Tuesday, May 26 brought 15 players to another NeoGoat tournament, with 4 rounds and 4 featured matches recorded.
The tournament featured a mix of Earth midrange decks, Chaos Flip control variants, Zombies, and even an experimental Timaeus strategy. Throughout the night, slower control decks and grind-heavy duels dominated the event.
Round 1 — Earth vs Chaos Flip
Winner: Earth
The first featured match showed Earth’s ability to pressure slower control decks. Chaos Flip tried to build advantage through set monsters and defensive play, but the Earth deck kept forcing action through battle pressure, removal, and efficient monster trades.
Chaos Flip had chances to stabilize, but Earth never allowed the game to slow down completely. The matchup became a good example of why midrange Earth strategies are gaining more attention in the current format.
Round 2 — Timaeus Deck vs Chaos
“Podrás ver de cerca un gran dragón”
Round 2 featured one of the most unusual decks of the night: a Timaeus-based strategy against Chaos.
The Timaeus deck brought a very different angle to the tournament, using Spellcaster-based pressure and fusion threats instead of playing a standard midrange or Chaos shell. Even when the Chaos deck managed to fight back with more familiar resource patterns, the match stood out because of how different the Timaeus strategy looked compared to the rest of the field.
Round 3 — Earth vs Zombie
Winner: Earth
The third featured match placed Earth against Zombie, another strong strategy in the current NeoGoat environment.
Zombie decks can be very difficult to exhaust once their graveyard engine starts working, but the Earth deck applied pressure early and forced the Zombie player into defensive turns. Instead of letting Zombie freely build momentum with recursion, Earth kept attacking, trading, and pushing damage before the game could fully stabilize.
This was another important win for Earth, proving that the deck was not only beating slower Flip strategies, but also competing well against graveyard-based midrange decks.
Final Round — Earth vs Chaos Flip
Winner: Chaos Flip (2-0)
The final round returned to one of the central matchups of the night: Earth versus Chaos Flip.
This time, however, the Chaos Flip player completely controlled the pace of the match and won the finals 2-0.
The Earth player came prepared after side decking and used Pulling the Rug specifically against Tsukuyomi, trying to interrupt the Flip engine and prevent repeated value loops. The side deck choice showed strong preparation for the matchup and successfully stopped Tsukuyomi at important moments.
Even so, Chaos Flip continued finding ways to generate advantage through defensive setups, recursive Flip effects, and careful resource management. The deck slowly exhausted the Earth player over the course of the finals while maintaining control of the duel flow.
By the end of the match, Chaos Flip secured a clean 2-0 victory and finished the tournament as the winning strategy of the night.
Final Thoughts
Chaos strategies remain some of the strongest and most popular decks in the format, but Earth midrange decks are clearly becoming serious contenders. Meanwhile, experimental decks like Timaeus continue showing that there is still plenty of unexplored space in NeoGoat.
Players are also reminded that the next local tournament will be the transition event between the April 2026 and June 2026 NeoGoat formats. During that tournament, duelists may choose to play either the April 2026 or June 2026 banlist and card pool configuration. After that event, only the June 2026 format will remain legal for NeoGoat tournaments going forward.
The second round of the 5th NeoGoat Online Tournament continued showing how different the June 2026 format feels compared to previous Chaos-centered metas.
Fusion decks, HERO builds, Monarch control, Water engines, Banisher strategies, and classic Goat-style midrange all appeared across the round, creating some of the most interactive duels seen in recent NeoGoat events so far.
Several matches also demonstrated how important battle sequencing, resource timing, and even deckout management have become in the slower June environment.
🔥 HERO Fusion vs Monarch Banisher
Rojoo123 vs Gaona
One of the most unusual matches of the round featured a dedicated HERO Fusion strategy against Gaona’s Banisher Monarch control deck.
Game 1 immediately showcased the explosive side of HERO Fusion builds.
Rojoo123 used:
Prisma
King of the Swamp
Polymerization
Miracle Fusion
to rapidly summon multiple HERO Fusion Monsters including:
Elemental HERO Nova Master
Elemental HERO Necroid Shaman
Nova Master repeatedly generated advantage through destruction effects while Necroid Shaman forced awkward monster trades that disrupted Gaona’s Monarch setup.
Gaona fought back with:
Banisher of the Radiance
Soul Exchange
Mobius
Thestalos
Tribe-Infecting Virus
showing how powerful graveyard denial has become in June 2026.
One of the strongest sequences of the match happened when:
Soul Exchange removed Wildheart
Mobius destroyed backrow
Book of Moon interrupted Mobius
Dust Tornado chained to destroy Scapegoat
creating a huge chain interaction that completely shifted momentum.
Game 3 became one of the strangest duels of the tournament.
The duel evolved into an extremely long resource war involving:
DNA Surgery
Rivalry of Warlords
Royal Oppression
Creature Swap
Wild Wingman
Banisher monsters
repeated Miracle Fusion attempts
At one point:
DNA Surgery changed every monster into Warriors
Tribe-Infecting Virus attempted to wipe the field
another chain changed monster types again mid-resolution
creating one of the weirdest interactions seen so far under the June 2026 rules.
