Another strong turnout for NeoGoat, with 21 players battling through a diverse field shaped by the April 2026 card pool. This event delivered a great mix of classic strategies and experimental builds pushing the format forward.
Round 2 - Dark Magician Girl Dragon Knight vs Pure Elemental HERO Fusion
A flashy and aggressive duel where a Spellcaster fusion strategy faced off against a streamlined HERO build.
The Dark Magician Girl engine aimed to resolve The Eye of Timaeus plays into Dark Magician Girl the Dragon Knight, backed by Spellcaster utility and pressure. However, the HERO deck proved more consistent, quickly assembling fusion threats and maintaining tempo.
👉 Result: Elemental HERO Fusion takes the win through cleaner setup and sustained pressure.
Round 3 - Zombies vs Gravekeepers
A classic control matchup.
Gravekeepers tried to lock the game with Necrovalley, but the Zombie deck managed to navigate around it and apply pressure through recursive threats and smart resource use.
👉 Result: Zombies break through and take the match.
⚖️ Round 4 - Chaos vs Chaos — Mirror Match
A pure skill matchup where both players traded removal, graveyard setup, and timing windows.
As expected, the duel came down to resource management and who could best leverage Chaos monsters at the right moment.
👉 Result: One Chaos deck advances after a tight exchange-heavy duel.
Final Match - Zombies vs Chaos
The final showcased one of the most consistent decks of the tournament: Zombies.
Against Chaos, the Zombie strategy demonstrated its strength:
Constant recursion
Strong midgame pressure
Ability to outlast Chaos threats
The Chaos deck had explosive potential, but Zombies controlled the pace and converted advantage into a win.
👉 Winner: 🧟 Zombies take the tournament.
🌟Featured Match — Fusion/Red-Eyes/Plant Hybrid
One of the most interesting decks of the event was this creative hybrid build, showcased in a featured match and piloted to a win.
💡 Why This Deck Is So Fun (and Creative)
This deck is a perfect example of what NeoGoat enables:
🔥 Multiple Engines Working Together
Plant engine (Lonefire Blossom + Hermitree) for field presence
Red-Eyes engine for recursion via Red-Eyes Spirit
Fusion package with Prisma, Miracle Fusion, and Metamorphosis
Skill Drain Synergy
Cards like:
Giant Orc
Fusilier Dragon
become huge beaters with no downside under Skill Drain, turning the deck into a pressure machine.
The fourth NeoGoat Online Tournament showcased a wide variety of strategies, but a few decks stood out not just for their results, but for how they approached the format.
In this post, we highlight three of the most interesting builds from the event:
🏆 José Dolores — Warrior Earth Control
🧟 Charly Goat — Zombie Toolbox Control
🔮 Angel hdz — Timaeus Spellcaster Fusion
Each one represents a different way to play NeoGoat — pressure, recursion, and hybrid combo.
🏆 José Dolores — Warrior Earth Control
A clean, efficient pressure deck built around strong attackers and perfect trading.
Monsters (18):
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x D.D. Assailant
3x D.D. Warrior
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
1x Elemental HERO Wildheart
1x Exiled Force
3x Giant Rat
1x Gigantes
3x Goblin Attack Force
1x Injection Fairy Lily
1x Morphing Jar
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
Spells (13):
1x Book of Moon
1x Creature Swap
1x Enemy Controller
1x Heavy Storm
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
1x Nobleman of Crossout
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Reinforcement of the Army
1x Scapegoat
2x Smashing Ground
1x Swords of Revealing Light
Traps (10):
2x Bottomless Trap Hole
1x Call of the Haunted
3x Dust Tornado
1x Mirror Force
1x Ring of Destruction
1x Torrential Tribute
Side Deck:
3x Des Wombat
1x Jinzo
3x Mobius the Frost Monarch
1x Giant Trunade
1x Ceasefire
3x Hallowed Life Barrier
3x Royal Decree
Deck Identity
Constant pressure backed by efficient removal
This deck doesn’t overcomplicate things — it trades cleanly and pushes damage every turn. Cards like Giant Rat and Goblin Attack Force create a fast clock, while a tight control package ensures the opponent never stabilizes.
Charly Goat — Zombie Toolbox Control
A grind-heavy strategy focused on recursion and value through the graveyard.
