Wednesday, July 1, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report - June 30th, 2026

The June 30th NeoGoat tournament brought 10 players together for a very unusual night: half tournament, half football watch party. While the duels were going on, everyone was also keeping an eye on the Mexico vs Ecuador World Cup match ⚽, so the room had that strange but fun mix of tense card-game silence, sudden soccer reactions, and the usual NeoGoat arguments over timing windows.

The featured matches gave us a good spread of the current local field: Water Plant, Hydro Banisher, Burn, Warrior, and Earth Zombie all showed up on camera. By the end of the night, Warrior took first place, Burn finished second, and Water Plant landed in third.


Featured Duel 1 - Water Plant vs Hydro Banisher

The first recorded match was Water Plant against Hydro Banisher, and it quickly became the rules-discussion match of the night. A long pause happened when Hydro Banisher argued that Botanical Girl would miss timing after being destroyed by battle while connected to Miracle Fertilizer.

After the judge reviewed the situation, the ruling was that Botanical Girl did not miss timing in that case, so the duel continued. From there, Water Plant managed to survive the disruption and keep grinding through the long game. In the last duel of the match, Pole Position ended up being the tech that won Water Plant the match. By chaining it to Book of Moon at the key moment, Plant kept its field from falling apart and took over the duel.

It was not the fastest duel of the night, but it was definitely the one that made everyone stop watching the football game for a moment.


Featured Duel 2 - Water Plant vs Burn

The second featured match was one of the most interesting ones: Water Plant against Burn. This was a full back-and-forth match where both decks showed what they were trying to do.

In the first duel, Water Plant opened with Lonefire Blossom into Sylvan Hermitree, but Burn slowed things down with Nightmare Wheel. The key turn came when Plant used Miracle Fertilizer to revive Lonefire, then followed with Giant Trunade, returning Fertilizer, Nightmare Wheel, and the set backrow. After that, Lonefire brought out Fairy King Truesdale, Abyss Soldier bounced the set monster, Fertilizer came down again, and a second Truesdale joined the field. Plant pushed through with a huge board and took the first duel.

The second duel was Burn at its nastiest, and also had one messy rules moment. Burn opened with Pot of Greed, Des Koala, Reflect Bounder, and later Lava Golem, forcing Water Plant to spend resources just to stay alive. When Lava Golem tributed Plant’s Botanical Girl and Abyss Soldier, Plant activated Botanical Girl and searched Lord Poison. That search was actually invalid, since Botanical Girl should miss timing when tributed this way, but no judge was nearby and Burn allowed the play to continue.

Even with that extra card, Burn kept applying pressure. Plant used Tribe-Infecting Virus to discard Lord Poison and destroy Lava Golem, then later tried to rebuild with Miracle Fertilizer, Sylvan Hermitree, and Frost and Flame Dragon. One of the best plays of the match came when Plant activated Nobleman of Crossout on Burn’s set monster, but Burn chained Ceasefire, flipping the target face-up as Giant Germ. That made Nobleman fail to banish it, while Ceasefire also dealt 1500 damage.

From there, Burn finished the duel perfectly. Plant kept trying to stabilize, but in the End Phase Burn activated three copies of Nightmare Wheel on Hermitree. The Wheels dropped Plant to 500, and then the saved Giant Germ attacked into Hermitree, was destroyed, and inflicted the final 500 damage. It was a brutal Burn finish: even after allowing an invalid Botanical Girl search, Burn still found the exact line to close the game.

The third duel was much cleaner for Water Plant. Lonefire brought out Hermitree again, but D.D. Warrior Lady removed it early. Plant rebuilt with Mother Grizzly, Lord Poison, and Abyss Soldier. Burn seemed to draw too many monsters and not enough real defensive pieces, and after Abyss Soldier bounced the last set monster, Plant attacked for the win.

Water Plant won the match. Burn deck can suddenly turn the duel into a math problem.


