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.
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.”
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
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
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
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.
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.
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 Ćngel
Charly survived Ćngel’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.
Father’s Day arrived, and twelve NeoGoat players decided to celebrate by setting traps, summoning oversized monsters,
and letting Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning ruin perfectly reasonable games.
Round 1 had six matches and a wide spread of decks: Warriors, Gravekeepers, Skill Drain beatdown, HERO/Plant piles,
Zombies, Normal Monster experiments, and even Exodia. Not every strategy survived, but every match had at least one
very NeoGoat moment.
Event Overview
Event: NeoGoat Online Tournament – Father’s Day Special
Players: 12
Round Covered: Round 1
Matches: 6
Format: NeoGoat, best-of-three matches
EfraĆn defeats Ćngel Hdz 2-0
EfraĆn, playing as shadowefra, beat Ćngel Hdz, playing as AkyHX, in a clean 2-0.
Ćngel brought a Normal Monster shell with Heart of the Underdog, Royal Decree,
Order to Charge, Unexpected Dai, and Jinzo, but EfraĆn kept the pressure tighter.
Game 1 had some real resistance from Ćngel. Premature Burial brought back Jinzo, and
Offerings to the Doomed answered EfraĆn’s first BLS. Still, EfraĆn had already pushed enough damage,
and D.D. Warrior Lady handled the revived Jinzo.
Game 2 slowed down after Royal Decree shut off a trap exchange, but EfraĆn eventually found
Fusilier Dragon, Jinzo, and finally Black Luster Soldier. Ćngel had answers, but
EfraĆn had cleaner threats and better closers.
Kztoor defeats Arena Mty 2-0
Castor, playing as Kztoor, defeated Arena Mty 2-0. Arena had power cards,
including an early Black Luster Soldier, but Kztoor’s answers lined up perfectly.
In Game 1, Arena dropped BLS and cleared two monsters, but Kztoor answered with Kycoo plus
Shrink, destroying BLS in battle. Arena later revived BLS with Premature Burial, only for
Heavy Storm to wipe the setup away.
Game 2 revolved around backrow and King Tiger Wanghu. Arena tried to defend with cards like
Gravity Bind, Sakuretsu Armor, and Scapegoat, but Kztoor kept breaking through.
Call of the Haunted brought back Jinzo, and from there Arena’s traps stopped mattering.
Epydemius defeats Gaona 2-0
Gaona brought Gravekeepers with Necrovalley, Rivalry of Warlords, and
Gravekeeper’s Spear Soldier. Gox, playing as Epydemius, answered
with big monsters, Skill Drain, and direct pressure.
Game 1 started well for Gaona, especially when Spear Soldier pierced through a Sheep Token for 2000.
Then Heavy Storm erased Necrovalley, Rivalry, and Gaona’s backrow. From there,
Epydemius turned the duel into a raw-stat fight.
Game 2 was even rougher. Skill Drain blanked Gravekeeper effects, while Zombyra,
Giant Orc, and Berserk Gorilla kept attacking. Gaona had defensive moments with
Sakuretsu Armor and Mirror Force, but another Heavy Storm sealed the match.
Grondal defeats Charly Goat 2-0
Charly Goat played Zombies with Pyramid Turtle, Gigantes,
Injection Fairy Lily, Tribe-Infecting Virus, and Ryu Kokki. Palacios,
playing as Grondal2, used a more classic Chaos-control shell.
Game 1 was about clean answers. Exiled Force removed Pyramid Turtle before it could trigger
in battle, Breaker cleared Magic Cylinder, and Premature Burial brought back
Exiled Force to remove Injection Fairy Lily.
Game 2 had Charly’s best push: Heavy Storm, Tribe-Infecting Virus, and
Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke hit for big damage. Then Grondal summoned BLS, cleared the field in one
Battle Phase, removed Magic Cylinder with Raigeki Break, and finished shortly after.
El Vic defeats Tego 2-1
CosteƱo, playing as El Vic, brought a hybrid HERO/Plant/Monarch pile with
Prisma, Wildheart, Lonefire Blossom, Sylvan Hermitree, Hydrogeddon,
Mobius, Miracle Fusion, and BLS. Castro, playing as Tego,
fought back with Warriors, removal, Injection Fairy Lily, and grind tools.
El Vic took Game 1 by converting small trades into a strong Lonefire into Hermitree line,
then closing with Mobius and Kycoo. Tego answered in Game 2, where Don Zaloog
discarded Miracle Fusion and Injection Fairy Lily forced the match to Game 3.