Monsters (18):
2x Berserk Gorilla
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
1x Exiled Force
2x Giant Rat
1x Gigantes
1x Injection Fairy Lily
1x Marshmallon
1x Morphing Jar
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
3x Pyramid Turtle
2x Ryu Kokki
1x Spirit Reaper
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
1x Vampire Lord
Spells (13):
2x Book of Life
1x Brain Control
1x Creature Swap
1x Heavy Storm
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
2x Nobleman of Crossout
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Scapegoat
1x Swords of Revealing Light
Traps (9):
1x Bottomless Trap Hole
1x Call of the Haunted
1x Dust Tornado
1x Mirror Force
1x Raigeki Break
1x Ring of Destruction
1x Sakuretsu Armor
1x Torrential Tribute
Side Deck:
3x Cipher Soldier
1x Jinzo
2x Mobius the Frost Monarch
2x Mystic Swordsman LV2
2x Book of Moon
2x Shield Crush
2x Smashing Ground
1x Royal Decree
Deck Identity
Win through recursion and resource advantage
With Pyramid Turtle and Book of Life, this deck thrives in long duels. It forces repeated interactions until the opponent runs out of answers, then takes over with Zombies that keep coming back.
Angel hdz — Timaeus Spellcaster Fusion
One of the most creative decks of the tournament, combining control with explosive fusion plays.
Monsters (18):
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
2x Dark Magician Girl
1x Elemental HERO Prisma
1x Exiled Force
3x Gravekeeper's Spy
1x Injection Fairy Lily
1x Jinzo
2x Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
1x Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
2x Skilled Dark Magician
2x The Tricky
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
Spells (15):
2x Book of Moon
1x Creature Swap
1x Heavy Storm
2x Magical Dimension
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Reinforcement of the Army
1x Scapegoat
2x Smashing Ground
1x Spell Shattering Arrow
3x The Eye of Timaeus
Traps (5):
2x Bottomless Trap Hole
3x Royal Decree
Extra Deck:
2x Dark Magician Girl the Dragon Knight
1x Dark Paladin
1x Amulet Dragon
Side Deck:
1x Mobius the Frost Monarch
1x Axe of Despair
1x Brain Control
1x Lightning Vortex
2x Shrink
1x Soul Exchange
1x Call of the Haunted
2x Final Attack Orders
1x Mirror Force
2x Raigeki Break
2x Sakuretsu Armor
Deck Identity
Control the game… then explode into fusion bosses
This deck plays a slower game early with Gravekeeper’s Spy and Kycoo, then transitions into powerful fusion monsters using The Eye of Timaeus, creating sudden and decisive swings.
Closing Thoughts
These three decks perfectly represent the current state of NeoGoat:
🏆 Warrior Earth → consistency and pressure
🧟 Zombies → recursion and grind
🧙 Spellcaster Fusion → creativity and explosive plays
No single strategy dominates — and that’s exactly what makes the format exciting.
Different paths, same goal: win through better decisions.
Round 3 was the decisive stage of the tournament. By this point, players were no longer just executing their decks — they were managing momentum, protecting narrow leads, and looking for the exact sequence that would break open each match. The result was a round full of long grind games, explosive swing turns, and several duels where one correct answer would have changed everything.
And when the dust settled, José Dolores stood above the field as the tournament champion.
Table 1 — José Dolores (Cple) vs Charly Goat
This was one of the most complete control matches of the round. It had clean answers, resource trading, tempo swings, and a final where José Dolores kept pressing until Charly ran out of room to recover. José won the match 2-0.
Duel 1
The duel opened with Pyramid Turtle from Charly Goat, but José immediately responded with Reinforcement of the Army into Mystic Swordsman LV2, shutting down the Turtle without allowing its effect to generate value. That was an early statement: this would be a duel defined by efficiency.
Charly answered well. Breaker the Magical Warrior forced action immediately, taking out José’s Dust Tornado while Dust chained to remove Charly’s Bottomless Trap Hole. Breaker then ran over Mystic Swordsman LV2, giving Charly the first strong tempo push. But José answered that momentum with Gigantes, forcing out Charly’s Mirror Force, then followed with Elemental HERO Wildheart before Charly cleared it with Nobleman of Crossout.
The duel then shifted into a more tactical midgame. José used his own Breaker to clear Swords of Revealing Light, landed direct damage, and set up more defense. Charly answered with Exiled Force to remove Breaker, but José continued applying pressure with D.D. Assailant. When Charly stole it temporarily with Brain Control and tried to swing the duel back, José’s set Bottomless Trap Hole removed the follow-up Ryu Kokki, preventing the stolen momentum from turning into board control.
