Wednesday, April 1, 2026

NeoGoat Card Search — Now Upgraded

The NeoGoat platform just got a major quality-of-life upgrade — and if you’re building decks, testing ideas, or just exploring the format, this is something you’ll want to check out.

👉 Try it here:

(Direct page: https://neogoatformat.blogspot.com/p/console.html)


What’s New?

The search tool now lets you combine multiple filters at once:

  • Card type (Monster / Spell / Trap)
  • Subtype (Effect, Equip, Continuous, etc.)
  • Attribute (LIGHT, DARK, FIRE…)
  • Monster type (Machine, Beast, Warrior…)
  • Full-text search (search inside card effects)

This means you can now actually explore the entire format dynamically.


Practical Uses

This upgrade turns the tool into something much closer to a format analysis engine.

You can now:

  • See how many cards exist under very specific combinations
  • Discover interactions based on effect text, not just names
  • Explore entire categories of cards you’ve never considered
  • Build decks starting from ideas, not just known staples

Instead of guessing what exists in NeoGoat… you can now prove it instantly.


Why This Matters for NeoGoat

NeoGoat is built around:

  • Creative deckbuilding
  • A curated but deep card pool
  • Constant discovery of new interactions

This tool fits perfectly into that philosophy.

Now you can:

  • Map out the format
  • Understand what’s actually available
  • Find overlooked tech that others miss


⚙️ Small but Important Details

  • Results are limited to 30 cards per search
  • Status (Forbidden / Limited / etc.) is clearly displayed
  • Origin (Normal Pool / Extra Pool) is included
  • Defaults to the current format but you can change to previous cardpools.

Final Thoughts

This isn’t just a search bar anymore.

It’s a tool that lets you understand NeoGoat at a deeper level — and that’s where the real edge comes from.

If you haven’t used it yet, go try something weird.

You might just find your next deck.

Theme Deck - Warrior Dai Grepher

A pure combat-focused Warrior deck built around Dai Grepher and his associated cards. This is NeoGoat at its core: pressure, trades, and winning through battle.

Monsters (18):
1x Axe Raider
1x Gigantes
1x Blindly Loyal Goblin
1x D.D. Assailant
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
2x Blade Knight
3x Warrior Dai Grepher
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
2x Elemental HERO Wildheart
1x Don Zaloog
1x Exiled Force

Spells (15):
1x Heavy Storm
1x Reinforcement of the Army
2x Unexpected Dai
1x Pot of Greed
1x Nobleman of Crossout
1x Last Will
2x Smashing Ground
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
2x Book of Moon
2x The A. Forces
1x Premature Burial
1x Gaia Power

Traps (7):
2x Bottomless Trap Hole
1x Mirror Force
1x Torrential Tribute
1x Ring of Destruction
1x Call of the Haunted
2x Sakuretsu Armor


3x Ryu Senshi

👉 Not summonable here, but included for theme — representing Grepher’s evolution into a warrior that can negate traps and resist spells.



🧰 Side Deck

1x Jinzo
1x Silent Swordsman LV5
1x Blindly Loyal Goblin
1x Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
1x Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1x D.D. Warrior
1x Injection Fairy Lily
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
1x Nobleman of Crossout
1x Smashing Ground
1x Morale Boost
1x Falling Down
1x Array of Revealing Light
2x Dust Tornado


Strategy 

This deck is all about building a board and turning it into damage through smart sequencing.


Unexpected Dai + The A. Forces

  • Activate Unexpected Dai → Special Summon a Normal Warrior (like Dai Grepher or Axe Raider)
  • Have The A. Forces active
  • Then Normal Summon another Warrior

Result:

  • You now control 2 Warriors
  • Each gains +400 ATK from The A. Forces

💥 That means:

  • Both monsters are immediately boosted
  • You can swing with two high-ATK bodies
  • This often leads to huge early damage or tempo swings

Key Cards & Roles

The Grepher Package

  • Warrior Dai Grepher — your main beater
  • Unexpected Dai — free field presence
  • The A. Forces — scaling ATK boost
  • Sakuretsu Armor — punishes battle

Aggressive Tools

  • Blade Knight — strong solo attacker, stops flips
  • Wildheart — ignores traps, great for pushing
  • D.D. Warrior Lady / Assailant — removal through combat
  • Don Zaloog — disrupts hand advantage