Featured Duel 3 - Warrior vs Earth Zombie

The third featured match was Warrior against Earth Zombie. This one was more direct than the Plant matches: less looping, more pressure, more removal, and more battle-phase punishment.

Earth Zombie tried to play through the grind, but Warrior kept the pace high and did not let the Zombie side comfortably establish its engine. The Warrior deck used its usual mix of efficient attackers, spot removal, and tempo swings to keep forcing bad trades. Once Warrior got ahead, Earth Zombie never fully recovered.

Warrior took the match and kept building momentum toward the final result of the night.


Featured Duel 4 - Water Plant vs Warrior

The last featured duel put Water Plant against Warrior, with both decks already having strong tournament runs. Water Plant had shown that it could grind through removal, abuse Miracle Fertilizer, and suddenly build a threatening board out of the Graveyard. Warrior, on the other hand, had the cleaner tempo plan.

This time, Warrior came out on top. The deck had enough pressure and interaction to keep Water Plant from freely setting up its recursion engine, and the match ended with Warrior securing the win.

That result gave Warrior first place for the June 30th event.


Final Standings

  1. 1st Place: Warrior
  2. 2nd Place: Burn
  3. 3rd Place: Water Plant

Overall, this was a fun 10-player night with a very different atmosphere from the usual local tournament. The World Cup match in the background made the room louder, stranger, and more relaxed, but the duels still delivered: a rules pause, a triple Nightmare Wheel finish, a Plant comeback, and a Warrior deck closing the tournament in first place.

Not a bad night for NeoGoat. Not a bad night for football either.

Monday, June 29, 2026

NeoGoat June 2026: The Format So Far

June 2026 has been one of the busiest months for NeoGoat so far. Between local tournaments, online events, deck profiles, loaner decks, NeoDraft, and early testing sessions, the format has had enough activity to give us a clear first picture of what the new banlist is doing.

This is not meant to be a full statistical breakdown. It is more of a quick mid-format recap: what has been showing up, what keeps winning, and what players should probably keep in mind when preparing for the rest of the June 2026 format.


June 2026 at a Glance

The biggest story of the month is still Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning. With BLS legal at one, many decks have naturally shifted toward LIGHT and DARK packages, even when they are not fully dedicated Chaos decks. Warrior piles, Good Stuff lists, Thunder Dragon engines, HERO variants, and even some aggressive beatdown decks can all threaten a sudden BLS swing once the Graveyard is ready.

At the same time, the format has not become only “summon BLS and win.” The June reports showed a wide field: Good Stuff, Chaos, Hydro Banisher, Beastdown, Monarchs, Gravekeepers, Zombies, HERO decks, Reasoning Gate, Decree Beat, and several rogue ideas all had moments worth talking about.

That is probably the healthiest sign of the month. The best decks are powerful, but the field is not solved. Players are still finding new ways to attack the same problems.


Meta Picture So Far

Based on the reported June events so far, this is the current rough picture of the June 2026 NeoGoat meta. This is not a strict tier list, but it does show which strategies have appeared repeatedly near the top tables.

June 2026 Meta Snapshot

Deck Family June Read Why It Matters
Chaos / BLS Shells Most consistent top-table presence Thunder Dragon, Flip engines, Warriors, and generic LIGHT/DARK piles all make BLS easy to enable.
Good Stuff Safest midrange choice Flexible threats, clean removal, and strong one-for-one cards keep it relevant in almost every matchup.
Hydro Banisher / Decree Beat Strong anti-meta pressure Banisher cards attack the Graveyard, while Royal Decree lets aggressive monsters ignore trap-heavy defenses.
Beastdown / Warrior Aggro Fast and still dangerous These decks punish slow starts and can turn simple battle pressure into tournament wins.
Monarchs Best midgame swing deck Mobius, Thestalos, Zaborg, Soul Exchange, and Return from the Different Dimension give Monarchs strong comeback tools.
HERO Variants Combo-midrange watchlist Miracle Fusion, Wildheart, Prisma, Phoenix Blade, Plants, and Gadgets give HERO decks several different identities.
Gravekeepers Rising anti-Graveyard option Necrovalley, Commandant, Spy, Guard, Ambusher, and anti-meta traps give the deck more structure than before.
Reasoning Gate Explosive rogue threat Reasoning and Monster Gate can punish opponents who are only prepared for normal midrange games.

