This special event brings together teams of 3 players in a competitive format built around national identity, strategic deckbuilding, and a direct connection to the 2026 World Cup.
This is not just a tournament — it’s a clash of nations.
👥 Event Format
Maximum 8 teams (24 players)
Teams of 3 players
Fixed positions:
Player A
Player B (Captain)
Player C
Each round is played as:
A vs A
B vs B
C vs C
All three matches are played simultaneously.
👉 The team that wins 2 out of 3 matches wins the round.
🏟️ Deck Construction
Inspired by competitive team formats:
The team shares card copy limits:
Cards at 3 → max 3 copies across the entire team
Cards at 2 → max 2 copies across the entire team
Cards at 1 → max 1 copy across the entire team
Additionally:
Each team may select 3 Selection Cards
These cards can be used normally by each player
Selection Cards ignore the shared team limit, but still respect their individual banlist limits.
This system forces teams to distribute resources and build distinct identities within the team.
⚽ Captain (Player B)
The center player acts as the team captain.
They may assist teammates during duels under the following rules:
Can observe the fields of Players A and C
Can give short suggestions
Examples:
“attack first”
“watch out for Mirror Force”
Restrictions:
Cannot touch cards
Cannot play for the teammate
Cannot give long or detailed instructions
Cannot slow down the pace of the game
👉 Assistance must be quick and minimal.
🌍 Nations
Each team represents a country.
Countries are chosen from the 8 teams that reach the Quarterfinals of the FIFA World Cup 2026
Countries cannot be repeated
Nations are purely for identity:
team name
flag
They do not provide gameplay advantages.
In addition to the main tournament, there is a long-term bonus:
When the FIFA World Cup 2026 concludes
The team whose country becomes World Champion will receive a special prize
This bonus is independent from the tournament results and will be awarded when the World Cup ends.
Not every duel that shapes the NeoGoat metagame happens during a tournament.
Between events, players often spend time testing new ideas, refining decklists, and exploring interactions that may eventually appear in competitive play. This collection of sparring duels features several experimental strategies, including Water variants utilizing A Legendary Ocean and Metamorphosis, Plant engines powered by Lonefire Blossom and Sylvan Hermitree, and Zombie builds centered around Decayed Commander, Zombie Tiger, and Vampire Lord.
Testing 1
The Water deck showcased several explosive plays throughout the session. One duel featured Monster Gate finding Fairy King Truesdale, immediately converted through Metamorphosis into Roaring Ocean Snake, creating a powerful threat from seemingly nowhere. Another highlight came when The Legendary Fisherman was transformed into Dark Balter the Terrible, allowing the Water player to turn a utility monster into a serious board presence.
The deck also demonstrated its ability to switch gears between aggression and control through cards such as Abyss Soldier, Levia-Dragon Daedalus, Brain Control, and multiple Metamorphosis targets.
Plants Continue to Grow
One of the most impressive moments came from the Plant package. Lonefire Blossom quickly converted itself into Sylvan Hermitree, giving the deck access to a massive attacker capable of pressuring opposing removal-based strategies. Combined with Water monsters and Reasoning-style acceleration, the deck repeatedly generated threats larger than opponents expected.
Sparring 2
The Zombie deck produced some of the most unique interactions of the sparring session. Decayed Commander repeatedly pressured the opponent's hand while Zombie Tiger enabled additional attacks and forced awkward combat situations. Combined with classic Zombie staples such as Vampire Lord, Pyramid Turtle, and Ryu Kokki, the strategy demonstrated strong grinding power against several different opponents.
One particularly brutal sequence involved Vampire Lord connecting multiple times and stripping key Spell Cards directly from the opponent's Deck, while Decayed Commander and Robbin' Goblin steadily reduced available resources.
Gadgets Fight Back
The Gadget deck was equally impressive during testing. Through Ultimate Offering, the deck flooded the field with multiple Gadgets in a single turn and quickly overwhelmed slower starts. Even when Torrential Tribute cleared entire boards, the Gadget engine consistently rebuilt thanks to its endless chain of searches.
The matches highlighted exactly why Gadgets remain a dangerous strategy in NeoGoat: they rarely run out of cards and can quickly convert a small advantage into complete field control.
