The NeoGoat Anniversary “Γ La Carte” event produced one of the strangest collections of decklists seen in the format so far.
While Chaos strategies were still heavily represented, many players experimented with unusual tech cards, control engines, floodgates, Ritual interactions, and forgotten archetypes trying to adapt to the special event rules.
In this post, we’ll be showcasing some of the decks used during the event, along with brief explanations of their strategy and notable card choices.
From Gravekeeper lockdown builds to aggressive hybrid strategies and bizarre side deck techs, the tournament ended up feeling less like a solved meta and more like a giant NeoGoat laboratory.
⚠️ Note: For this event, Ritual Monsters used for the special Γ La Carte rule are shown in the Side Deck section when uploaded to the NeoGoat Builder, since the current builder does not yet support Ritual Monsters inside the Extra Deck area.
All featured decklists will also be available on the new NeoGoat Builder site. Players can test opening hands, edit lists directly in-browser, and download .ydk files for simulators.
25 duelists entered the NeoGoat anniversary special event for 5 rounds of Swiss using the experimental “Γ La Carte” format.
This wasn’t a normal NeoGoat tournament.
For this event, Ritual Monsters were placed in the Extra Deck while their Ritual Spells remained in the Main Deck. Once the Ritual Spell resolved normally, the Ritual Monster was summoned directly from the Extra Deck.
The Golden Pass was awarded to Gustavo Chapa. The Golden Pass grants free entry to all NeoGoat tournaments during June and July.
Round 1 — Reasoning Combo vs Gravekeepers
One of the most memorable matches of the tournament was Marcos’ Reasoning/Monster Gate combo deck against a Gravekeeper Ritual control strategy.
The duel immediately showed how explosive the anniversary format could become.
Duel 1 — Heavy Storm swing
The combo player opened aggressively with Fusilier Dragon and backrow while the Gravekeeper player established Necrovalley early alongside Morphing Jar.
The game exploded after Morphing Jar resolved.
Both players discarded everything and drew 5 new cards, instantly changing the pace of the duel.
Breaker the Magical Warrior tried to push damage, but Scapegoat absorbed the pressure.
Then came the turning point:
Heavy Storm.
Necrovalley and multiple set cards disappeared at once.
Immediately after clearing the field, the combo player activated Reasoning.
Fusilier Dragon hit the field for free.
Then things became even worse for the Gravekeeper player:
Brain Control steals Breaker
Breaker gets tributed for Airknight Parshath
Parshath attacks Morphing Jar
draw effect resolves
Fusilier attacks directly
Main Phase 2 → Metamorphosis into Dark Balter the Terrible
Suddenly the field was completely locked down.
Dark Balter immediately destroyed the Gravekeeper set monster next turn, Fusilier continued attacking directly, and the Gravekeeper player conceded shortly after.
Duel 2 — Necrovalley pressure
This duel went very differently.
The Gravekeeper player established Necrovalley early again, but this time backed it up with Gravekeeper Spy and Gravekeeper Assailant pressure.
The combo deck attempted a Summoner Monk into Sacred Crane setup:
discard Book of Moon
special summon Crane
draw card
Monster Gate on Crane
Airknight Parshath appeared from the deck…
…but Bottomless Trap Hole immediately removed it.
That completely killed the momentum.
The Gravekeeper player carefully rebuilt Necrovalley after Mystical Space Typhoon destroyed the first copy, then slowly converted the field advantage into lethal pressure.
A well-timed Book of Moon during battle phase also created an awkward combat step where Summoner Monk was forced into attack position and destroyed.
The combo player quickly ran out of resources and conceded.
Duel 3 — The Masked Beast appears
The deciding duel became one of the wildest games of the event.
The combo player started fast again:
Summoner Monk
Sacred Crane draw engine
Monster Gate
another Sacred Crane
multiple backrow
But this time the Gravekeeper player flipped Royal Decree during the End Phase, shutting down several defensive options.
Airknight Parshath appeared again through Reasoning and immediately started generating advantage.
Then the entire duel suddenly transformed because of the anniversary rules.
The Gravekeeper player activated the Ritual Spell for The Masked Beast.
Using two Gravekeeper Spies as tribute material, the gigantic Ritual Monster emerged directly from the Extra Deck with 3200 ATK.
The room reportedly exploded when it hit the table.
Masked Beast immediately destroyed King Dragun in battle while Breaker cleaned up tokens.
But the combo deck somehow survived.
Pot of Greed found the answer:
Metamorphosis on a token → Thousand-Eyes Restrict.
TER absorbed The Masked Beast itself.
The impossible comeback looked real.