What the Tournament Reports Showed

The early June events showed that straightforward pressure is still good. Beastdown, Warriors, Hydrogeddon decks, and Decree Beat all had strong moments because they force opponents to answer the board immediately. In a format where many decks want time to set up Graveyard value, Flip effects, or tribute summons, simple combat pressure can still steal entire matches.

Good Stuff also continued to look like one of the safest choices. It does not need a single combo to function. The deck can play removal, pressure with efficient monsters, protect itself with traps, and still end games with BLS when the opportunity appears.

Chaos remains one of the clearest pillars of the format. Thunder Dragon, Dekoichi, Night Assailant, Tsukuyomi, Gravekeeper's Spy, and similar engines keep giving Chaos decks enough cards to survive long games. Once the Graveyard is ready, Black Luster Soldier can turn a stable position into a winning one very quickly.

Monarchs also made a real statement. Earth Monarch and other tribute-based decks showed that cards like Mobius the Frost Monarch, Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch, Zaborg the Thunder Monarch, Shrink, and Return from the Different Dimension can swing games even after the opponent looks ahead.

The more experimental side of June was just as important. HERO decks kept finding new shells, from Phoenix Blade to Gadget HERO to Plant-HERO hybrids. Gravekeepers received more attention thanks to Commandant and Ambusher. Reasoning Gate proved that explosive spell-based decks still need to be respected. Even Zombies, Skill Drain builds, Harpies, Red-Eyes, Tyranno Infinity, Archfiends, and Water strategies added useful variety to the month.


Cards That Defined the Month

  • Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning: still the biggest closer in the format.
  • Heavy Storm: punished greedy backrow setups all month.
  • Royal Decree: gave aggressive decks a way to ignore trap-heavy boards.
  • Banisher of the Radiance: forced Chaos and Graveyard decks to play differently.
  • Miracle Fusion: kept HERO decks relevant, even when opponents tried very hard to discard it.
  • Mobius the Frost Monarch: repeatedly turned tribute summons into game-breaking tempo swings.
  • Reasoning / Monster Gate: reminded everyone that not every deck wants to play fair.

What Should Players Prepare For?

Going forward, the safest preparation is to respect three things: BLS, backrow punishment, and non-standard engines.

If your deck cannot answer Black Luster Soldier, it probably needs changes. If your deck loses instantly to Heavy Storm, Royal Decree, or Mobius, it probably needs a better plan. And if your testing only includes Good Stuff mirrors, you may be caught off guard by Reasoning Gate, Gravekeepers, Hydro Banisher, HERO combo turns, or Skill Drain pressure.

The June 2026 format rewards strong fundamentals, but it also rewards players who understand the field. A clean deck is good. A clean deck with a real side plan is much better.


Final Thoughts

June has shown that the new NeoGoat banlist is doing what a good format update should do: creating powerful decks without making the format feel solved immediately. BLS is everywhere, but it is not the only story. Good Stuff is strong, but not untouchable. Chaos is real, but beatdown, Monarchs, HERO, Gravekeepers, Decree decks, and rogue strategies all have space to compete.

The current meta picture is still moving. That is the best part. Every tournament has added something new: another decklist, another tech card, another upset, or another reminder that NeoGoat is still a format where a prepared player can bring something different and make it work.

For now, the June 2026 format looks open, aggressive, and very dangerous. Bring answers to BLS, respect the Graveyard hate, and do not assume the opponent is playing the same deck as last week.

Saturday, June 27, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report – June 23th, 2026

This is a brief tournament report for the June 23 NeoGoat event. We had four rounds of play, but due to limited time this article will stay short and focus mostly on the recorded matches and the final round highlight.