Final Thoughts
These sparring sessions offered an early look at several strategies that could become regular sights in future NeoGoat tournaments. Water continues to discover new Metamorphosis lines, Plants keep finding larger threats than opponents expect, Zombies gain value through constant recursion, and Gadgets remain as relentless as ever.
Sometimes the most important duels happen before the tournament even begins.
The fifth NeoGoat Online Tournament showcased a healthy mix of strategies in the June 2026 format. While Black Luster Soldier remained one of the format's premier threats, the surrounding decks demonstrated just how many different ways players can approach NeoGoat.
From battle-oriented Warrior builds and anti-Graveyard Monarch decks to Royal Decree beatdown and Thunder Dragon resource engines, the tournament featured a wide variety of successful ideas.
Below are five featured decklists from the event.
Palacios: Good Stuff
This aggressive Warrior-based strategy focuses on turning successful battles into lasting advantage. Cards like Don Zaloog, Airknight Parshath, and Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke punish opponents whenever attacks connect, while Shrink creates favorable combat situations throughout the duel.
1 Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
1 Blade Knight
1 Jinzo
1 Airknight Parshath
1 Elemental HERO Wildheart
1 Goblin Attack Force
2 Gravekeeper's Spy
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 D.D. Assailant
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Spirit Reaper
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Injection Fairy Lily
1 Marshmallon
1 Gigantes
1 Exiled Force
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Don Zaloog
Spells
1 The Warrior Returning Alive
1 Smashing Ground
2 Shrink
1 Swords of Revealing Light
1 Scapegoat
1 Reinforcement of the Army
2 Nobleman of Crossout
1 Premature Burial
1 Pot of Greed
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Heavy Storm
1 Book of Moon
Traps
1 Magic Cylinder
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Torrential Tribute
2 Trap Hole
The deck's greatest strength is its ability to continuously pressure opponents while maintaining answers to nearly every threat. Every battle matters, and every successful attack can generate additional value.
Gaona: Monarchs of Exile
Combining Banisher monsters with a powerful Monarch package, this deck attacks resources from multiple angles simultaneously.
1 Morphing Jar
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Zaborg the Thunder Monarch
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Tsukuyomi
1 Marshmallon
1 Spirit Reaper
1 Exiled Force
3 Banisher of the Radiance
1 Banisher of the Light
3 Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch
1 Mobius the Frost Monarch
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 D.D. Assailant
1 D.D. Warrior
Spells
1 Brain Control
2 Nobleman of Crossout
2 Shrink
1 Pot of Greed
3 Soul Exchange
1 Scapegoat
1 Lightning Vortex
1 Heavy Storm
1 Creature Swap
Traps
1 Mirror Force
1 Royal Oppression
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Return from the Different Dimension
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Ring of Destruction
Banisher of the Radiance is the centerpiece of the strategy, disrupting graveyard-based decks while enabling devastating Return from the Different Dimension turns. Combined with repeated Monarch summons, the deck can slowly choke opponents out of the duel.
Linares: Decree Beat
A classic Decree Beat strategy built around battle dominance and relentless pressure.
1 Spirit Reaper
1 Don Zaloog
2 Blade Knight
2 Banisher of the Radiance
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 King Tiger Wanghu
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
2 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Elemental HERO Wildheart
1 Marshmallon
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Tsukuyomi
3 Hydrogeddon
Spells
1 Nobleman of Crossout
3 Smashing Ground
1 Enemy Controller
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Scapegoat
2 Book of Moon
3 Shrink
1 Heavy Storm
3 Shield Crush
1 Creature Swap
Traps
1 Mirror Force
1 Torrential Tribute
3 Royal Decree
Triple Shrink, triple Shield Crush, and triple Smashing Ground make it incredibly difficult for opponents to maintain field presence. Once Royal Decree resolves, the deck can focus entirely on winning battles and applying pressure.
Felipe Pinales: Chaos Control
This Chaos Flip build is a masterclass in incremental advantage. Nearly every card either replaces itself, recurs another card, or contributes to a larger resource engine.