One of the biggest turning points came from Morphing Jar. Charly attacked into it with Tribe-Infecting Virus, and both players refilled, but José came out of it with immediate pressure: Goblin Attack Force hit over Tribe, forcing Charly to answer again. Charly did manage to stabilize briefly through D.D. Warrior Lady, Berserk Gorilla, and Book of Life reviving Pyramid Turtle, but José dismantled that board with Smashing Ground and Exiled Force.
The endgame was decided by one clean swing sequence. Charly tried to rebuild with another Berserk Gorilla, but José answered with Creature Swap, taking the Gorilla and forcing awkward trades through Giant Rat. After that, Charly attempted a final defense with Spirit Reaper, Dust Tornado, and a set Nobleman of Crossout, but José drew Pot of Greed, found Heavy Storm, cleared the backrow, summoned D.D. Warrior to remove Reaper, and then attacked directly with Berserk Gorilla for game. It was a long duel, but José’s pressure stayed organized all the way through.
Duel 2
The second duel was less chaotic and more controlled. Charly opened with Spirit Reaper and Bottomless Trap Hole, and immediately punished José’s first Goblin Attack Force. But José answered that with Ring of Destruction on Berserk Gorilla, trading life points while keeping Charly from converting early pressure into a lead.
From there, José gradually took over the duel. D.D. Warrior Lady traded off with Spirit Reaper, then a second Goblin Attack Force forced out Scapegoat, slowing Charly’s development. Charly tried to rebuild with Injection Fairy Lily, Cipher Soldier, Pot of Greed, Smashing Ground, Gigantes, and finally Exiled Force plus Torrential Tribute, but each line either got interrupted or failed to generate enough pressure to close the gap. José kept chipping away with Mystic Swordsman LV2, Giant Rat, and recurring Goblin Attack Force pressure backed by Call of the Haunted.
The finish was straightforward. One Goblin Attack Force hit for 2300, then Call of the Haunted brought another one back for a second 2300 direct attack, and finally José summoned yet another Goblin Attack Force to land the last hit. It was not flashy, but it was decisive — exactly the kind of duel that wins tournaments.
Table 2 — Yahikor vs Angel hdz
This was one of the most interesting spellcaster-heavy matches of the round, mixing Dark Magician lines, flip effects, Tsukuyomi interactions, and modern-style Timaeus fusion pressure. Angel won the match 2-0.
Duel 1
The duel started with Kycoo from Angel and Old Vindictive Magician backed by Torrential Tribute from Yahikor. When Angel tried to develop further with Skilled Dark Magician, Torrential cleaned up both monsters and reset the field. That could have opened the door for Yahikor, but Angel quickly rebuilt with Gravekeeper’s Spy, another Spy from deck, and then a direct push supported by Kycoo.
Yahikor tried to create a swing with Call of the Haunted reviving Copycat, but Book of Moon shut that line down cleanly. Afterward, Yahikor tried to fight back through Injection Fairy Lily, but Angel responded with Dark Magician Girl into The Eye of Timaeus, summoning Dark Magician Girl the Dragon Knight. That was the defining play of the duel: the Dragon Knight removed Lily and then hit directly for 2600. Yahikor attempted a comeback with Dark Magic Curtain into Dark Magician and Creature Swap, but the exchange failed to stabilize the field, and the Dragon Knight simply attacked again for game.
Duel 2
This duel was more tactical and more interactive. Yahikor opened with Old Vindictive Magician, then used it to remove Gravekeeper’s Spy, but Bottomless Trap Hole immediately answered Skilled Dark Magician. From there, Card Destruction reshaped both hands and pushed the duel into a strange resource battle. Yahikor did find a strong midgame line with Magical Dimension, turning Old Vindictive into Dark Magician and clearing Angel’s Skilled Dark Magician, then followed with direct attacks from Dark Magician to seize the initiative.
Angel’s best response came later through chained Magical Dimension interactions. When Yahikor tried to protect momentum, Angel navigated through Raigeki Break and used double Dimension effects to land Dark Magician Girl while removing Dark Magician from the field. That stabilized the duel completely. From there, the pace slowed, but Angel gradually turned the game with Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, repeatedly attacking Yahikor’s graveyard by banishing Dark Magician and Injection Fairy Lily, then later winning battles over opposing monsters and surviving Yahikor’s flip-control attempts with Tsukuyomi.