But after several more exchanges involving Lightning Vortex, Fusilier Dragon, and repeated pressure, the combo player eventually stabilized and closed the duel.
One of the strangest matches of the tournament.
Water Plant Deck Takes Over
The breakout strategy of the event was easily the Water Plant deck.
At first glance the deck looked bizarre:
Abyss Soldier
Lonefire Blossom
Sylvan Hermitree
Frost and Flame Dragon
Salvage
Mother Grizzly
Lord Poison
But throughout the event the deck kept generating huge value loops.
After many updates, fixes, and community feedback, the NeoGoat Deck Builder has become one of the most advanced custom retro-format deckbuilding tools ever made for Yu-Gi-Oh!.
Players no longer need to manually rewrite decklists before importing them.
Small quality-of-life improvement.
Massive time saver.
⚖️ Improved Banlist Validation
The validator system has also been upgraded.
Deck legality updates more reliably depending on the active NeoGoat format.
This is especially important because NeoGoat changes over time through rotating banlists and Extra Pool adjustments.
As new formats arrive, the builder adapts with them.
π Test Hand Option
The builder also includes a Test Hand feature, similar to the one in Master Duel.
This lets players instantly draw opening hands and check how their deck actually feels before playing.
It is useful for testing:
opening consistency
brick hands
combo starters
side deck changes
monster/spell/trap ratios
NeoGoat’s 6-card opening hand
Players can also use the +1 Draw button to simulate the next turn and see how the deck develops after the opening hand.One of the most useful upgrades:
Decks that you find from the library can now load directly into the editor.
That means players can:
open tournament decks
modify lists instantly
test changes quickly
learn from other players
experiment without rebuilding from scratch
This makes community deck sharing much more powerful.
Designed for Experimentation
NeoGoat rewards creativity more than most retro formats.
There are still countless:
unexplored engines
forgotten archetypes
underused Extra Pool cards
strange tech choices
NeoDraft interactions
rogue strategies
waiting to be discovered.
The deckbuilder was made to support that experimentation.
Because the more players test ideas…
the more the format evolves.
Future Features
More upgrades are already planned or being explored:
π Every player opened a Flaming Eternity pack before the duel and secretly selected 1 card to add to their starting hand.
And once again, those hidden cards completely changed entire matches.
This event showed something important again:
Even NeoGoat’s established decks keep evolving every week.
⚔️ Round 1 — Chaos vs Monarch
The opening round immediately became one of the most explosive duels of the night.
The Monarch player opened aggressively with tribute pressure and removal, trying to slow the duel before Chaos monsters could take over.
But Chaos adapted quickly.
Early discard setup combined with smart resource management allowed the Chaos player to stabilize after an aggressive Monarch opening.
A key turning point happened when the Monarch side committed heavily into the field expecting lethal pressure…
…only for Chaos to swing momentum completely with a sudden field reset and immediate counter-push.
From there:
Chaos Sorcerer pressure
repeated removal
graveyard advantage
and efficient trades
slowly overwhelmed the Monarch deck.
Chaos wins Round 1.
⚔️ Round 2 — Good Stuff vs Warriors
This duel was much more technical.
The Warrior player focused on tempo:
strong normal summons
pressure attacks
battle traps
aggressive positioning
Meanwhile, the Good Stuff deck played patiently and traded resources efficiently.
A major moment came after the Warrior side attempted a large push through backrow…
…but walked directly into layered defensive interaction that completely stopped the attack phase.
After surviving the pressure, the Good Stuff player slowly gained advantage through consistent 1-for-1 trades and stronger late-game draws.
Eventually the Warrior deck ran out of momentum.
Good Stuff wins Round 2.
⚔️ Round 3
No featured video survived from Round 3.
⚔️ Round 4 — Plant Water vs Good Stuff
This became one of the craziest matches of the entire event.
The Plant Water deck showcased exactly why NeoGoat’s larger card pool creates completely different strategies compared to traditional Goat environments.
Instead of playing only slow control, the deck suddenly exploded with banish-based combo turns involving:
Dimension Fusion
Frost and Flame Dragon
Lekunga
The synergy became extremely difficult to contain.
Lekunga repeatedly converted WATER monsters in the graveyard into tokens, helping create field presence while also setting up removal and banish resources.
Then Frost and Flame Dragon started controlling the duel by discarding cards to destroy monsters while constantly threatening huge swings in tempo.
But the most dangerous turns came after multiple monsters were banished.
Once enough resources accumulated outside the graveyard…
π₯ Dimension Fusion suddenly threatened to refill the entire field at once.
The Good Stuff player managed to survive several pushes with defensive traps and careful trades.
