Sunday, May 24, 2026

NeoGoat 5th Online Tournament - Second Round Report

The second round of the 5th NeoGoat Online Tournament continued showing how different the June 2026 format feels compared to previous Chaos-centered metas.

Fusion decks, HERO builds, Monarch control, Water engines, Banisher strategies, and classic Goat-style midrange all appeared across the round, creating some of the most interactive duels seen in recent NeoGoat events so far.

Several matches also demonstrated how important battle sequencing, resource timing, and even deckout management have become in the slower June environment.


🔥 HERO Fusion vs Monarch Banisher

Rojoo123 vs Gaona

One of the most unusual matches of the round featured a dedicated HERO Fusion strategy against Gaona’s Banisher Monarch control deck.

Game 1 immediately showcased the explosive side of HERO Fusion builds.

Rojoo123 used:

  • Prisma
  • King of the Swamp
  • Polymerization
  • Miracle Fusion

to rapidly summon multiple HERO Fusion Monsters including:

  • Elemental HERO Nova Master
  • Elemental HERO Necroid Shaman

Nova Master repeatedly generated advantage through destruction effects while Necroid Shaman forced awkward monster trades that disrupted Gaona’s Monarch setup.

Gaona fought back with:

  • Banisher of the Radiance
  • Soul Exchange
  • Mobius
  • Thestalos
  • Tribe-Infecting Virus

showing how powerful graveyard denial has become in June 2026.

One of the strongest sequences of the match happened when:

  • Soul Exchange removed Wildheart
  • Mobius destroyed backrow
  • Book of Moon interrupted Mobius
  • Dust Tornado chained to destroy Scapegoat

creating a huge chain interaction that completely shifted momentum.

Game 3 became one of the strangest duels of the tournament.

The duel evolved into an extremely long resource war involving:

  • DNA Surgery
  • Rivalry of Warlords
  • Royal Oppression
  • Creature Swap
  • Wild Wingman
  • Banisher monsters
  • repeated Miracle Fusion attempts

At one point:

  • DNA Surgery changed every monster into Warriors
  • Tribe-Infecting Virus attempted to wipe the field
  • another chain changed monster types again mid-resolution

creating one of the weirdest interactions seen so far under the June 2026 rules.

Later:

  • Creature Swap stole Wild Wingman
  • Wild Wingman destroyed DNA Surgery (the one that declared Warrior) by discarding Mobius
  • Rivalry and Banisher monsters repeatedly locked both players out of graveyard setups

The duel eventually became so grind-heavy that Rojoo123 ran out of cards in deck and surrendered before the next draw phase, despite still controlling Fusion monsters on the field.

A perfect example of how June 2026 NeoGoat can create extremely long technical games.


🌊 Water Midrange vs Warrior Control

Perales (substitute) vs Ahumada

This match showed how dangerous Water combo-midrange decks can become when allowed to establish tempo.

Ahumada’s deck combined:

  • Reasoning
  • Abyss Soldier
  • Lekunga
  • Daedalus
  • Aqua Spirit
  • Sylvan Hermitree
  • The Legendary Fisherman

creating a hybrid strategy focused on pressure and graveyard resource loops.

Game 1 started explosively when:

  • Lonefire Blossom summoned Sylvan Hermitree
  • Reasoning immediately extended into Fairy King Truesdale

but Ahumada’s monsters were repeatedly answered by:

  • Exiled Force
  • Sakuretsu Armor
  • Bottomless Trap Hole
  • Don Zaloog pressure

Perales constantly punished overextension while Don Zaloog repeatedly ripped combo pieces directly from Ahumada’s hand.

Game 2 became much slower.

Ahumada stabilized behind:

  • A Legendary Ocean
  • Abyss Soldier
  • Aqua Spirit

while carefully controlling backrow with:

  • MST
  • Heavy Storm

A key turning point happened when:

  • Lightning Vortex was negated by Magic Jammer
  • Mobius destroyed both Mirror Force and A Legendary Ocean
  • Blade Knight and Gravekeeper’s Spy pushed for heavy damage

The duel ended in one of the funniest moments of the tournament:
Ahumada activated Brain Control while at exactly 800 LP, immediately losing the duel from the activation cost.

Game 3 featured repeated Reasoning interactions, Bottomless Trap Hole exchanges, and constant pressure around Levia-Dragon - Daedalus setups.