Yahikor had one last window after clearing the field with Torrential Tribute, but Angel rebuilt faster. Skilled Dark Magician eventually connected directly multiple times, and with Yahikor unable to convert his final draws into a real comeback, he conceded. It was a much slower duel than the first, but Angel won it through cleaner recovery and stronger graveyard denial.
Table 3 — Krlospollo vs ShadowEfra
This match was one of the most dramatic of the round. It was a clash between Chaos control and a Phoenix/Monarch strategy capable of turning one monster into repeated inevitability. Pollo won the match 2-1, but not before dropping the first duel.
Duel 1
ShadowEfra opened by loading the grave with Thunder Dragon, setting Mirror Force, and establishing Blade Knight. Pollo responded with the classic Hand of Nephthys line, stealing Blade Knight with Brain Control and tributing both for Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys. After Card Destruction, the duel accelerated quickly. Phoenix attacked, ran into Mirror Force, and then ShadowEfra followed with Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, dealing damage and banishing Phoenix copies from the graveyard.
The important nuance here is that the banish choice was imperfect, he banished the discarded phoenix not the one destroyed allowing it to keep returning. That mattered, because Phoenix revived, forced out Ring of Destruction, revived again, forced Scapegoat, and kept pressing through Marshmallon and later Zaborg the Thunder Monarch. Even so, ShadowEfra held on. Raigeki Break, Chaos Sorcerer, and eventually Return from the Different Dimension gave him enough control to survive the recursion and force Pollo to surrender despite the Phoenix mistake. It was a good example of how even after an error, Chaos can still reclaim the board if it finds enough banish and pressure.
Duel 2
The second duel was where Pollo fully turned the match. Early pressure came from UFO Turtle, then the game swung when ShadowEfra used Creature Swap and Brain Control lines to try to disrupt the Fire deck’s progression. Pollo navigated around that with Compulsory Evacuation Device, then began committing to stronger summons. Spirit of Flames, Hand of Nephthys, and Pulling the Rug interactions bought him enough time to clear the field and resolve a crucial Soul Exchange into Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch.
The key line came later: Premature Burial revived Thestalos, Metamorphosis turned it into Ryu Senshi, and suddenly the duel shifted from attrition into a very hard lock on ShadowEfra’s defensive options. Ryu Senshi pushed direct damage, then Soul Exchange into another Thestalos took out Kycoo, and finally Circle of the Fire Kings recycled Thestalos for one more direct attack that ended the duel. This was one of the sharpest sequences of the whole round.
Duel 3
The third duel became the Phoenix duel everyone will remember. It opened slowly, with Thunder Dragon setup and Scapegoat from ShadowEfra, and traps from Pollo. After Pot of Greed, Flame Ruler, Bonfire, and Spirit of Flames, the duel’s first big life swing came through Ring of Destruction, damaging both players. ShadowEfra then pressed with Thunder Dragon and D.D. Warrior Lady, forcing Pollo into a risky Brain Control line that let him summon Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys — only for D.D. Warrior Lady to banish it immediately.
Even then, Pollo kept playing toward inevitability. Torrential Tribute answered Chaos Sorcerer, Charcoal Inpachi turned into Thestalos, and later Card Destruction plus Soul Exchange opened the door for Circle of the Fire Kings to bring Phoenix back anyway. From that point on, the duel revolved around whether ShadowEfra could permanently answer Phoenix. He could not. Even after surviving big attacks, using Return from the Different Dimension for one last swing, and dropping Pollo all the way to 400 LP, the lack of a lasting answer let Phoenix return once again and take over the endgame.
The duel log even shows the game state looping through repeated patterns before Phoenix finally attacked directly for the win. It was the clearest example in the round of a recursive threat becoming overwhelming once the opponent runs out of correct answers.
Table 4 — Kztoor vs Totonatiuh
This match was a very fun contrast: fusion-oriented spellcaster lines from Kztoor against Totonatiuh’s control shell with ritual, Chaos, and utility monsters. Totonatiuh won the match 2-1.
Duel 1
Kztoor had one of the flashiest openings of the round. After taking an early hit from Jinzo, he used E - Emergency Call into Elemental HERO Prisma, milled Dark Magician, then fused Prisma with Mirage Dragon into Amulet Dragon. That let him clear graveyard spells and immediately beat over Jinzo. It was a very strong comeback line.