1 Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1 Sinister Serpent
2 Tsukuyomi
2 Night Assailant
3 Thunder Dragon
2 Dekoichi the Battlechanted Locomotive
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
2 Blade Knight
1 Jinzo
2 Gravekeeper's Spy
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Marshmallon
1 Exiled Force
Spells
1 Metamorphosis
1 Reinforcement of the Army
1 Premature Burial
1 Pot of Greed
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Heavy Storm
1 Scapegoat
Traps
1 Solemn Judgment
2 Raigeki Break
2 Sakuretsu Armor
2 Jar of Greed
3 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Dust Tornado
1 Magic Cylinder
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Torrential Tribute
Extra Deck
1 Dark Balter the Terrible
1 Dark Blade the Dragon Knight
1 Darkfire Dragon
1 Dragoness the Wicked Knight
1 Gatling Dragon
1 Master of Oz
1 Ojama King
1 Reaper on the Nightmare
1 Thousand-Eyes Restrict
1 Ryu Senshi
1 The Last Warrior from Another Planet
1 Twin-Headed Thunder Dragon
Thunder Dragon, Dekoichi, Night Assailant, and Tsukuyomi create a powerful grind engine capable of generating advantage over long games. Metamorphosis provides access to Thousand-Eyes Restrict whenever a duel demands a dramatic swing.
Bernardo: Chaos Control
Although it shares the Thunder Dragon engine with the previous deck, this build takes a more proactive approach.
1 D.D. Warrior Lady
1 Don Zaloog
1 Zaborg the Thunder Monarch
1 D.D. Assailant
1 Sinister Serpent
1 Tsukuyomi
2 Night Assailant
3 Thunder Dragon
2 Dekoichi the Battlechanted Locomotive
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Blade Knight
1 Jinzo
2 Gravekeeper's Spy
1 Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
1 Exiled Force
Spells
1 Swords of Revealing Light
1 Creature Swap
1 Nobleman of Crossout
1 Reinforcement of the Army
1 Pot of Greed
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
1 Heavy Storm
Traps
2 Raigeki Break
3 Jar of Greed
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Mirror Force
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Torrential Tribute
Extra Deck
1 Dark Balter the Terrible
1 Dark Blade the Dragon Knight
1 Darkfire Dragon
1 Dragoness the Wicked Knight
1 Gatling Dragon
1 Master of Oz
1 Ojama King
1 Reaper on the Nightmare
1 Thousand-Eyes Restrict
1 Ryu Senshi
1 The Last Warrior from Another Planet
1 Twin-Headed Thunder Dragon
The deck excels at extracting value from nearly every card it draws. Thunder Dragon fuels the Chaos engine, Jar of Greed keeps resources flowing, and Zaborg provides a powerful answer to opposing threats. The result is a flexible strategy capable of shifting between aggression and control as needed.
Final Thoughts
The fifth NeoGoat Online Tournament once again demonstrated the diversity of the June 2026 format.
Battle-oriented Warriors, Banisher Monarchs, Royal Decree beatdown, and two distinct Thunder Dragon Chaos variants all found success despite sharing very different game plans.
As the format continues to evolve, players are discovering that there is far more to NeoGoat than simply resolving Black Luster Soldier. Every tournament reveals new ideas, new interactions, and new approaches to winning duels.
Fourteen duelists gathered for another Thursday night NeoGoat tournament, bringing a mix of June 2026 format strategies ranging from aggressive beatdown decks to Chaos variants and rogue concepts. After four rounds of competition, one deck managed to remain undefeated throughout the evening: Decree Beat.
While the first round was not recorded, the later rounds showcased exactly why the strategy has become one of the most dangerous anti-meta choices in the current environment.
Round 2 — Decree Beat vs Chaos
The first featured match of the night saw Decree Beat face one of the format's most common strategies: Chaos.
On paper, Chaos decks have access to some of the strongest individual cards available in the format, combining efficient removal, graveyard manipulation, and powerful finishers. However, Decree Beat is specifically designed to punish slower, reactive decks.
Once Royal Decree hit the field, many of Chaos's defensive options became unavailable, forcing the duel into pure monster combat. This played directly into the strengths of cards such as Hydrogeddon, Mystic Swordsman LV2, Blade Knight, and other battle-oriented threats.