The match overall showed how viable Water-based midrange-combo decks may become in June 2026, especially now that slower resource games happen more frequently.


⚔️ Thunder Control Mirror-Style Grind

Felipe Pinales vs Bernardo

This was one of the most classic NeoGoat-style matches of the round.

Both duelists used highly interactive midrange control decks featuring:

  • Gravekeeper’s Spy
  • Thunder Dragon
  • Dekoichi
  • Kycoo
  • Blade Knight
  • BLS
  • Night Assailant
  • heavy trap lineups

Game 1 showcased constant incremental advantage.

Felipe gained early control through:

  • Gravekeeper’s Spy walls
  • Kycoo pressure
  • Mystic Swordsman LV2 clearing flip monsters

while Bernardo stabilized using:

  • Thunder Dragon advantage
  • Dekoichi
  • Jar of Greed
  • Night Assailant loops

A massive momentum swing happened when:

  • BLS cleared Jinzo
  • Heavy Storm removed remaining traps
  • Sinister Serpent helped maintain grind resources

but Felipe eventually stabilized through:

  • Raigeki Break
  • Torrential Tribute
  • Solemn Judgment
  • repeated monster removal

before finally pushing lethal with:

  • Tribe-Infecting Virus
  • Night Assailant attacks
  • Exiled Force clearing blockers

Game 2 was shorter but still highly interactive.

Felipe established early pressure with:

  • Jinzo
  • Kycoo
  • Mystic Swordsman LV2
  • Breaker

while Bernardo relied on:

  • Creature Swap
  • Gravekeeper’s Spy
  • Swords of Revealing Light
  • Exiled Force

to slow the duel down.

Kycoo once again proved incredibly important by repeatedly banishing key graveyard resources before BLS could become fully dominant.

Eventually Felipe overwhelmed Bernardo with direct attacks from multiple midrange threats after removing nearly every defensive resource.

Another strong example of how:

  • battle positioning
  • graveyard management
  • incremental advantage

have become far more important after the June banlist changes.


⚡ Hydro Banisher vs Good Stuff

One of the fastest-paced matches of the round came from Palacios and Linares.

Palacios used an aggressive Warrior-based strategy focused on:

  • Blade Knight
  • D.D. Warrior Lady
  • Exiled Force
  • Reinforcement of the Army
  • Mystic Swordsman LV2
  • strong trap pressure

while Linares played a slower Thunder Chaos-style control deck built around:

  • Thunder Dragon
  • Night Assailant
  • Gravekeeper’s Spy
  • BLS
  • Dekoichi
  • defensive traps

Game 1 heavily favored Palacios early.

Blade Knight and Mystic Swordsman LV2 repeatedly punished Linares’ defensive monsters before Thunder Dragon advantage could fully stabilize the duel.

A huge momentum swing happened when:

  • Exiled Force removed Gravekeeper’s Spy
  • Heavy Storm cleared two defensive traps
  • Blade Knight pushed direct damage

forcing Linares dangerously low very quickly.

However Linares stabilized through:

  • Scapegoat
  • Metamorphosis into Thousand-Eyes Restrict
  • Night Assailant recursion

slowing the duel enough to begin rebuilding advantage.

The duel eventually turned into a grind war around BLS pressure and repeated removal exchanges.

Game 2 became much more explosive.

Palacios opened aggressively again with:

  • Reinforcement of the Army
  • D.D. Warrior Lady
  • Book of Moon support

but Linares answered with:

  • Torrential Tribute
  • Dekoichi advantage
  • Thunder Dragon setup

before eventually landing BLS to stabilize the board.

One of the strongest moments came when:

  • BLS banished a Warrior monster
  • Sakuretsu Armor removed the follow-up attack
  • Ring of Destruction threatened lethal
  • Magic Cylinder completely reversed combat math

forcing both players into extremely careful battle phases afterward.

The final duel became a constant exchange of:

  • spot removal
  • trap trades
  • tempo swings
  • topdeck recovery

before Palacios finally closed the match through sustained Warrior pressure after exhausting Linares’ remaining defensive resources.

A very strong showing for aggressive Warrior decks in the new June format.

Round 2 already felt slower, more technical, and much more board-oriented than previous NeoGoat environments — exactly the kind of gameplay the June 2026 format was designed to create.

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