But eventually the recursive pressure became too much.
A late-game Dimension Fusion sequence completely flipped the board and allowed Plant Water to close the duel.
Plant Water wins Round 4.
Finals — Plant Water vs Zombie
The finals became a battle of recursion.
Both decks constantly returned monsters to the field and refused to run out of resources.
Plant Water tried controlling the pace early with defensive positioning and gradual advantage generation.
But Zombies slowly took over the graveyard game.
Once the Zombie player established momentum, every removal card started becoming less effective.
Pyramid Turtle loops, graveyard recursion, and constant field presence eventually overwhelmed the Plant strategy.
The final turns became extremely tense as both players were nearly out of resources.
Plant Water still managed several dangerous combo turns involving Lekunga and banished monsters…
…but the Zombie deck simply kept coming back.
One final recursive push secured the match.
Zombie wins the tournament.
Final Thoughts
NeoDraft Flaming Eternity continues producing some of the most unpredictable NeoGoat tournaments yet.
Because players secretly add one card from their opened pack before the duel starts:
no opening is fully safe
no matchup is fully understood
and every round can suddenly change from a single hidden card
This event also showed how much unexplored power still exists inside NeoGoat’s larger card pool.
Strategies like Plant Water are doing things almost impossible in traditional Goat environments:
recursive token engines
banish combo loops
Dimension Fusion finishers
hybrid attribute-based control
And with 21 players experimenting every week, entirely new strategies continue appearing constantly.
The NeoGoat format has changed dramatically over the last several months.
Early NeoGoat was heavily centered around aggressive Earth decks, Warriors, and classic Goat-inspired Chaos shells. But as the format evolved through rotating Extra Pool updates, NeoDraft experimentation, and multiple banlist revisions, the environment became far more diverse.
This tier list is based exclusively on actual tournament history from the NeoGoat tournament archive:
This is NOT based on potential, there are maybe undiscovered powerful decks that haven't been used in tournaments yet.
Only:
podium finishes
repeated appearances
tournament wins
long-term consistency
recurring success across different events and stores
S Tier — The Meta Definers
These are the decks that shaped NeoGoat the most through actual tournament results.
Not necessarily unbeatable.
But undeniably central to the format.
☯️ Chaos Variants
The most represented deck family in NeoGoat history.
Includes:
Chaos
Chaos Recruit
Chaos Warrior
Chaos Monarch
Chaos Return
Chaos Flip
Chaos variants appear constantly across:
local tournaments
online events
multiple banlists
transition periods
different stores
However, an important detail:
Chaos may NOT actually be the single strongest deck in NeoGoat.
So why is it everywhere?
Simple: many players already owned Chaos cards from traditional Goat Format.
That made Chaos the easiest deck to bring into NeoGoat:
familiar shell
familiar gameplay
already built physically
easy to adapt
Meanwhile, newer NeoGoat strategies often required:
additional testing
newer pool cards
different engines
experimentation
So Chaos became the community “default deck” more than an unstoppable format tyrant.
Why S Tier
✔️ Highest overall representation ✔️ Survived every format transition ✔️ Extremely flexible deckbuilding ✔️ Constant top cuts across months ✔️ Adapts better than almost any strategy
☠️ Zombie
Probably the biggest true success story of NeoGoat.
Zombie started as a rogue strategy…
…but gradually became one of the format’s defining decks through repeated strong performances.
Unlike many experimental decks that spike once and disappear, Zombies kept returning to podiums.
Especially around:
Pyramid Turtle
Ryu Kokki
Book of Life
Compared to Chaos, Zombie actually has a very strong conversion rate relative to appearances.
Why S Tier
✔️ Multiple tournament wins ✔️ Excellent long-term consistency ✔️ Strong recursive grind game ✔️ Successful across different pilots ✔️ Continued succeeding after format shifts
A Tier — Major Tournament Threats
These decks repeatedly perform well and absolutely win tournaments…
…but have slightly less long-term dominance than S Tier.
π Earth Decks
One of the strongest “quality over quantity” deck families in NeoGoat history.
The deck does not always appear in massive numbers…
This build mixes direct attack Toon pressure with a reactive Spellcaster control shell, creating a deck capable of switching between explosive damage and slower midrange resource games depending on the matchup.
Instead of relying entirely on Toon World and hoping the opponent cannot answer it, the deck uses cards like:
Dark Renewal
Magical Dimension
Skilled Dark Magician
Apprentice Magician
to maintain tempo even after the Toon engine gets disrupted.
The result is something closer to a “Toon Midrange Spellcaster” strategy rather than classic Toon OTK gameplay.