The event still gave us a useful snapshot of the current NeoGoat field: established Good Stuff shells, combo-oriented strategies, and the usual midrange piles fighting for position. Even with a shorter write-up, the matches are worth checking out, especially the final round.

Round 1

Round 1 opened the tournament with the usual early-round uncertainty: players still finding their rhythm, testing hands, and trying to figure out what kind of field they had entered. In NeoGoat, the first round often tells you a lot about the room, but not always about who will actually make it to the top.

Round 2

By Round 2, the tournament started to settle into a more familiar pace. The slower decks had to prove they could survive pressure, while the more explosive decks had to show they could win without overextending into the classic NeoGoat punishment cards.

Round 3

Round 3 was the point where the standings began to matter. Every small exchange became more important, and the difference between having a clean follow-up and running out of gas started to decide games.

Round 4 – Reasoning Gate vs Good Stuff

The final round featured Reasoning Gate against a Good Stuff deck, and the Reasoning strategy took the match.

This was the most important result of the event. Good Stuff remains one of the safest and most flexible choices in NeoGoat, but Reasoning Gate showed that it can still attack the format from a different angle. Instead of trying to trade one-for-one forever, the deck pressures the opponent with explosive turns, awkward summons, and the constant threat of turning one spell into a major swing.

The match was a good reminder that NeoGoat is not only about clean midrange play. A deck that forces the opponent to respect high-impact cards like Reasoning and Monster Gate can punish hands that are built only to answer normal board development.

Final Thoughts

This was a short report, but the tournament still gave us a clear takeaway: Reasoning Gate deserves attention. Good Stuff is still strong, consistent, and hard to punish, but it is not untouchable.

When a combo deck can survive long enough to force its power cards through, the match can shift very quickly. June 23 ended with Reasoning Gate taking the final round over Good Stuff, giving the tournament a very different finish from the usual midrange grind.

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Deck Profiles: Four Lists from the Field

Here are four tournament decklists from the latest NeoGoat action, each showing a different angle of the format. Some lists attack the board directly, some build long-term advantage, and others try to lock the opponent into uncomfortable positions.

The names below are not strict archetype labels. They are tournament profile names, meant to give each deck a stronger identity than just calling everything “Chaos,” “Good Stuff,” or “Control.”


1. Beastdown



Deck link: Open in NeoGoat Deck Viewer

Tiger Gate is built around immediate pressure and controlled aggression. King Tiger Wanghu limits smaller summons, Berserk Gorilla forces combat, and the rest of the list backs that pressure with efficient removal and strong trap coverage.

The deck can play aggressively without giving up interaction. Kycoo, Wanghu, Berserk Gorilla and Zaborg apply pressure from different angles, while Bottomless Trap Hole, Sakuretsu Armor, Magic Cylinder, Ring of Destruction and Torrential Tribute make it difficult for the opponent to stabilize.

Black Luster Soldier gives the list a powerful closing threat, but the deck does not rely only on Chaos. Its main strength is forcing the opponent to play through a board that punishes both weak monsters and careless attacks.

Decklist - Tiger Gate
# Main Deck
1 Chiron the Mage
1 D.D. Assailant
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Don Zaloog
1 Exiled Force
1 Gigantes
1 Injection Fairy Lily
1 Jinzo
2 King Tiger Wanghu
2 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
2 Nobleman of Crossout
1 Pot of Greed
1 Premature Burial
1 Reinforcement of the Army
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Magic Cylinder
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
2 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 Heavy Storm
1 Brain Control
2 Book of Moon
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
1 Zaborg the Thunder Monarch
3 Berserk Gorilla

# Extra Deck

1 Dark Balter the Terrible
1 Dark Blade the Dragon Knight
1 Darkfire Dragon
1 Gatling Dragon
1 Reaper on the Nightmare
1 Ryu Senshi
1 Thousand-Eyes Restrict
1 Elemental HERO Gaia

# Side Deck

1 Chiron the Mage
2 Cipher Soldier
2 Giant Rat
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
2 Soul Exchange
2 Magic Drain
2 Pulling the Rug
2 Royal Decree 

2. The Arsenal


Deck link: Open in NeoGoat Deck Viewer

Ivory Arsenal is a refined one-for-one deck built around high-impact monsters and flexible answers. It does not lean into one single engine. Instead, it plays a deep lineup of reliable threats that can trade cleanly and keep pressure on the opponent.