Control & Removal

  • Smashing Ground / Exiled Force — clean answers
  • Tribe-Infecting Virus — board wipe potential
  • Nobleman of Crossout — anti-flip or defense

Utility

  • Book of Moon — protects and disrupts
  • Last Will — extends after trades
  • Reinforcement of the Army — consistency

Power Push

  • Gaia Power — surprise lethal setups
  • The A. Forces — main damage engine
  • Falling Down / Morale Boost
    → Not useful, but part of the Grepher identity package

Final Thoughts

This deck shows how far you can go with just:

  • Good monsters
  • Smart spells
  • Strong fundamentals

Grepher doesn’t need tricks —
he just needs a battlefield.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

NeoGoat Online Sparring— April 2026 Format

The April 2026 format is already delivering exactly what NeoGoat is built for:

unpredictable decks, explosive turns, and games that swing hard based on sequencing.

These three matches showcase very different styles colliding with one constant presence:
🔥 Phoenix Pyro, quickly emerging as one of the defining decks of the format.


Match 1 — Archfiend vs Phoenix Pyro

💥 Duel Breakdown

This match is a slow burn that suddenly explodes.

The first duel starts with Archfiends taking the initiative. Archfiend Heiress comes down first, then Shadowknight Archfiend, forcing Phoenix Pyro to rely on Scapegoat just to slow the early damage. Once Skull Archfiend of Lightning joins the field, the pressure becomes much harder to manage.

Phoenix eventually finds a strong setup turn with Heavy Storm, Unexpected Dai, Card Destruction, and Foolish Burial, loading Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys into the graveyard and finally preparing to turn the duel around. But even then, Archfiends do not simply fold.

A crucial detail in this duel is that the Archfiend dice mechanics protected the board from targeted answers. When Phoenix tried to use Brain Control on Skull Archfiend of Lightning, the effect did not successfully take it. Later, Ring of Destruction was also aimed at Skull, and once again the Archfiend survived while Phoenix still paid the price in life points and then got hit directly afterward.

That made Duel 1 feel especially brutal for the Phoenix side: even after assembling a real comeback setup, the normal one-for-one answers were not reliable. Archfiends kept their pressure, kept their monsters on the field when it mattered most, and closed the duel before Phoenix recursion could fully take over.


Duel 2 — The swing

Archfiends open aggressively again:

  • Pandemonium + double Archfiend bodies
  • Direct attacks drop Phoenix dangerously low

Then comes one of the cleanest punish plays in the entire set:

👉 Tribe-Infecting Virus declares Fiend

  • Wipes the entire Archfiend board instantly

No hesitation, Phoenix converts immediately:

  • Brain Control steals Heiress
  • Hand of Nephthys tributes it
  • Sacred Phoenix hits the field
  • Spirit of Flames follows

From a losing position, Phoenix suddenly has:

  • Board presence
  • Graveyard setup
  • Pressure

Archfiends never recover from that swing.


Duel 3 — Snowball

This duel is much more one-sided.

Phoenix:

  • Opens with Bonfire → Blazing Inpachi
  • Controls the pace with Ring of Destruction and Raigeki Break

The key moment:

  • Hand of Nephthys converts Inpachi into Phoenix
  • Phoenix clears backrow on revival and starts pushing damage

From there:

  • Spirit of Flames + Tribe-Infecting Virus
  • Direct attacks stack up quickly

Archfiends can’t rebuild fast enough.


Match 2 — Fusion Gate vs Phoenix Pyro


💥 Duel Breakdown

This is the most explosive match — and also the most brutal.


Duel 1 — Combo showcase

Fusion Gate sets up quickly:

  • Terraforming finds Fusion Gate
  • Thunder Dragon loads the hand

Then the combo begins:

  • Thunder Dragons are banished → Twin-Headed Thunder Dragon hits the field

Phoenix tries to stabilize, but doesn’t get the chance.

Next turn escalates even further:

  • Cyber-Stein pays 5000 LP
  • Summons Ryu Senshi
  • While Fusion Gate enables Master of Oz

👉 Suddenly the board is absurd:

  • 4200 ATK + 4200 ATK + negation

Phoenix gets completely overwhelmed.