Later:
Creature Swap stole Wild Wingman
Wild Wingman destroyed DNA Surgery (the one that declared Warrior) by discarding Mobius
Rivalry and Banisher monsters repeatedly locked both players out of graveyard setups
The duel eventually became so grind-heavy that Rojoo123 ran out of cards in deck and surrendered before the next draw phase, despite still controlling Fusion monsters on the field.
A perfect example of how June 2026 NeoGoat can create extremely long technical games.
🌊 Water Midrange vs Warrior Control
Perales (substitute) vs Ahumada
This match showed how dangerous Water combo-midrange decks can become when allowed to establish tempo.
Ahumada’s deck combined:
Reasoning
Abyss Soldier
Lekunga
Daedalus
Aqua Spirit
Sylvan Hermitree
The Legendary Fisherman
creating a hybrid strategy focused on pressure and graveyard resource loops.
Game 1 started explosively when:
Lonefire Blossom summoned Sylvan Hermitree
Reasoning immediately extended into Fairy King Truesdale
but Ahumada’s monsters were repeatedly answered by:
Exiled Force
Sakuretsu Armor
Bottomless Trap Hole
Don Zaloog pressure
Perales constantly punished overextension while Don Zaloog repeatedly ripped combo pieces directly from Ahumada’s hand.
Game 2 became much slower.
Ahumada stabilized behind:
A Legendary Ocean
Abyss Soldier
Aqua Spirit
while carefully controlling backrow with:
MST
Heavy Storm
A key turning point happened when:
Lightning Vortex was negated by Magic Jammer
Mobius destroyed both Mirror Force and A Legendary Ocean
Blade Knight and Gravekeeper’s Spy pushed for heavy damage
The duel ended in one of the funniest moments of the tournament:
Ahumada activated Brain Control while at exactly 800 LP, immediately losing the duel from the activation cost.
Game 3 featured repeated Reasoning interactions, Bottomless Trap Hole exchanges, and constant pressure around Levia-Dragon - Daedalus setups.
The match overall showed how viable Water-based midrange-combo decks may become in June 2026, especially now that slower resource games happen more frequently.
⚔️ Thunder Control Mirror-Style Grind
Felipe Pinales vs Bernardo
This was one of the most classic NeoGoat-style matches of the round.
Both duelists used highly interactive midrange control decks featuring:
Gravekeeper’s Spy
Thunder Dragon
Dekoichi
Kycoo
Blade Knight
BLS
Night Assailant
heavy trap lineups
Game 1 showcased constant incremental advantage.
Felipe gained early control through:
Gravekeeper’s Spy walls
Kycoo pressure
Mystic Swordsman LV2 clearing flip monsters
while Bernardo stabilized using:
Thunder Dragon advantage
Dekoichi
Jar of Greed
Night Assailant loops
A massive momentum swing happened when:
BLS cleared Jinzo
Heavy Storm removed remaining traps
Sinister Serpent helped maintain grind resources
but Felipe eventually stabilized through:
Raigeki Break
Torrential Tribute
Solemn Judgment
repeated monster removal
before finally pushing lethal with:
Tribe-Infecting Virus
Night Assailant attacks
Exiled Force clearing blockers
Game 2 was shorter but still highly interactive.
Felipe established early pressure with:
Jinzo
Kycoo
Mystic Swordsman LV2
Breaker
while Bernardo relied on:
Creature Swap
Gravekeeper’s Spy
Swords of Revealing Light
Exiled Force
to slow the duel down.
Kycoo once again proved incredibly important by repeatedly banishing key graveyard resources before BLS could become fully dominant.
Eventually Felipe overwhelmed Bernardo with direct attacks from multiple midrange threats after removing nearly every defensive resource.
Another strong example of how:
battle positioning
graveyard management
incremental advantage
have become far more important after the June banlist changes.
⚡ Hydro Banisher vs Good Stuff
One of the fastest-paced matches of the round came from Palacios and Linares.
Palacios used an aggressive Warrior-based strategy focused on:
Blade Knight
D.D. Warrior Lady
Exiled Force
Reinforcement of the Army
Mystic Swordsman LV2
strong trap pressure
while Linares played a slower Thunder Chaos-style control deck built around:
Thunder Dragon
Night Assailant
Gravekeeper’s Spy
BLS
Dekoichi
defensive traps
Game 1 heavily favored Palacios early.
Blade Knight and Mystic Swordsman LV2 repeatedly punished Linares’ defensive monsters before Thunder Dragon advantage could fully stabilize the duel.
A huge momentum swing happened when:
Exiled Force removed Gravekeeper’s Spy
Heavy Storm cleared two defensive traps
Blade Knight pushed direct damage
forcing Linares dangerously low very quickly.
However Linares stabilized through:
Scapegoat
Metamorphosis into Thousand-Eyes Restrict
Night Assailant recursion
slowing the duel enough to begin rebuilding advantage.
The duel eventually turned into a grind war around BLS pressure and repeated removal exchanges.
Game 2 became much more explosive.