Game 3 was the best duel of the match. BLS came down, was answered, came back, and was answered again.
Tego defended with Marshmallon, Sakuretsu Armor, D.D. Warrior Lady, and
Raigeki Break, but El Vic kept changing roles. In the end, Hydrogeddon opened the final push,
and Exiled Force attacked directly for the last 1000 damage.
Elpipe9 defeats Totonatiuh 2-1
Pipe, playing as Elpipe9, faced Tona, playing as
Totonatiuh. Pipe had a control shell with Gravekeeper’s Spy, Mystic Swordsman LV2,
Dekoichi, Tsukuyomi, and removal. Tona brought Exodia with Normal Monsters,
Heart of the Underdog, Good Goblin Housekeeping, Reload, and floodgates.
Game 1 was Pipe’s tempo game. He removed key backrow, kept attacking, and never let Tona’s engine fully start.
Game 2 was the headline: Tona actually assembled all five Exodia pieces and won. The forbidden grandpa showed up
on Father’s Day and stole a duel.
Game 3 was long and weird. Tona drew heavily with Heart of the Underdog, while Pipe waited for the
right opening. Heavy Storm finally destroyed the floodgates and several draw cards, letting Pipe attack
with a pile of small monsters. Tona even summoned Exodia pieces as emergency bodies, but Pipe kept clearing them
until the match was his.
Round 1 Results
EfraĆn defeated Ćngel Hdz 2-0
Castor / Kztoor defeated Arena Mty 2-0
Gox / Epydemius defeated Gaona 2-0
Palacios / Grondal defeated Charly Goat 2-0
CosteƱo / El Vic defeated Castro / Tego 2-1
Pipe / Elpipe9 defeated Tona / Totonatiuh 2-1
Round 1 Takeaways
Round 1 showed a healthy spread of NeoGoat decks. There were classic Chaos shells, big Skill Drain monsters,
Gravekeepers, Zombies, HERO/Plant hybrids, and full Exodia nonsense.
Black Luster Soldier was everywhere, but not unstoppable. It won games, got removed by battle,
got destroyed, got revived, and got answered again. That is exactly where BLS lives in NeoGoat: unfair, but
still part of the fight.
Heavy Storm was probably the real villain of the round. It broke Gaona’s Gravekeeper board, punished
Arena’s revived BLS, and opened Tona’s Exodia lock. If Father’s Day had an angry dad turning off the console,
it was Heavy Storm.
The best single moment was Tona winning a duel with Exodia. The best overall performances came from players who
mixed pressure with exact answers: EfraĆn, Kztoor, Epydemius, Grondal, El Vic, and Pipe all won by knowing when
to push and when to wait.
The Flaming Eternity NeoDraft brought together 21 players for five rounds of strange draft games, improvised win conditions, and exactly the kind of card appearances that make NeoGoat events worth documenting.
This is not a full turn-by-turn match report. The log was kept in true battlefield fashion: quick card names, scattered notes, and only the most important moments preserved. Round 2 was not recorded, so that round now belongs to history, speculation, and whoever remembers drawing the best topdeck.
Still, the surviving notes give us enough to tell the story: Chaos decks showed up repeatedly, Gatling Dragon became a major character, Zombies appeared early, Water Return tried to fight through a machine boss, and the final table came down to two Chaos players from earlier feature rounds.
Event Details
Format: Flaming Eternity NeoDraft
Players: 21
Rounds: 5
Round 2: Not recorded
Special Prize: OTS Pack 7 Gatling Dragon for the central player in the standings
Central Prize Winner:Bryan Vigil
In a 21-player event, the middle of the standings has a special kind of power. It is not first place, but it is not failure either. It is the mathematical center. The sacred neutral zone. The perfect place to award a Gatling Dragon.
That honor went to Bryan Vigil, who finished as the central player and won the OTS Pack 7 Gatling Dragon. A prize based on position, destiny, and probably a little bit of coin-flip energy.
Round 1 — Hydro Banisher vs. Zombies
Round 1 opened with Player A on Hydro Banisher against Player B on Zombies. The match log starts simply, but the cards already tell the story of a draft game trying to figure itself out.
Player A presented early pressure with Insect Knight, one of those plain-looking monsters that becomes very real when the format is draft and every body matters. Player B answered with Good Goblin Housekeeping, trying to turn a slower card into better future draws.
From there, Player A moved into Blade Rabbit, while Player B showed The Earth - Hex-Sealed Fusion. That alone already made the game feel like Flaming Eternity draft: normal monsters, fusion support, awkward utility, and both players trying to make every card do something useful.