Duel 2 — Control vs Combo

Fusion Gate opens similarly:

  • Phoenix was left with 1000LP, double fusion setup again (Thunder Dragon + Oz line)

But this time Phoenix had an answer:

👉 Metamorphosis → Thousand-Eyes Restrict

  • Absorbs Master of Oz
  • Stops momentum completely

From here, the duel slows down:

  • Phoenix sets up graveyard with Foolish Burial
  • Builds toward Phoenix recursion

Once Phoenix stabilizes:

  • Direct attacks with Thousand-Eyes start closing the game

Duel 3 — disrupted combo, Phoenix outgrinds

This duel starts much slower than the others. Both players set up instead of committing early, with Phoenix establishing backrow while Fusion Gate prepares with Terraforming.

Phoenix strikes first:

  • Bonfire → Blazing Inpachi gets early damage in
  • Fusion responds with Tribe-Infecting Virus, clearing Inpachi and slowing the tempo

The key swing comes next:

  • Brain Control steals Tribe
  • Hand of Nephthys → Sacred Phoenix
    👉 Phoenix turns defense into immediate pressure and setup

Fusion tries to recover with a smart midgame line:

  • Prisma sends Big Koala
  • Premature Burial + Giant Trunade
  • Attempt to push into fusion plays

But Phoenix interrupts cleanly:

  • Compulsory Evacuation Device stops Big Koala
  • Later, Raigeki Break destroys Prisma, also loading Phoenix into grave

Fusion finally lands Master of Oz, but:

  • Scapegoat stalls the attack
  • Needle Ceiling wipes Oz + Cyber-Stein

👉 That’s the breaking point of the duel.

From there, Phoenix takes over:

  • Unexpected Dai + Hand of Nephthys → Phoenix again
  • Even through Shrink, Phoenix pushes damage
  • Circle of the Fire Kings ensures a second hit to close

Match 3 — Red-Eyes Mokey Mokey vs Phoenix Pyro


💥 Duel Breakdown

This is peak NeoGoat chaos — it was an interesting idea, use The Law of the Normal with Mokey Mokey package and then use Red-Eyes graveyard recursion to recover, but in practice resulted difficult to achieve.


Duel 1 — Setup vs recursion

Mokey Red-Eyes deck opens with:

  • Elemental HERO Prisma
  • Sends Red-Eyes Black Dragon to grave

Early pressure builds, but Phoenix responds with:

  • Brain Control into Thestalos
  • Stripping resources from hand

Then:

  • Soul Exchange → Sacred Phoenix attempt

Even though Phoenix gets destroyed by Torrential:

  • It comes back next turn
  • Clears all backrow

That recursion defines the duel.


Duel 2 — Explosion

Hybrid deck pops off hard:

  • Meteor Black Dragon hits the field via Polymerization
  • Strong tempo push

But Phoenix fights back:

  • Unexpected Dai double Inpachi play
  • Followed by Circle of the Fire Kings → Phoenix revive

Momentum swings constantly.

The duel peaks when:

  • Ring of Destruction removes Meteor Black Dragon
  • Massive life swing on both sides

From there:

  • Phoenix regains control through recursion again

Duel 3 — Absolute madness

This duel has everything:

  • Paladin of Dark Dragon → Red-Eyes summon
  • Immediate pressure

Phoenix answers:

  • Brain Control steals Red-Eyes
  • Uses it aggressively before converting into Phoenix setup

Then:

  • Chaos Sorcerer banishes Phoenix
  • Slowing the recursion engine

Hybrid deck escalates:

  • Mokey Mokey combo → Mokey Mokey King
  • Field floods with Mokey Mokey monsters

Then:
👉 Needle Ceiling wipes EVERYTHING

The duel resets completely.

From there:

  • Phoenix rebuilds faster
  • Uses Spirit of Flames + Monarch pressure
  • Closes the game

Takeaway

👉 This format rewards creativity — but Phoenix rewards discipline.

Even against:

  • Rituals
  • Chaos
  • Fusion
  • Meme engines

Phoenix still finds lines to win.