But Totonatiuh stayed composed. D.D. Warrior Lady traded with Amulet Dragon, Breaker the Magical Warrior and Raigeki Break dismantled Kztoor’s backrow, and later Chaos Sorcerer plus Relinquished lines pushed the duel away from Kztoor’s fusion advantage. The late game became messy, and the log is incomplete near the end, but Totonatiuh ultimately took the duel.
Duel 2
Kztoor came back hard in the second duel. He opened with Reinforcement of the Army into Prisma, used it with The Eye of Timaeus to summon Dark Paladin, then backed that with Royal Decree and Call of the Haunted for Dark Magician. That was overwhelming. Totonatiuh tried to survive with Scapegoat, Metamorphosis, Manju of the Ten Thousand Hands, and other defensive tools, but Paladin plus Dark Magician kept the pressure high while Gravekeeper’s Spy helped widen the board. Totonatiuh eventually conceded under the weight of that setup.
Duel 3
The third duel was much shorter and much harsher for Kztoor. Totonatiuh opened with Thunder Dragon and D.D. Warrior Lady, then after a mutual wipe through Torrential Tribute and Compulsory Evacuation Device, he rebuilt first with Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer. Kztoor set Royal Decree, but Breaker the Magical Warrior immediately removed it, clearing the way for Kycoo and Breaker to attack directly. After that, Kztoor never recovered. The log even notes that he bricked, and shortly after another draw from Totonatiuh, he conceded.
Tournament Winner — José Dolores
After the final round, José Dolores finished on top and became the winner of the tournament. His Round 3 victory over Charly Goat was a perfect summary of why: he played cleanly, kept the pressure organized, and converted advantage into wins without losing control of the duel. From Mystic Swordsman pressure to Goblin Attack Force finishes, José showed the kind of discipline that wins events.
Final Thoughts
Round 3 showed several important things about this tournament and about NeoGoat in general.
This round felt like a real snapshot of the format: Warriors, Chaos, Phoenix, Monarchs, and Spellcaster fusion lines all had moments to shine. And at the end of it all, José Dolores earned the title by navigating the final stretch better than everyone else.
After reviewing the impact on the meta and several emerging interactions, the following changes are being applied:
❌ Last Will → Forbidden 🔻 Elemental HERO Nova Master → Limited to 1 copy
💡 Reasoning: As the format is still in its early stages, it’s important to address potentially problematic dynamics before they fully develop.
Last Will was enabling overly explosive sequences that are difficult to interact with, especially in combination with engines like Warrior and Plant.
Nova Master is being limited to prevent the rise of splashable mini-engines that any deck can use to generate easy advantage without committing to a dedicated strategy (similar to what happened in Edison with Absolute Zero).
👉 The goal is to preserve deck diversity from the start and avoid more drastic corrections later on.
📅 Effective immediately for the April 2026 format. This update will be reflected on the blog.
16 Duelists — Round 1 Feature + Full Final Breakdown
Another strong NeoGoat turnout with 16 players battling through a diverse meta: Monarch variants, HERO builds, Chaos shells, Zombies… and a Plant deck that ended up taking it all.
Round 1 Monarch vs HERO Blast (Win)
The opening featured match immediately showed how explosive the format can be.
The Monarch deck tried to establish early control through tribute pressure and removal, but the HERO Blast build played a very different game:
Constant recursion through HERO interactions
Efficient trades with backrow
Ability to recover tempo after Monarch hits
💡 Key takeaway:
Monarchs still hit hard, but HERO Blast punishes overextension and wins the grind game. Once Monarch loses momentum, it struggles to close.
Round 2 - Plants (win) vs Chaos
Round 3 - Chaos Monarch (win) vs Dai Grepher Deck
A very unique and aggressive build focused on:
Unexpected Dai + The A. Forces → explosive ATK scaling
This time, we bring you multiple featured matches with video coverage—except for one particularly intense duel that turned into a full-length war, which we’ll present through replay links instead.
🎥 Featured Match: Pollo vs Kztoor
This match was a perfect clash between Fire/Phoenix aggression and a Spellcaster/Fusion toolbox build.
Duel 1 – Chaos into Dragon Knight Finish
The early game was fairly standard: Apprentice Magician setups vs UFO Turtle. But things escalated fast.
Creature Swap + Ring of Destruction interaction created an early resource reset.
Pollo quickly assembled Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys, threatening a long-term grind.