Blade Knight, Kycoo, Don Zaloog, D.D. Assailant, D.D. Warrior Lady, Sasuke and Zombyra all create different combat problems. Jinzo and Zaborg give the list higher-impact plays, while Black Luster Soldier remains the strongest finisher once the graveyard is ready.

The spell and trap lineup keeps the deck balanced. Shield Crush, Book of Moon, Shrink, Solemn Judgment, Dust Tornado and the standard removal suite let the deck adapt to different matchups without needing a complicated setup.

Decklist - Ivory Arsenal
# Main Deck
2 Blade Knight
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Marshmallon
1 Jinzo
3 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Don Zaloog
1 Exiled Force
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 Zaborg the Thunder Monarch
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
1 D.D. Assailant
1 Dekoichi the Battlechanted Locomotive
1 Spirit Reaper
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Zombyra the Dark
1 Shield Crush
1 Book of Moon
1 Brain Control
1 Pot of Greed
1 Nobleman of Crossout
1 Reinforcement of the Army
1 Premature Burial
1 Heavy Storm
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Shrink
1 Sakuretsu Armor
1 Mirror Force
1 Widespread Ruin
1 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Solemn Judgment
1 Call of the Haunted
2 Dust Tornado
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Torrential Tribute

# Side Deck

2 King Tiger Wanghu 

3. Chaos Ledger


Thunder Ledger is a Chaos list focused on resource management. Thunder Dragon loads the graveyard and fixes hand structure, while Jar of Greed, Dekoichi, Gravekeeper's Spy and Night Assailant help the deck keep cards moving throughout the duel.

Phoenix Wing Wind Blast gives the deck a strong tempo tool, especially with Sinister Serpent and Night Assailant available as discard material. The list is comfortable playing a longer game, slowing the opponent down while preparing Black Luster Soldier.

This deck is not only about summoning BLS. It wins by making small exchanges profitable, protecting itself with traps, and eventually turning those incremental advantages into a decisive board state.

Decklist - Thunder Ledger
# Main Deck
3 Gravekeeper's Spy
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Blade Knight
1 Don Zaloog
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Exiled Force
3 Thunder Dragon
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
3 Jar of Greed
2 Phoenix Wing Wind Blast
2 Dekoichi the Battlechanted Locomotive
1 Sinister Serpent
2 Night Assailant
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Heavy Storm
1 Premature Burial
1 Pot of Greed
1 Brain Control
1 Upstart Goblin
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Book of Moon
1 Reinforcement of the Army
1 Scapegoat
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Mirror Force
2 Bottomless Trap Hole

# Side Deck

2 Cipher Soldier
2 Des Wombat
2 King Tiger Wanghu
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
2 The End of Anubis
1 Soul Exchange
2 Royal Decree
2 Nobleman of Crossout 

4. Red-Eyes Lockdown


Crimson Lockdown is the most unusual list of the group. It combines Red-Eyes recursion with Skill Drain pressure, using Red-Eyes Wyvern and Red-Eyes Spirit to keep large monsters coming back while Skill Drain limits the opponent’s ability to answer through monster effects.

Fusilier Dragon is one of the key cards here. Under Skill Drain, it becomes a major threat, and it also works well with the deck’s heavier trap structure. Prisma and E - Emergency Call help access Red-Eyes names, while Raigeki Break, Dust Tornado and the standard power cards give the deck enough interaction to stay in the game.

This is not a standard Chaos pile or a normal beatdown deck. It is a dedicated pressure deck with a recursion plan, a lockdown plan, and enough explosive cards to punish opponents who underestimate it.