The Chaos player attempted to stabilize through monster-based interactions, but repeated pressure and efficient combat tricks allowed Decree Beat to maintain control of the duel. By the end of the match, the anti-trap strategy had secured another victory and moved to the next round.
Round 3 — Decree Beat vs Skull Servant
Round 3 featured one of the night's most explosive matches as Decree Beat faced a dedicated Skull Servant strategy built around massive copies of King of the Skull Servants, Goblin Zombie, Book of Life, and Vampire Lord.
The first duel quickly showcased the strengths of both decks. Skull Servants established early pressure through Vampire Lord while multiple copies of King of the Skull Servants began filling the Graveyard through Foolish Burial and Needlebug Nest. At one point a King reached 2000 ATK while Vampire Lord repeatedly threatened Decree Beat's resources.
Decree Beat fought back through combat tricks. A key Shrink allowed Hydrogeddon to defeat Vampire Lord in battle, generating additional Hydros and completely changing the tempo of the duel. Later, Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke and Mystic Swordsman LV2 proved devastating.
When the Skull Servant player attempted to protect a set King of the Skull Servants and revive it through its own effect, Mystic Swordsman LV2 bypassed the effect entirely by destroying it without flipping it face-up, eliminating a major threat.
With the Skull Servant player reduced to 1800 Life Points and unable to stop a direct attack, Ring of Destruction ended up taking the final points from both players, but the Skull Servant duelist was defeated first, giving Decree Beat the opening duel.
The second duel belonged to Skull Servants. Early copies of King of the Skull Servants reached 3000 and then 4000 ATK thanks to Foolish Burial, Prisma, Book of Life, and continuous graveyard setup.
Although Decree Beat briefly stabilized with Banisher of the Radiance, Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, and a strong Hydrogeddon sequence that destroyed both Ryu Kokki and Vampire Lord, the Skull Servant deck continually rebuilt its field.
A final 4000 ATK King returned through Book of Life and delivered the winning attack, forcing a third duel.
The deciding game was much closer.D.D. Warrior Lady immediately removed Pyramid Turtle from the game, denying an important search. Hydrogeddon then generated advantage by destroying Goblin Zombie and summoning additional copies from the deck.
The Skull Servant player attempted to swing momentum back by using Metamorphosis on a set King of the Skull Servants to summon Thousand-Eyes Restrict, stealing Breaker the Magical Warrior. However, Sakuretsu Armor answered the Fusion Monster before it could take over the duel.
The final turns highlighted exactly why Decree Beat is so dangerous. Call of the Haunted revived Hydrogeddon, creating another copy and overwhelming the field with monsters. Reinforcement of the Army searched Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke, and together with Hydrogeddon the deck applied constant pressure.
When Spirit Reaper appeared as a last defensive wall, Shrink targeted it during battle, causing Reaper to destroy itself through its own effect. With the path clear, Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke and Hydrogeddon attacked directly for the remaining Life Points and secured both the duel and the match.
The match perfectly demonstrated Decree Beat's ability to compete with graveyard-based strategies. Despite facing multiple 4000 ATK Kings of the Skull Servants, the deck repeatedly leveraged battle-phase interaction, removal, and monster effects to maintain control and advance to the final round undefeated.
Round 4 — Decree Beat vs Beastdown
The final recorded feature match placed Decree Beat against a traditional Beastdown strategy.
Beastdown decks excel at generating constant field presence through cards like Giant Rat and various Earth monsters, creating steady pressure while maintaining access to strong combat options. The matchup therefore became a battle between two decks focused primarily on winning through the Battle Phase.
The duel remained competitive as both players fought for board control, but Decree Beat's combination of removal and battle manipulation once again proved difficult to overcome. Shrink, Shield Crush, and aggressive monster sequencing allowed the deck to maintain favorable exchanges throughout the match.
Unfortunately, the recording was cut short when the phone battery died before the duel concluded. However, the remaining footage showed Decree Beat maintaining the advantage and eventually securing the victory to finish the tournament undefeated.