Final Thoughts

Across all three matches, one thing is clear:

👉 Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys is a defining card of April 2026

  • It punishes backrow
  • It enables grind
  • It turns losing positions into winning ones

But the format is not solved:

  • ⚡ Fusion Gate can end games instantly
  • 😈 Archfiends grind harder than expected
  • 🧪 Rogue decks can explode out of nowhere

Saturday, March 28, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report – March 28th, 2026

 This was a compact but competitive 10-player event played across 4 Swiss rounds, where every match mattered from the start. With such a short structure, there was little room for error, and decks that could apply early pressure while staying consistent had a clear advantage.

The tournament developed into a clash between aggressive tempo decks and slower, resource-driven strategies. In the end, Warrior Aggro proved to be the most reliable choice, defeating Gadget Monarch in the finals.


Featured Duel — Rock vs Zombie

Only one match was recorded during the event, but it turned out to be one of the most entertaining duels of the day.

The Rock deck showed surprisingly strong and creative plays. One of the standout cards was Enraged Muka Muka, which became a real threat by gaining attack from cards in hand and forcing inefficient responses from the opponent. The deck built its advantage patiently, setting up for explosive turns rather than rushing.

On the other side, the Zombie deck focused on control and recursion, playing a more traditional NeoGoat game — slowing things down, trading resources, and waiting for the right moment to take over.

  • Duel 1: Zombies managed to stabilize early and take control of the pace, securing the first win through consistent pressure and resource advantage.
  • Duel 2: Rock struck back in explosive fashion. After building up resources, the duel ended with a 2100 ATK Megarock Dragon hitting the field and attacking for game in a single decisive swing.
  • Duel 3: The Zombie deck adapted well, shutting down the Rock player’s setup and preventing another big push. Through steady control and better resource management, Zombies closed out the match 2–1.

🥇 Winning Deck — ⚔️ Warrior 

This Warrior build is a very clean and efficient tempo deck. It focuses on applying constant pressure while maintaining strong answers to the opponent’s plays.

Monsters (19):
3x Blade Knight
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
2x Command Knight
1x D.D. Assailant
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
1x Don Zaloog
1x Exiled Force
1x Goblin Attack Force
3x Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
1x Ninja Grandmaster Sasuke
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus

Spells (13):
2x Book of Moon
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
2x Nobleman of Crossout
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Reinforcement of the Army
2x Smashing Ground
1x Snatch Steal
1x The A. Forces

Traps (11):
2x Bottomless Trap Hole
1x Call of the Haunted
1x Dust Tornado
1x Mirror Force
1x Ring of Destruction
2x Sakuretsu Armor
2x Solemn Judgment
1x Torrential Tribute


Deck Explanation

This deck wins by doing something very simple, but very well:
apply pressure while never losing control of the game.

Blade Knight and Command Knight establish early board presence and make it difficult for the opponent to stabilize. At the same time, the deck is packed with answers like Exiled Force, Tribe-Infecting Virus, and Smashing Ground, which allow it to remove threats without falling behind.

One of the most important cards in the deck is Kycoo the Ghost Destroyer. Running three copies is a strong meta call, especially in a tournament where graveyard-based strategies like Zombies are present. Kycoo shuts down recursion and prevents key setups, forcing those decks to play at a disadvantage.

The spell lineup supports consistency and control. Reinforcement of the Army helps find the right monster at the right time, while Nobleman of Crossout deals with flip effects that could otherwise slow the deck down.

Finally, The A. Forces gives the deck its finishing power. In a field full of Warriors, it can quickly turn a normal board into a lethal attack.


Side Deck Explanation

The side deck is very focused and clearly built with the meta in mind:

  • Pulling the Rug (x3): extremely strong against Monarch decks, stopping their tribute effects completely
  • Jowgen the Spiritualist (x2): shuts down special summons, useful against Chaos and combo decks
  • Jinzo: excellent against trap-heavy strategies
  • Mind Crush + D.D. Designator: provide hand control and information advantage
  • Trap Jammer: protects key attacks and pushes through damage

Overall, the side deck shows a clear understanding of the expected matchups and gives the deck tools to adapt after game one.


Final Thoughts

Even with only one recorded match, this tournament showed exactly what makes NeoGoat interesting:

  • Unusual decks like Rock can create explosive and memorable plays
  • Zombies continue to be relevant but must adapt to heavy disruption
  • Warrior decks remain a top-tier choice due to their consistency and pressure

Most importantly, the event proved again that NeoGoat is not just about winning — it’s about experimenting, discovering interactions, and creating moments that wouldn’t happen in a more rigid format.