Decklist - Crimson Lockdown
# Main Deck
2 Red-Eyes B. Dragon
3 Red-Eyes Spirit
3 Red-Eyes Wyvern
2 Elemental HERO Prisma
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
2 Dust Tornado
2 E - Emergency Call
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Deck Devastation Virus
1 Heavy Storm
1 Lightning Vortex
2 Metamorphosis
1 Mirror Force
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Pot of Greed
1 Premature Burial
1 Reinforcement of the Army
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Scapegoat
1 Sinister Serpent
2 Raigeki Break
1 Exiled Force
2 Zombyra the Dark
1 Call of the Haunted
3 Skill Drain
1 Solemn Judgment
3 Fusilier Dragon, the Dual-Mode Beast

# Extra Deck

1 B. Skull Dragon
1 Meteor Black Dragon

# Side Deck

1 Giant Trunade
2 Nobleman of Crossout
1 Swords of Revealing Light
1 Torrential Tribute
2 Sakuretsu Armor
2 Mobius the Frost Monarch
1 Malevolent Catastrophe 

Closing Thoughts

These lists show several different directions available in NeoGoat right now. Tiger Gate pressures summons and combat. Ivory Arsenal plays a clean, flexible threat package. Thunder Ledger builds value until Chaos becomes live. Crimson Lockdown attacks from a completely different angle with Skill Drain and Red-Eyes recursion.

The format continues to reward both technical play and deck identity. A list does not need to look like every other successful deck to compete, but it does need a clear plan, strong interaction, and enough pressure to close games before the opponent takes over.

NeoGoat Online Father's Day Tournament - Round 3 & Final Match

Round 3 was where the tournament started getting heavier. No more free breathing room, no more casual warm-up duels. Every match had that feeling of “one bad set, one bad attack, one bad read, and your tournament starts falling apart.”

The fourth round was not played as a full round. Instead, only the match for first place was played, so this post covers the Round 3 matches first and then closes with the final match. Results are kept at the end, so watch first if you do not want spoilers.


Round 3 - Efra vs Gaona


This match opened with a clean contrast: Efra trying to keep the game moving with Dekoichi, Don Zaloog, Thunder Dragon and removal, while Gaona leaned into Gravekeeper pressure, Necrovalley, Rivalry of Warlords and annoying flip monsters.

The first duel had a lot of little exchanges that mattered. Gravekeeper's Guard bounced pressure back, Ring of Destruction punished an early summon, and Creature Swap turned the board into a mess. From there, the match kept shifting between control pieces and direct pressure.

The later games got more uncomfortable. Banisher of the Radiance, Jinzo, Necrovalley, Rivalry and Heavy Storm all showed up at different moments, and one of the biggest swings came from a Metamorphosis line into King Dragun. It was not a clean match. It was one of those games where both players keep asking “is this enough?” and the answer keeps changing.


Round 3 - Epydemius vs Kztoor


This one was much more direct. Big bodies, battle traps, Skill Drain attempts, Brain Control swings, and a lot of monsters getting thrown into each other until somebody finally ran out of board.

Epydemius started with the kind of opening that looks scary on paper: Giant Orc into Deck Devastation Virus. Kztoor had to play through hand reveals, graveyard pressure from Kycoo, and a series of monster trades involving Berserk Gorilla, Goblin Attack Force, Zombyra and D.D. Assailant.

Nimble Momonga bought time, Torrential Tribute reset the table, and both players had moments where they looked ready to steal the duel back. But this match was always dangerous because the board never stayed small for long. One Brain Control, one Premature Burial, one clean attack sequence, and the whole duel could flip.


Round 3 - Arena vs Angel


This was probably the weirdest match of the round in the best way. Arena brought the heavy monster package with Mausoleum of the Emperor, Reasoning, Monster Gate, Horus, Jinzo and Dark Magician of Chaos. Angel answered with a normal monster engine, Heart of the Underdog, Order to Charge, Unexpected Dai and Black Luster Soldier.