👑💀 Featured Deck — King of the Skull Servants
One of the most memorable decks of the tournament was this Skull Servant build, capable of repeatedly producing 3000–4000 ATK Kings while maintaining access to Zombie toolbox monsters and powerful graveyard recursion.
MAIN DECK
3 Skull Servant
1 Ryu Kokki
1 Vampire Lord
2 Elemental HERO Prisma
1 Tribe-Infecting Virus
1 Breaker the Magical Warrior
3 Pyramid Turtle
2 Goblin Zombie
1 Spirit Reaper
1 Morphing Jar
3 King of the Skull Servants
2 Book of Life
1 Heavy Storm
1 Creature Swap
1 Metamorphosis
1 Pot of Greed
1 Lightning Vortex
1 Foolish Burial
1 Smashing Ground
1 Mystical Space Typhoon
2 Book of Moon
1 Scapegoat
1 Premature Burial
2 Bottomless Trap Hole
1 Mirror Force
1 Torrential Tribute
1 Ring of Destruction
1 Call of the Haunted
1 Dust Tornado
EXTRA DECK
1 Gatling Dragon
1 Ryu Senshi
1 Dark Balter the Terrible
1 Reaper on the Nightmare
1 Flame Ghost
1 Thousand-Eyes Restrict
SIDE DECK
1 Mystic Swordsman LV2
1 Lightning Vortex
2 Nobleman of Crossout
2 Enemy Controller
1 Exchange of the Spirit
2 Crush Card Virus
1 Dust Tornado
2 Royal Decree
2 Needlebug Nest
1 Deck Devastation Virus
Final Thoughts
Decree Beat was the clear story of the tournament.
While Chaos decks continue to be among the most popular choices in NeoGoat, this event demonstrated that straightforward battle-focused strategies remain fully capable of competing with the format's strongest archetypes. By shutting off traps with Royal Decree and forcing opponents into combat, the deck was able to navigate multiple difficult matchups and emerge as the tournament's standout performer.
With the June 2026 format continuing to evolve, events like this show that aggressive anti-meta strategies still have a place at the top tables, especially when they can consistently turn every duel into a battle for field presence rather than a war of trap cards.
The fifth NeoGoat Online Tournament brought together another competitive field of duelists for a full evening of June 2026 format action. As the format continues to evolve following recent banlist changes, players arrived with a mixture of Chaos variants, HERO experiments, flexible control decks, and unique card choices designed to gain an edge in an increasingly refined metagame.
The Finalists
The tournament produced several memorable featured matches, including a brutal HERO brick, a powerful Black Luster Soldier showcase, and a championship duel decided by one of the most iconic trap cards ever printed.
Perales vs Rojo
The match between Perales and Rojo ended up being one of the strangest stories of the tournament, with both duels being defined less by explosive plays and more by opportunities that slipped away.
The first duel began with Rojo opening on Elemental HERO Prisma, immediately sending Elemental HERO Necroshade to the Graveyard to set up future HERO plays. The opening looked promising. Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning was already in hand, and the deck appeared well positioned to transition into powerful midgame threats.
However, the duel slowly turned against him.
As the game developed, Rojo reached a point where he could have committed Black Luster Soldier to the field. Instead, the summon was delayed. Whether out of caution or concern about possible answers, the Chaos monster remained in hand while the duel continued.
That decision became increasingly costly as Perales established pressure through Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke and eventually Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer. Once Kycoo began connecting, the situation changed dramatically. Necroshade and other important graveyard resources were banished, reducing Rojo's future options and making the delayed Black Luster Soldier look worse with every passing turn.
The duel effectively slipped away after Kycoo took control of the Graveyard. Perales continued applying pressure while Rojo struggled to regain momentum. By the time Dust Tornado collided with Royal Decree and the field position became untenable, Rojo chose to concede and move to the second game.
If the first duel was about a missed opportunity, the second duel was about pure suffering.
Rojo opened with Mystical Space Typhoon, Reinforcement of the Army, and three copies of Elemental HERO Bladedge, then drew Elemental HERO Prisma for turn.
Three copies of Bladedge immediately clogged the hand, leaving Prisma as the only realistic play available. Rojo summoned Prisma and once again sent Necroshade to the Graveyard, hoping to unlock his stranded high-level monsters.