Then the round escalated. Player A had Gatling Dragon, while Player B had Element Doom. Gatling Dragon showing up in Round 1 was a perfect preview of the event’s theme. This was not just another monster. This was a boss card, a threat, and eventually the same monster tied to the tournament’s central prize.
Round 3 gave us Chaos against Flip Chaos, which sounds like a normal Goat-era matchup until you remember this is NeoDraft and both decks are being held together by whatever the packs allowed.
The first recorded exchange was beautifully symmetrical: Golem Sentry on Player A’s side and Golem Sentry on Player B’s side. Nothing says “draft control game” like both players using the same bouncing wall to slow the duel down and make every summon feel temporary.
The next note gives the round a little more texture. Player A had Chiron the Mage, while Player B had Phoenix Wing Wind Blast. Chiron threatened to turn spells into backrow removal, while Phoenix Wing Wind Blast represented one of the most frustrating tempo answers available: discard a card, put the problem back on top, and make the opponent draw it again.
In a normal constructed deck, these are just cards. In draft, they are entire plans.
Round 4 featured a different Chaos player against Water Return. This round also produced the clearest boss-monster note of the event: Player B could not get rid of Gatling Dragon.
Player A brought out Gatling Dragon, while Player B had The Dark - Hex-Sealed Fusion. On paper, that sounds like both players had access to fusion-related power cards. In practice, the log makes the important part clear: Gatling Dragon stuck, and Player B could not answer it.
That is the nightmare of draft. Sometimes your opponent does not need a complicated engine. Sometimes they just resolve a monster that your deck cannot remove cleanly, and the rest of the game becomes a question of how long you can survive under it.
The later notes show Whirlwind Prodigy for Player A and Divine Dragon Ragnarok for Player B. Those are exactly the kind of cards that make this format funny. A small tribute-support monster and an old-school dragon body both ended up mattering enough to make the log.
But the headline of Round 4 was simple: Gatling Dragon stayed on the field, and Water Return could not get it off.
The final round brought together the Chaos player from Round 4 against the Chaos player from Round 3. After a draft full of strange card choices and uneven answers, the last recorded round came down to two Chaos decks fighting for position.
The first note is already very NeoDraft: Player A had Mecha-Dog Marron, while Player B had Threatening Roar, but the log notes that Threatening Roar was not used. That detail matters because sometimes the card sitting unused is just as memorable as the card that resolves. Maybe the timing never lined up. Maybe the pressure was not right. Maybe it was simply waiting for a turn that never came.
Then the game moved into fire and rebirth. Player A had Firebird, while Player B had Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys. That gave the final round a much bigger feel, with Phoenix representing one of the flashiest recurring threats a draft deck could hope to deploy.
The final card notes were Silent Doom for Player A and Spell Absorption for Player B. Silent Doom gave Player A access to revival lines, while Spell Absorption threatened to stretch the game by gaining 500 life points every time a spell resolved.
That is a very fitting final-round snapshot: a Chaos mirror where one player is trying to revive pressure, the other is trying to pad life points, and both decks are operating with whatever strange tools Flaming Eternity gave them.
The first sparring video featured Toons, and the deck produced one of the wildest turns of the day.
In the video, the Toon player summoned Toon Dark Magician, Toon Dark Magician Girl, Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning, and another monster in the same turn to push for the win.
That is the kind of board that makes the opponent check the graveyard, check the hand count, check the life totals, and then realize the duel is probably just over.
The second sparring video featured HEROs, and it came down to one of the cleanest topdeck moments you can ask for.
The HERO player was about to lose to Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning unless he found an answer. Then he drew Miracle Fusion.
That Miracle Fusion made Elemental HERO Shining Flare Wingman, whose massive attack power turned the entire game around and gave the HERO player the win.
Sometimes the answer to BLS is removal. Sometimes it is defense. And sometimes it is summoning a huge Shining Flare Wingman and ending the duel immediately.
The surviving log for this Flaming Eternity NeoDraft is short, but it captures the event’s personality well. The format was full of awkward monsters, strange utility cards, and boss threats that could take over games if the opponent did not have the exact answer.
Gatling Dragon was the event’s symbolic card in more than one way. It appeared in the recorded rounds, it dominated Round 4 when Water Return could not remove it, and it also served as the special central standings prize.
Congratulations to everyone who played, and especially to Bryan Vigil, winner of the central player prize: an OTS Pack 7 Gatling Dragon.
In Flaming Eternity NeoDraft, you can win the round, lose the round, or become the exact center of the universe. Bryan chose the third option.