Thursday, March 26, 2026

NeoGoat Tournament Report – March 24th, 2026

Tuesday night NeoGoat returned with a compact but competitive 14-player field. While most of the action went unrecorded, the opening round and final match delivered plenty to analyze — including a ruling mistake that slipped by unnoticed, and another interaction that looked wrong but was actually correct under modern mechanics.

👥 14 Duelists • 🎯 4 Rounds


Round 1: Beast vs Chaos

The first round gave us a match that became more interesting after the fact than during play.

At the table, it looked like a straightforward duel: Beastdown trying to push early pressure, Chaos building advantage through graveyard setup and removal, they were recent players. Two key situations later sparked discussion among players reviewing the match.


⚠️ Misplay — Green Baboon in Damage Step

During the duel, the Beast player attempted to activate Green Baboon, Defender of the Forest during the Damage Step.

  • This is incorrect under modern rulings
  • Baboon’s effect does not meet the requirements to activate in Damage Step

No judge was nearby at the time, so the duel continued normally.
The mistake was only caught later by players watching the recorded match.

👉 A good reminder: live play can miss things — recorded matches don’t.


⚖️ Controversial Play — Double Shrink on Bazoo

Later in the same duel, the Beast player attempted to save a monster from Bazoo the Soul-Eater during damage calculation:

  • Activated Shrink
  • Then chained a second Shrink

This immediately raised eyebrows — but the judge allowed it.

And it was correct.


Why This Works in NeoGoat

NeoGoat follows modern Yu-Gi-Oh rulings, where ATK modifiers resolve sequentially and apply to the current ATK at resolution.

  • Each Shrink is an activated effect that sets original ATK to a new value (halves it)
  • Shrink keeps redefining what “original ATK” is — so the second one halves it again.

So chaining two results in:

  • First Shrink → ATK ÷ 2
  • Second Shrink → (new ATK) ÷ 2 again

➡️ Final result: original ATK ÷ 4

https://ygorganization.com/atkdefmodifierguide/


⚠️ Format Contrast

In formats like Edison:

  • Shrink is often interpreted differently
  • Multiple Shrinks do not stack the same way

👉 That behavior does not apply here

No additional matches were recorded during Rounds 2 and 3.
Coverage resumes in the final round (Round 4).


Final Round HERO Blast vs Chaos Return 

The final round featured a strong contrast:

  • HERO Blast — explosive tempo and recursion
  • Chaos Return — control, patience, and inevitability


Duel 1 — Chaos Takes Control

Player A opened with Elemental HERO Prisma, setting up Necroshade lines early.

Player B responded with:

  • Breaker the Magical Warrior clearing backrow
  • Followed by steady pressure and advantage building

The duel quickly shifted:

  • Gravekeeper's Spy generated field presence
  • Spy converted into Zaborg the Thunder Monarch, removing Neos
  • Direct attacks began stacking damage

A key moment:

  • Tribe-Infecting Virus was stopped by Solemn Judgment

From there, Chaos Return maintained control and closed the duel with:

  • Snatch Steal securing the final push

Duel 2 — HERO Blast Pushes Back

This time, Player A came prepared:

  • Early Prisma setup into Neos
  • Strong backrow presence

Key exchanges included:

  • Dust Tornado hitting Solemn Judgment
  • Nobleman of Crossout removing Spy
  • D.D. Warrior Lady trading resources
  • Bottomless Trap Hole stopping Breaker

And in true local tournament fashion:

🔊 A refrigerator alarm went off mid-duel… and stayed there for several turns


💥 The Turning Point

At low Life Points, HERO Blast created a strong push:

  • Hero Blast destroyed Shining Angel and recovered Neos
  • Premature Burial brought back Prisma
  • Chain Dust Tornado removed Mirror Force

Then:

  • Prisma sent Necroshade
  • Neos was summoned for free
  • Both monsters attacked directly

➡️ This was the moment where the duel could flip.


🧊 Chaos Return Finishes It

But Chaos Return had the answer:

  • Snatch Steal (high winrate card) took Neos
  • Tribute → Mobius the Frost Monarch
  • Destroyed key backrow and sealed the game

Even alternative lines (like Skill Drain timing) would not overcome the LP gap.