Unfortunately, Perales had exactly the right answer.
Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer hit the field immediately, attacked over Prisma, and banished Necroshade before it could ever be used. In a single battle phase, Rojo lost both his monster and the entire plan his hand depended on.
What followed was less a duel and more a slow collapse. With multiple Bladedges stranded in hand and no reliable way to summon them, Rojo was forced to watch as Perales developed a functional board while his own draws failed to solve the problem.
By the end of the match, the story was clear. The first duel was defined by a Black Luster Soldier that never arrived, while the second was defined by one of the harshest HERO bricks seen in recent NeoGoat events.
Linares vs Gaona
One of the most anticipated matches of the tournament featured Linares facing Gaona shortly after the return of Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning to the NeoGoat card pool.
Many players entered the event wondering whether the newly unbanned Chaos monster would immediately impact competitive play. Linares wasted no time providing an answer.
The first duel began with aggressive pressure from Linares. Don Zaloog hit the field on the opening turn, while Enemy Controller protected it from an early Mystic Swordsman LV2 attack. On the following turn, Heavy Storm cleared Gaona's Bottomless Trap Hole before Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer joined the field and helped establish control. Don Zaloog connected directly, stripping Brain Control from Gaona's hand and putting him immediately on the defensive.
Gaona fought back with Tribe-Infecting Virus, discarding both Return from the Different Dimension and Shrink to clear Don Zaloog and Kycoo in consecutive activations. The play temporarily stabilized the duel, but Linares responded immediately with Banisher of the Radiance and Smashing Ground, eliminating Tribe and continuing the pressure.
Then came the moment everyone wanted to see.
On Turn 7, Linares banished Banisher of the Radiance and Don Zaloog from his Graveyard to summon Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning. The Chaos monster immediately justified all the excitement surrounding its return. First it destroyed Breaker the Magical Warrior in battle for 1400 damage, then attacked again and struck directly for another 3000. In a single turn, BLS dealt 4400 damage, effectively deciding the duel on the spot.
The second duel was considerably slower and far more interactive. Both players traded resources relentlessly. Bottomless Trap Hole banished Banisher of the Radiance. Ring of Destruction removed a second Banisher. Torrential Tribute answered Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer. Mirror Force, Nobleman of Crossout, Brain Control, Gravity Bind, and Heavy Storm all appeared as neither duelist could establish lasting control of the field.
Eventually Linares drew Black Luster Soldier once again.
After Heavy Storm cleared Gaona's remaining defenses, the path finally opened. With both Banisher of the Radiance and Kycoo now available in the Graveyard, Linares summoned Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning for the second time in the match. The appearance of the Chaos monster immediately shifted the duel into a winning position and completed Linares's march to victory.
For a card that had only recently returned from the Forbidden List, Black Luster Soldier could hardly have asked for a better debut. Linares demonstrated exactly why the card remains one of the most feared finishers ever printed: in both games, once Black Luster Soldier reached the field, the duel rapidly moved toward its conclusion.
Third Place Match — Costeño vs Bernardo
The third-place playoff featured Costeño's Warrior strategy against Bernardo's Chaos build.
The opening duel began with Bernardo using Thunder Dragon to establish resources before backing Blade Knight with Call of the Haunted and Raigeki Break. Costeño responded immediately through Reinforcement of the Army, searching Don Zaloog and beginning a sequence of efficient Warrior trades.
The duel quickly developed into a resource war. Blade Knight was revived through Call of the Haunted only to be answered by Raigeki Break and Smashing Ground. Don Zaloog repeatedly threatened Bernardo's hand while Swords of Revealing Light temporarily slowed the pace and allowed both players to gather resources.
The pivotal moment came when Bernardo finally summoned Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning. The summon looked terrifying, but it survived only moments. Bottomless Trap Hole and Torrential Tribute combined to remove the Chaos monster immediately while simultaneously clearing the field. The exchange neutralized Bernardo's biggest threat and left him unable to capitalize on his setup.
Costeño steadily took control afterward. Spirit Reaper generated hand advantage, Premature Burial revived Don Zaloog for additional pressure, and Mobius the Frost Monarch destroyed critical cards while Hydrogeddon closed the game through repeated direct attacks.