Palacios opened aggressively again with:
Reinforcement of the Army
D.D. Warrior Lady
Book of Moon support
but Linares answered with:
Torrential Tribute
Dekoichi advantage
Thunder Dragon setup
before eventually landing BLS to stabilize the board.
One of the strongest moments came when:
BLS banished a Warrior monster
Sakuretsu Armor removed the follow-up attack
Ring of Destruction threatened lethal
Magic Cylinder completely reversed combat math
forcing both players into extremely careful battle phases afterward.
The final duel became a constant exchange of:
spot removal
trap trades
tempo swings
topdeck recovery
before Palacios finally closed the match through sustained Warrior pressure after exhausting Linares’ remaining defensive resources.
A very strong showing for aggressive Warrior decks in the new June format.
Round 2 already felt slower, more technical, and much more board-oriented than previous NeoGoat environments — exactly the kind of gameplay the June 2026 format was designed to create.
Yesterday’s NeoGoat local brought 18 players for 4 rounds of play, with three recorded feature matches showing a pretty varied field.
Chaos was still present, but this event also gave space to stranger builds: Plant engines, Skill Drain, Equip Warriors, Earth Beasts, Monarchs, and Zombies.
Round 1 Feature Match
Red-Eyes Plant Skill Drain vs Monarch
The first video showed one of the most unusual decks of the night: a Red-Eyes Plant Skill Drain build.
Against Monarchs, the deck managed to control the pace well. Skill Drain helped shut down key monster effects, while the Plant and Red-Eyes pieces gave it enough pressure to keep advancing the game.
Winner: Red-Eyes Plant Skill Drain
Round 2 Feature Match
Chaos vs Divine Sword Warrior
Round 2 was a full three-duel match between a Chaos deck and a Warrior deck focused around Divine Sword - Phoenix Blade.
The Warrior deck had strong grind potential, using its Equip strategy to keep resources flowing and apply pressure. But after three games, Chaos proved more stable. The deck’s removal, power cards, and comeback potential carried it through the set.
Winner: Chaos
Round 3 Feature Match
Red-Eyes Plant Skill Drain vs Earth Beast
The Red-Eyes Plant Skill Drain deck returned for another feature match, this time against an Earth Beast deck.
This time, the Beast deck managed to break through. With solid bodies, pressure, and enough momentum to fight through the control elements, Earth Beast took the match and stopped the Red-Eyes Plant run.
Winner: Earth Beast
Final Round Feature Match
Zombie vs Earth Beast
The final round featured Zombie against the same Earth Beast deck that had just won its previous feature match.
Earth Beast came in with momentum, but Zombies ended up taking the final match. The Zombie deck’s recursion and efficient pressure were enough to close the tournament on top.
Winner: Zombie
Final Thoughts
This tournament showed a nice mix of NeoGoat ideas. We had Chaos, Warriors, Monarchs, Zombies, Plants, Skill Drain, Red-Eyes, and Earth Beast all showing up in relevant matches.
The most interesting part was seeing non-standard decks actually reach the feature table and win games. Even when Chaos is still one of the most familiar choices, NeoGoat continues to leave room for strange engines and forgotten strategies to compete.
Decklists and videos will be shared in the next post.
NeoGoat will enter one of its strangest eras yet. Chaos Sorcerer has finally been removed from the format, Black Luster Soldier returns under strict limitation, and multiple forgotten strategies may finally have room to breathe again.
And there is no better place to witness the beginning of this new meta than the Fifth NeoGoat Online Tournament.
The first experiments have already begun.
And this tournament may become the very first real glimpse into the June 2026 metagame.
Confirmed Participants
Costeño
Linares
Perales
Bernardo
Palacios
Gaona
Felipe Pinales
Rojo
Eight duelists.
Only one will become champion.
Format
NeoGoat Format — June 2026 Banlist
Major changes include:
Chaos Sorcerer forbidden
Card Destruction forbidden
Black Luster Soldier limited
Miracle Fusion semi-limited
Book of Moon semi-limited
Dinosaur’s Rage added to the format
Banisher of the Radiance added to the Extra Card Pool
Elemental HERO Gaia added to the Extra Card Pool
What To Expect
The first weeks after a new banlist are always unpredictable.
Players trying to rebuild Chaos shells.
Experimental HERO variants.
Zombie decks attempting to adapt to the slower environment.
Warrior strategies making a possible return.
And probably several duelists trying to discover whether a single copy of Black Luster Soldier is still enough to completely steal games.
This may also become one of the first tournaments where aggressive and midrange decks can properly challenge the format again.
Prize Support
🥇 1st Place
$800 MXN store credit
🥈 2nd–4th Place
1 Blazing Dominion Special Box
🎟️ 5th–8th Place
2 free tournament entries
Following the event, selected decklists, replays and tournament results will be published on the NeoGoat blog and Deck Library.
The core card pool consists of all OCG cards released before Cybernetic Revolution. The following links detail the cards that differ from traditional Goat Format.
OCG-Exclusive Card Pool: Vanillas (including Rituals and non-effect Fusions):