Another exciting NeoGoat local brought together 16 participants for a competitive and dynamic tournament night. With a diverse field that included Gadget control, Earth Return strategies, Spell Counter builds, Burn, Warriors, and a powerful Red-Eyes deck, the meta felt wide open from Round 1.
Let’s break down the action featured in the recorded matches.
π₯ Round 1 – Gadget π vs Earth Return
The Gadget deck aimed to grind advantage through constant normal summons using Ultimate Offering and incremental card economy, slowly overwhelming the opponent. Across the table, the Earth Return deck prepared explosive late-game pushes using graveyard setup and powerful recursion plays.
The duel became a test of patience:
Gadgets kept the board stable.
Earth Return carefully filled the graveyard.
The turning point came when Return attempted a big comeback push, but timely backrow disruption slowed the momentum.
A strong technical opener to set the tone for the night.
π₯ Round 2 – Red-Eyes π vs Spell Counter
Next up, a thematic clash between raw Dragon power and calculated Spell Counter control.
The Red-Eyes strategy focused on pressuring the opponent early with high-ATK threats. Meanwhile, the Spell Counter build used engines like Skilled Dark Magician and Magical Citadel of Endymion to accumulate advantage over time.
Key moments included:
Spell Counters stacking quickly during the midgame.
A decisive swing when the Dragon player capitalized on a cleared board for game.
Red-Eyes advanced with momentum building.
π₯ Round 3 – Red-Eyes π vs Zombie Monarch
Key elements of the strategy:
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Lacooda generating steady draw advantage.
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Monarch-style tribute plays such as Mobius the Frost Monarch to clear backrow.
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Zombie recursion and grind control.
Red-Eyes had to push through layers of incremental advantage instead of pure stall damage. The matchup became more about tempo than endurance.
Red-Eyes ultimately prevailed, but this deck proved it was much more than a gimmick.
Final – Red-Eyes vs Warriors π
The championship match featured two aggressive strategies:
Red-Eyes, fueled by Dragon beatdown and explosive turns.
Warriors, leveraging toolbox precision and efficient removal.
The Warrior deck showcased why the archetype remains so dangerous in NeoGoat:
Consistent searching.
Flexible answers.
Clean tempo control.
The final duel swung heavily when Warriors established board control and denied Red-Eyes its comeback window. Once momentum shifted, the Warrior deck never looked back.
From Warrior consistency to the deep Red-Eyes run and the clever Zombie Monarch engine, it was a big, fun tournament night that showed the format continues to evolve while staying true to its roots.