The first duel already showed what kind of match this was going to be. Spirit Reaper stalled, Heart of the Underdog started threatening extra cards, Morphing Jar blew everything open, and Black Luster Soldier appeared early enough to make the table nervous.

The second and third duels went even harder into the nonsense. Mausoleum paid life points to cheat out tribute monsters, Dark Magician of Chaos recycled Brain Control, Monster Gate found bodies at exactly the kind of moments that make people complain, and Horus LV8 turned one answer into nothing. It was ugly, explosive, and very NeoGoat.


Round 3 - Grondal vs Castro


This match was slower and more annoying. Not bad annoying. Real NeoGoat annoying. Dekoichi, Tsukuyomi, Night Assailant, Sinister Serpent, Scapegoat, Sakuretsu, Ring of Destruction, Nobleman and small direct attacks that slowly became impossible to ignore.

The first duel had Don Zaloog doing Don Zaloog things early, ripping cards while tiny bits of damage kept adding up. Castro had answers, but the pressure kept coming back in small pieces. The game became a grind over who could keep one monster alive long enough to matter.

The second duel had a strange Creature Swap start, trading Sinister Serpent and Cipher Soldier, and from there the game turned into a long fight over value. Dekoichi drew cards, Swords of Revealing Light bought time, Ring punished Airknight, and Kycoo eventually became a huge problem because the graveyard started to matter more and more.


Round 3 - El Vic vs Pipe


This match had a different pace. El Vic leaned on the HERO and plant engine, while Pipe had the usual pile of removal, traps and Chaos pressure waiting to punish anything too cute.

The first duel opened with Lonefire Blossom climbing into Sylvan Hermitree, but Pipe had Raigeki Break and Dust Tornado ready to cut off the early setup. For a moment it looked like Pipe had stabilized with Breaker and Blade Knight, but Miracle Fusion changed the shape of the duel fast. Nova Master came down, started threatening cards, and suddenly every battle phase mattered.

The second duel was tighter and nastier. Night Assailant punished the first attack, Marshmallon forced a strange Ring of Destruction and Solemn Judgment sequence, and Prisma plus Kycoo gave El Vic a way to keep pushing without overextending too much. Pipe still had Lily, Thunder Dragon, Solemn and Torrential floating around, so the duel never really felt safe.


Pending Match - Charly vs Tona

This pairing was listed as pending in the log, so there is no match video or duel breakdown included here. If the replay shows up later, it can be added as an update.


The Final Match for First Place - El Vic vs Efra


And then came the only match played as Round 4: El Vic vs Efra for first place.

This was not just another match in the list. This was the last table standing. El Vic had already shown that the HERO engine could turn small setups into big swings, especially with Miracle Fusion turning used monsters into real pressure. Efra had the Chaos shell, Thunder Dragon fuel, Monarchs, Don Zaloog, Jinzo, Tsukuyomi and the kind of removal package that makes every normal summon feel like bait.

The first duel started fast. El Vic pushed early with Wildheart, UFO Turtle and Hydrogeddon, forcing Efra to answer instead of sitting comfortably behind setup cards. Efra fought back with Exiled Force, Smashing Ground and a Premature Burial line that led into Zaborg. Then Miracle Fusion entered the table and the game suddenly became about whether Efra could survive long enough to land the big Chaos threat.

That threat did appear. Black Luster Soldier hit the field at one of those moments where the whole duel seems like it is about to collapse. But the answer was waiting. The final match was not going to be decided by one big monster that easily.

The second duel was the real grind. Don Zaloog started ripping cards, Miracle Fusion tried to swing the field back, Ring of Destruction blew up a Gaia before it could take over, and both players kept trading the exact cards that looked like they were about to win the game. Torrential Tribute cleaned up a Spy board. Bottomless answered another Black Luster Soldier. Call of the Haunted, Mirror Force, Swords of Revealing Light, Raigeki Break, Pot of Greed and Heavy Storm all took turns making the duel look almost over.