➡️ Chaos Return wins the match


Closing Thoughts

This tournament highlighted something important:

  • ❌ A wrong ruling passed unnoticed (Baboon)
  • ✅ A correct ruling looked wrong (Double Shrink)

That contrast is exactly where NeoGoat lives.

Modern rulings reshape how old cards behave — and even experienced players can get caught between memory and reality.

Meanwhile, in the final:

  • HERO Blast showed explosive potential
  • Chaos Return proved why it remains one of the most consistent and punishing strategies in the format

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Inferno Cyclone — Decklists Breakdown

The Inferno Cyclone event delivered exactly what it promised: chaos, experimentation, and wildly different interpretations of the same rule set. From refined FIRE engines to full rule-abuse strategies and even classic NeoGoat control, these decks represent the spectrum of the format.

🥇 1st Place —Pyro

🔗 Download Deck 

Monster:

1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
1x Exiled Force
2x Hino-Kagu-Tsuchi
1x Horus the Black Flame Dragon LV6
1x Horus the Black Flame Dragon LV8
1x Magician of Faith
1x Marshmallon
1x Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys
1x Tenkabito Shien
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
3x Volcanic Shell
2x Blazing Inpachi

Spell:
3x Bonfire
2x Book of Moon
1x Circle of the Fire Kings
1x Foolish Burial
1x Giant Trunade
1x Heavy Storm
1x Lightning Vortex
1x Metamorphosis
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
1x Oil
1x Pot of Greed
1x Scapegoat
2x Unexpected Dai
Trap:
1x Call of the Haunted
1x Mirror Force
1x Ring of Destruction
2x Royal Decree
1x Torrential Tribute

Extra:
1x Blue-Eyes Ultimate Dragon
1x Charubin the Fire Knight
1x Dark Balter the Terrible
1x Dark Blade the Dragon Knight
1x Darkfire Dragon
1x Flame Swordsman
1x Gatling Dragon
1x King Dragun
1x Master of Oz
1x Meteor Black Dragon
1x Ojama King
1x Reaper on the Nightmare
1x Ryu Senshi
1x The Last Warrior from Another Planet
1x Thousand-Eyes Restrict

Emblem Monster:
1x Flame Ruler

This was the most balanced and complete deck of the tournament. Instead of overcommitting to Inferno Cyclone gimmicks, it built a strong FIRE core and supported it with proven NeoGoat staples.

The Volcanic Shell + Bonfire engine gave the deck consistency and fuel for discard-based interaction like Lightning Vortex and Tribe-Infecting Virus. This allowed it to keep playing even through awkward hands — something many event decks struggled with.

The real pressure came from its boss monsters. Hino-Kagu-Tsuchi was a constant threat that could end games immediately after one successful attack, while Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys punished backrow-heavy strategies. The inclusion of Horus LV8 added an additional layer of control against spell-reliant decks.

Cards like Tenkabito Shien and Royal Decree ensured that the deck could break defensive setups and maintain momentum. It didn’t try to “break” the event — it simply played better Yu-Gi-Oh under its conditions.


🥈 2nd Place — FIRE Control / OTK (Lava Golem Engine)

🔗 Download Deck

Monster:
3x Hino-Kagu-Tsuchi
3x Iron Blacksmith Kotetsu
3x Lava Golem
2x Sacred Phoenix of Nephthys
2x Solar Flare Dragon
3x Spirit of Flames
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
1x Tyrant Dragon
3x Volcanic Shell

Spell:
3x Bonfire
2x Brain Control
1x Card Destruction
3x Circle of the Fire Kings
1x Giant Trunade
1x Heavy Storm
2x Megamorph
3x Mind Control
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
3x Owner's Seal
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Snatch Steal
3x Spiritualism

Trap:
1x Call of the Haunted
3x Compulsory Evacuation Device
1x Mirror Force
3x Raigeki Break
1x Ring of Destruction
3x Threatening Roar
1x Torrential Tribute

Emblem Monster:
1x Solar Flare Dragon

This deck represents the opposite philosophy: instead of respecting the format, it pushes its mechanics to the limit.

The core interaction revolves around Lava Golem combined with Owner’s Seal, Mind Control, and Brain Control. By giving the opponent Lava Golem and then reclaiming it, the deck turns removal into tempo, damage, and combo potential.