The second duel followed a similar pattern. Ring of Destruction immediately traded with Blade Knight, while Thunder Dragon and Call of the Haunted generated value for Bernardo. Multiple copies of Bottomless Trap Hole, Mirror Force, Raigeki Break, and Nobleman of Crossout kept both duelists from developing overwhelming positions.
Once again, Black Luster Soldier failed to dominate the game. Smashing Ground immediately answered the summon, preventing Bernardo from gaining meaningful value from the format's most famous boss monster.
Costeño gradually accumulated advantages through Gravekeeper's Spy, Mobius the Frost Monarch, and a steady stream of efficient attacks. Tsukuyomi briefly disrupted Mobius, but the momentum had already shifted. Direct attacks from Breaker the Magical Warrior and Gravekeeper's Spy eventually ended the duel, securing a 2-0 victory and third place.
Championship Match — Felipe vs Palacios
The final match of the tournament featured Felipe and Palacios in a championship duel filled with removal, recursion, trap exchanges, and one unforgettable ending.
Duel 1
Felipe opened by using Thunder Dragon to immediately increase his resource count before setting multiple defensive cards. Palacios attempted to establish pressure through Breaker the Magical Warrior, but Bottomless Trap Hole immediately removed the monster before it could generate value.
Swords of Revealing Light slowed the pace of the duel while Marshmallon provided a defensive wall. Felipe eventually answered the problem with Shield Crush, clearing the path for Jinzo.
Jinzo connected directly and temporarily shut down Palacios's trap lineup before D.D. Assailant answered it in battle, banishing both monsters and resetting the field.
The duel then entered a lengthy grind phase. Don Zaloog generated hand pressure, Exiled Force traded with key monsters, Gravekeeper's Spy generated card advantage, and Mirror Force, Sakuretsu Armor, Torrential Tribute, and Raigeki Break repeatedly punished attempts to establish control.
As resources diminished, Tribe-Infecting Virus emerged as the defining card. The monster repeatedly threatened Warrior boards and allowed Felipe to transition from defense to offense. After a long exchange of removal and direct attacks, Felipe eventually secured the opening duel.
Duel 2
The second duel began much more aggressively. Palacios opened with Don Zaloog before quickly deploying Injection Fairy Lily. The monster immediately became the focal point of the game, repeatedly paying 2000 Life Points to overpower Blade Knight and maintain pressure.
Felipe responded through relentless recursion. Call of the Haunted revived Blade Knight. Premature Burial revived Blade Knight again. Every time Palacios cleared the monster, it seemed to return.
The duel reached a critical moment when Palacios attempted to summon Tribe-Infecting Virus. Recognizing the danger, Felipe activated Solemn Judgment and paid half his Life Points to negate the summon entirely. It was an expensive decision, but it preserved the board and prevented a potentially devastating swing.
Swords of Revealing Light bought additional turns before Airknight Parshath finally entered the field. With Felipe's Life Points already reduced and Palacios appearing to regain momentum, Airknight looked poised to turn the duel around. After Mystical Space Typhoon removed Premature Burial and sent Blade Knight back to the Graveyard, the path appeared clear.
Airknight declared a direct attack.
Then came the moment that defined the entire tournament.
Magic Cylinder.
The attack was negated, and Airknight's 1900 attack points were reflected directly back at Palacios. After paying thousands of Life Points throughout the duel to fuel Injection Fairy Lily, Palacios no longer had enough remaining Life Points to survive the reflected damage.
The duel ended immediately. The tournament ended immediately. And Felipe became the champion of NeoGoat Online Tournament #5.
Final Standings
🥇 Felipe
🥈 Palacios
🥉 Costeño
Closing Thoughts
NeoGoat Online Tournament #5 provided one of the first meaningful looks at how the June 2026 format is beginning to take shape.
The return of Black Luster Soldier - Envoy of the Beginning immediately became one of the tournament's biggest storylines. After spending years on the Forbidden List, the legendary Chaos monster wasted little time reminding players why it remains one of the most feared finishers ever printed. Linares's performance against Gaona demonstrated just how quickly a duel can end once BLS reaches the field.
