Discussion The Future's Looking Grim

Kookaburra Kong

Aspiring Trainer
Member
There's rarely a moment in the competitive scene where it skews negative, but we've run into one of those situations today, regarding the current format. Recently ZapdosTCG went into detail regarding the current situation, and how players like Alex Schemanske and AzulGG are dropping out of the rat race, but he (and I) mostly whittle it down to a few problems bogging the game down.

1. Broken Nature of Some Cards​

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Culprit A: Dusknoir. This card could easily kill anything within 110 HP, or at the very least, weaken something to get it within killing range. Sure, getting knocked out might be a bit of a detriment for some, but...

Culprit B: Briar. Tera-Centered decks like Charizard, Terapagos, and Dragapult were quick to run this supporter in tandem with Dusknoir in order to lure the opponent into 2 Prize Cards, and then have something weaker (preferably a double prize card) get killed to effectively take up to 3 prizes!

Culprit C: Fezandipiti ex. The fact that this was a bulkier Oricorio GX that could compromise hand disruptors like Iono and Unfair Stamp basically made those comeback cards effectively useless.

2. A Homogenized Meta​

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At least Japanese players find ways to make otherwise mundane cards like Scolipede (TWM) look cool. But outside Japan, there's only a handful of decks that seem to be going anywhere. Dortmund is a great example ZapdosTCG explored. Despite the Top 8 decks being different, a recurring pattern emerged: Dusknoir was what won decks, not the stars of the decks themselves. A good chunk of these decks, even non-Tera decks like Palkia VSTAR ran this abomination. At least ADP GX decks, despite the stupid OP GX attack was balanced out in their Meta with other solid decks like Centiskorch, Eternatus, and Pikarom taking up space with it. But now, it feels like the game is actively punishing you for not following the Meta.

3. Going First Basically Guarantees a W​

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This was not something I actually thought would be detrimental to the game, but a lot of players are taking issue with how going first effectively wins you the game. What happened to decks like Future Box, where going second was also a good thing?

4. The Modern Tournament Qualification​

This is what's driving Azul and Schemanske to quit. The number of Qualifiers for Tournaments after Worlds '24 has basically shrunk. The 6-2 ratio no longer guarantees you getting into Regionals. That ratio basically sends you into a lottery. If few enough players don't show up, the number of rounds played shrinks too.

What now?​

Best case scenario: TPCI listens to the barrage of support tickets these fans have and does something. Worst Case scenario: Nothing happens and Azul leaves.

I'm just typing into the void.

10+ Meme Kermit The Frog Typing - FWDMY
 
I agree that the current format isn't the most fun, and I'd argue the biggest cause for that is Dusknoir. Losing to Briar is very annoying but I think that it's the combination with Dusknoir that makes it feel super shitty. If you're ahead with 3 vs. 4 Prize cards remaining, you're just losing that turn.
I don't really think Pezandipity is that bad, it's just a generic supporting ex and is well designed in a vacuum, although I'm starting to feel like we have too many of them when Mew, Squawkabilly, Rotom, Bibarel, etc exist.
 
Even lists that run dusk lineup, like charizard/pult still go second 100% of the time, being blind matchup.
This meta just seperates good players from really good players.
Azul won just in 3 years around 100k+ of tops. Doesnt mean he topped every singular event. Sometimes you lose, sometimes you win, it is what it is.

The 6-2 Ratio is just bs, youre absolutely right about that.
 
Creatures or whoever calls the shots needs to get a grip and start banning unhealthy cards again. Mysterious Message Mismagius (try saying that three times fast) had the same drawback with a busted effect, these "KO self" cards got a record of being too strong.
 
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