The Volcanic Shell engine once again provides consistency, while Megamorph enables explosive finishing turns, especially after Life Point manipulation from Lava Golem.

Triple Hino-Kagu-Tsuchi makes the deck extremely punishing — if the opponent ever loses control of the board, their hand can disappear immediately. Meanwhile, Solar Flare Dragon and Threatening Roar allow the deck to stall until it assembles a winning sequence.

This build thrives in chaos. It creates unnatural game states, then capitalizes on them instantly. High risk, high reward — and very hard to play against if you’re not prepared.


🥉 3rd Place — Gadget Monarch Control

🔗 Download Deck

Monster:
1x Breaker the Magical Warrior
1x Gigantes
1x Jinzo
3x Lonefire Blossom
1x Lord Poison
2x Mobius the Frost Monarch
1x Spirit of Flames
3x Thestalos the Firestorm Monarch
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
2x Green Gadget
2x Red Gadget
2x Yellow Gadget

Spell:
2x Brain Control
1x Heavy Storm
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
1x Pot of Greed
3x Smashing Ground
1x Snatch Steal

Trap:
3x Bottomless Trap Hole
2x Dust Tornado
1x Mirror Force
1x Ring of Destruction
2x Sakuretsu Armor
1x Torrential Tribute
1x Trap Hole

Emblem Monster:
1x Charcoal Inpachi

This deck is a reminder that fundamentals still matter. While others leaned into event mechanics, this build stayed close to traditional NeoGoat strategy.

The Gadget engine provides steady card advantage, allowing the deck to maintain resources over long games. This feeds directly into its tribute monsters, especially Thestalos and Mobius, which disrupt the opponent’s hand and backrow.

Lonefire Blossom adds flexibility and field presence, while Gigantes provides sudden pressure and backrow clearing potential.

The trap lineup is one of the strongest in the event, with multiple layers of removal like Bottomless Trap Hole, Sakuretsu Armor, and Torrential Tribute. Combined with Jinzo, the deck can control when traps matter — and when they don’t.

This deck doesn’t try to out-cheese the format. It wins by forcing efficient trades, punishing overextension, and slowly taking control of the duel.


🌪️ Best WIND Deck — Harpie Aggro Control

Monster:
2x Cyber Harpie Lady
1x D.D. Warrior Lady
1x Exiled Force
2x Flying Kamakiri #1
1x Harpie Lady 1
3x Harpie Queen
1x Jinzo
1x Mystic Swordsman LV2
1x Silpheed
1x Tribe-Infecting Virus
1x Luster Dragon #2
3x Luster Dragon
2x Sky Scout

Spell:
2x Book of Moon
3x Harpies' Hunting Ground
1x Heavy Storm
1x Mystical Space Typhoon
1x Pot of Greed
1x Premature Burial
1x Reinforcement of the Army
2x Shrink
2x Smashing Ground
1x Snatch Steal

Trap:
1x Bottomless Trap Hole
1x Hysteric Party
3x Royal Decree

Emblem Monster:
1x The Dragon Dwelling in the Cave

The core interaction is Harpie Queen searching Harpies’ Hunting Ground, turning every monster summon into backrow removal. This makes it extremely difficult for opponents to stabilize.

Flying Kamakiri #1 ensures field presence, while efficient beaters like Luster Dragon and Silpheed maintain offensive pressure.

The use of Royal Decree is key, shutting down traps entirely and allowing the deck to dictate the pace of the game. Hysteric Party provides a powerful comeback option, enabling sudden swings in momentum.

Unlike FIRE decks, this build doesn’t rely on explosive finishes. Instead, it wins through tempo, repeated pressure, and denying the opponent the ability to set up.


🧠 Final Thoughts

The Top Decks of Inferno Cyclone highlight three distinct approaches to the format:

  • 🥇 Refined FIRE midrange — consistent, efficient, and adaptable
  • 🥈 Mechanic exploitation — chaotic, explosive, and difficult to counter
  • 🥉 Fundamental control — stable, reactive, and reliable

Meanwhile, WIND strategies demonstrated that while they may not have the same explosive ceiling, they can still compete through pressure and tempo.

Events like Inferno Cyclone continue to prove that NeoGoat thrives when players are pushed to explore — whether that means mastering the rules or bending them entirely.

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