This is very good
Just play weakness policy. Or, play this in Malamar so that you can discard this and use marshadow, which both hits for weakness and doesn’t lose three prizes if KO’d later.Fun card but Zoroark can take 3 prizes in one hit so no thanks
Your opponent could just Field Blower and I would honestly rather be using Dark Flash or Prismatic Burst which is way more consistent than Poltergeist, besides it's not worth playing in Gaskan if you have the chance to start it against Zoroark with your opponent immediately being able to take 3 prizesJust play weakness policy. Or, play this in Malamar so that you can discard this and use marshadow, which both hits for weakness and doesn’t lose three prizes if KO’d later.
Again, like I said, if it’s used in Malamar as a one or two of, it could be used by marshadow. Also, field blower is not currently being played, due to hw innefective against stadiums it is, and not many decks play it. If anything, a one of. And for consistency, I used limitlesstcg to check the last two tournaments, the LAIC and the Roanoke regionals. In the decklists given, the lowest trainer count was Robin Schulz’s gardevoir list, which I have tested and added a few more for consistency. On average, most lists had 33-34 trainers, with quite a few 37s the highest amount was 49. If you do some calculations, it shows that for the average deck that there is a 1 in 2 chance of a random card being a trainer card. With average hand size around 6, that’s about 3 trainers per hand on average, which is 150 damage for Gengar and mimikyu. Those odds are just aided by the GX.Your opponent could just Field Blower and I would honestly rather be using Dark Flash or Prismatic Burst which is way more consistent than Poltergeist, besides it's not worth playing in Gaskan if you have the chance to start it against Zoroark with your opponent immediately being able to take 3 prizes