However, Kztoor responded brilliantly:
Magical Dimension → Dark Magician Girl
Followed by The Eye of Timaeus → Dark Magician Girl the Dragon Knight
That swing was massive. With Mirage Dragon backing it up, Kztoor pushed over 5000 damage in one turn to close the duel instantly.
👉 Classic NeoGoat moment: a slow setup game suddenly turning into a lethal push.
Duel 2 – Chaos Control vs Phoenix Grind
This duel was much longer and far more technical.
Key moments:
Early Amulet Dragon + Chaos Sorcerer combo gave Kztoor strong tempo.
Morphing Jar #2 completely reset the board, one of the most chaotic plays of the round.
Pollo stabilized with:
Sacred Phoenix loops
Spirit of Flames pressure
The turning point:
D.D. Warrior Lady banishing Phoenix temporarily stopped the recursion engine.
But Pollo adapted:
Rebuilt board presence
Maintained pressure with repeated attacks and backrow control
Eventually, Kztoor ran out of answers and conceded.
Duel 3 – Resource War into Burn Pressure
This final duel showcased resource denial and tempo control.
Highlights:
Giant Trunade into double Spy pressure gave Kztoor early dominance.
Needle Ceiling wiped a developed board at the perfect time.
Pollo’s comeback:
Hino-Kagu-Tsuchi + Spirit of Flames combo applied brutal hand pressure
Constant chip damage forced Kztoor into defensive play
The duel ended with sustaine damage sealing the match for Pollo.
👉 A great example of how Fire decks can pivot from combo into attrition.
🎥 Featured Match: Efraín vs Totonatiuh
This match was too intense and too long to include as a single video, so instead we present the full replays:
Efrain’s Thunder Dragon + Tsukuyomi control deck did work early, but Tona kept coming back with Relinquished steals and Chaos Sorcerer plays.
The absolute highlight was Efrain’s Tribe-Infecting Virus wiping out an entire Spellcaster board, followed by a Gatling Dragon finish that felt straight out of a highlight reel.
Tona had some insane value with Manju and Black Illusion Ritual, but Efrain’s removal and bounce game was just too consistent.
One of the most interesting aspects:
Totonatiuh constantly tried to stabilize with control tools like Gravity Bind and Level Limit
Efraín repeatedly broke through with removal and recursionfrom Magical Stone Excavation.
👉 This match perfectly shows how NeoGoat rewards patience, sequencing, and resource timing over raw aggression.
🎥 Featured Match: Carlos Dávila vs Ángel Hernández
A clash between Spellcaster tempo and Zombie recursion.
Duel 1 – Aggression vs Backrow
Early Kycoo + Injection Fairy Lily pressure put Ángel on the back foot.
A devastating push:
The Tricky + Lily + Kycoo dealt massive damage in one turn.
Ángel attempted to stabilize with traps, but:
Mirror Force and Torrential interactions reset both players.
The finishing blow came after a clean push once resources ran dry.
Duel 2 – Zombie Engine Takes Over
This time, the Zombie deck showed its power:
Pyramid Turtle chains into Vampire Lord and Ryu Kokki
Book of Life created tempo swings and graveyard denial
Multiple floating effects overwhelmed Ángel's field
👉 Once Zombies establish momentum, they are incredibly hard to stop.
🎥 Featured Match: Yahiko vs José Dolores
A very fun duel between Dark Magician combo and Warrior beatdown.
Duel 1 – Explosive Dark Magician Opening
Yahiko opened with:
Magical Dimension → Dark Magician
Followed by Dark Magician of Chaos
This created a huge early lead, but:
José fought back with:
Mystic Swordsman LV2
Aggressive board pressure
Eventually, consistent attacks closed the duel.
Duel 2 – Midrange Control Battle
Early Ring of Destruction equalized tempo
Morphing Jar + Gigantes + Torrential Tribute created chaotic resets
Yahiko tried to stabilize with:
Gravekeeper engine
Flip monsters
But José’s steady pressure with:
D.D. Assailant
Goblin Attack Force
Tribe-Infecting Virus
…slowly chipped away until victory.
Closing Thoughts
Round 2 showcased everything that makes NeoGoat special:
Combo decks that can OTK out of nowhere
Control decks that stretch games into long tactical battles
Creative engines like Phoenix, Zombies, Ritual, and Spellcasters all competing on equal footing
And this is just the middle of the tournament…
👉 The final results are coming soon, when we publish the third and last round of this event.