But it still was not over.

By the time the match reached the third duel, both decks had already shown the same message: nothing stays safe. Prisma started the pressure. Gravekeeper's Spy tried to slow it down. Royal Decree threatened to shut off traps, then Breaker removed it. Wildheart kept attacking through the usual trap nonsense. Lonefire Blossom found Sylvan Hermitree. Then Efra found the kind of midgame line that makes a final feel like a final: Brain Control, tribute, Jinzo, and Tsukuyomi turning the combat math into a nightmare.

El Vic still had plays. Don Zaloog forced a discard. Bottomless was still around. Kycoo tried to matter. But Jinzo and Tsukuyomi kept asking the same question every turn: can you really survive one more battle phase?

That is the kind of final this was. Not clean, not pretty, and not decided in the first big swing. It dragged both players through removal, traps, fusion pressure, Chaos threats and tribute monsters until finally there was no more room left.


Final Result

In the final match for first place, Efra defeated El Vic.

A good closing match for the event: El Vic pushed hard with HERO pressure and Miracle Fusion lines, but Efra survived the scary turns, answered the biggest threats, and closed the tournament with the Chaos/Monarch grind doing exactly what it is built to do.

Congratulations to ShadowEfra for taking first place. Solid run, good reads, and enough patience to survive that final. Well deserved.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

NeoGoat Online Tournament – Father’s Day: Round 2

Round 2 gave us six recorded matches, with Chaos mirrors, Zombies, HERO plants, Gravekeepers, Skill Drain beatdown, and one very suspicious pile trying to summon Exodia with normal monsters.



El Vic vs Kztoor

Probably the best match of the round. Kztoor opened with strong control tools like Kycoo, Tribe-Infecting Virus, Shrink, Torrential Tribute, and several traps, but El Vic fought through it with HERO pressure and Plant lines. Even after losing Black Luster Soldier from hand to Spirit Reaper, El Vic still found a way to close the match with Miracle Fusion into Elemental HERO Nova Master.


Charly Goat vs Ángel

Charly survived Ángel’s early normal monster pressure and turned the games around with the Zombie toolbox. Morphing Jar refilled the hand, Book of Life kept the pressure alive, and cards like Gigantes, Vampire’s Curse, Smashing Ground, and Injection Fairy Lily helped Charly take the match.


Grondal vs ShadowEfra

This was a long Chaos grind. Both players traded removal, Thunder Dragon value, Sinister Serpent value, and Black Luster Soldier swings. Grondal had answers, including D.D. Warrior Lady, but ShadowEfra kept finding pressure through Monarchs, Fusilier Dragon, Tribe-Infecting Virus, and eventually took the match.


Epydemius vs El Pipe

Epydemius opened strong with the Skill Drain beatdown plan, using big bodies like Giant Orc, Zombyra, Goblin Attack Force, and Fusilier Dragon. El Pipe recovered in the next games with the classic Thunder Dragon Chaos shell, defensive traps, Magic Cylinder, Mobius, and a final Black Luster Soldier push to win 2-1.


Arena vs Castro

Arena brought the Zombie grind, while Castro answered with Warrior and Chaos pressure. Mystic Swordsman LV2 was especially annoying for the Zombie side, and although Arena managed to steal a game through Marshmallon and removal, Castro took the match after a final game full of tempo swings, Airknight pressure, and a decisive Ring of Destruction.


Gaona vs Totonatiuh

Gaona had to deal with the strangest deck of the round: Heart of the Underdog Exodia with normal monsters and stall cards. Totonatiuh actually stole a game by assembling Exodia, but Gaona kept the pressure with Gravekeeper’s Commandant, Necrovalley, removal for the floodgates, and a fast Game 3 finish.


After Round 2, the tournament was already moving away from simple beatdown games. Gravekeepers had to fight Exodia stall, Zombies had to survive Warriors, and Chaos decks kept proving that one big boss monster can still change everything in a single turn.

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