At the same time, the event showed that success in NeoGoat still depends on much more than drawing powerful boss monsters. Cards such as Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer, Banisher of the Radiance, Tribe-Infecting Virus, and Don Zaloog repeatedly influenced matches, often determining the outcome long before a game-ending threat appeared.
Several duels also highlighted the importance of flexibility and adaptation. Whether it was graveyard denial shutting down Chaos plays, clever use of battle-phase interaction, or timely removal preventing explosive turns, the tournament showcased a format where small decisions continue to matter just as much as powerful cards.
Most importantly, the event delivered one of the most memorable championship finishes in recent NeoGoat history.
After an entire evening filled with Black Luster Soldier, Chaos strategies, flexible control engines, and countless resource exchanges, the final match was ultimately decided by a card that has been catching players off guard for more than two decades.
Magic Cylinder.
One reflected attack was all it took to end the championship and crown Felipe as the winner of NeoGoat Online Tournament #5.
Sometimes the oldest surprises are still the best ones.
Tuesday, May 26 brought 15 players to another NeoGoat tournament, with 4 rounds and 4 featured matches recorded.
The tournament featured a mix of Earth midrange decks, Chaos Flip control variants, Zombies, and even an experimental Timaeus strategy. Throughout the night, slower control decks and grind-heavy duels dominated the event.
Round 1 — Earth vs Chaos Flip
Winner: Earth
The first featured match showed Earth’s ability to pressure slower control decks. Chaos Flip tried to build advantage through set monsters and defensive play, but the Earth deck kept forcing action through battle pressure, removal, and efficient monster trades.
Chaos Flip had chances to stabilize, but Earth never allowed the game to slow down completely. The matchup became a good example of why midrange Earth strategies are gaining more attention in the current format.
Round 2 — Timaeus Deck vs Chaos
“Podrás ver de cerca un gran dragón”
Round 2 featured one of the most unusual decks of the night: a Timaeus-based strategy against Chaos.
The Timaeus deck brought a very different angle to the tournament, using Spellcaster-based pressure and fusion threats instead of playing a standard midrange or Chaos shell. Even when the Chaos deck managed to fight back with more familiar resource patterns, the match stood out because of how different the Timaeus strategy looked compared to the rest of the field.
Round 3 — Earth vs Zombie
Winner: Earth
The third featured match placed Earth against Zombie, another strong strategy in the current NeoGoat environment.
Zombie decks can be very difficult to exhaust once their graveyard engine starts working, but the Earth deck applied pressure early and forced the Zombie player into defensive turns. Instead of letting Zombie freely build momentum with recursion, Earth kept attacking, trading, and pushing damage before the game could fully stabilize.
This was another important win for Earth, proving that the deck was not only beating slower Flip strategies, but also competing well against graveyard-based midrange decks.
Final Round — Earth vs Chaos Flip
Winner: Chaos Flip (2-0)
The final round returned to one of the central matchups of the night: Earth versus Chaos Flip.
This time, however, the Chaos Flip player completely controlled the pace of the match and won the finals 2-0.
The Earth player came prepared after side decking and used Pulling the Rug specifically against Tsukuyomi, trying to interrupt the Flip engine and prevent repeated value loops. The side deck choice showed strong preparation for the matchup and successfully stopped Tsukuyomi at important moments.
Even so, Chaos Flip continued finding ways to generate advantage through defensive setups, recursive Flip effects, and careful resource management. The deck slowly exhausted the Earth player over the course of the finals while maintaining control of the duel flow.
By the end of the match, Chaos Flip secured a clean 2-0 victory and finished the tournament as the winning strategy of the night.
Final Thoughts
Chaos strategies remain some of the strongest and most popular decks in the format, but Earth midrange decks are clearly becoming serious contenders. Meanwhile, experimental decks like Timaeus continue showing that there is still plenty of unexplored space in NeoGoat.
Players are also reminded that the next local tournament will be the transition event between the April 2026 and June 2026 NeoGoat formats. During that tournament, duelists may choose to play either the April 2026 or June 2026 banlist and card pool configuration. After that event, only the June 2026 format will remain legal for NeoGoat tournaments going forward.