Best Leafeon ex Deck For Pokemon TCG Pocket

Best Leafeon ex Deck For Pokemon TCG Pocket
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There have been enough Eevee variants in Pokemon TCG Pocket to account for at least one per prospective evolution, but it’s taken until the release of Triumphant Light for us to get our first glimpse of Leafeon ex. “Eeveelution” cards can vary dramatically in competitive value – and Leafeon ex stands right up there with Mythical Island’s Vaporeon for the best of the bunch thus far.

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Leafeon ex’s natural bulk, as well as its stellar Ability, give it enough of an edge to easily slot into the upper echelons all on their own. But the card’s delightful versatility has positioned it ever higher. Our version of Pokemon TCG Pocket’s Leafeon ex deck is just one among several, though it’s certainly our favourite, and we’ll discuss alternatives, too.

Sample Decklist

Leafeon ex against a Gaussian Blur in Pokemon TCG Pocket

Leafeon ex and Yanmega ex Deck

Mythical Island Eevee in Pokemon TCG Pocket

Leafeon ex in Pokemon TCG Pocket

Yanma in Pokemon TCG Pocket
Yanma ex in Pokemon TCG Pocket

(MI) Eevee x2

Leafeon ex x2

Yanma x2

Yanmega ex x2

Erika in Pokemon TCG Pocket
Irida in Pokemon TCG Pocket
Giant Cape in Pokemon TCG Pocket
The Cyrus Trainer card in Pokemon TCG Pocket.

Erika x2

Irida x2

Giant Cape x2

Cyrus x1

Sabrina in Pokemon TCG Pocket
Professor's Research in Pokemon TCG Pocket.
Poke Ball in Pokemon TCG Pocket

Sabrina x1

Professor’s Research x2

Poke Ball x2

While any Eevee can be used here, you’ll find that the overwhelming majority of players use Mythical Island’s Eevee. And for good reason, as its Continuous Steps attack, which, while luck-based, can theoretically deal loads of damage with one Energy, puts it above every other kind.

Our preferred approach to the Leafeon ex deck is to pair it with another ex – Yanmega ex. This means a pair of single-evolution Basic Pokemon comprise the entirety of your creature stockpile, leaving 12 Trainer cards at your disposal.

That’s a lot to work with, of course, and this decklist makes the most of it. The lovely thing about the deck is that, despite all appearances to the contrary, we’re running Water Energy on it rather than Grass Energy.

This gives us a singularly outstanding chance to use a whopping four healing-based Supporter Cards, as the only specifically-Grass Energy that you’ll need can come from Leafeon ex itself. Everything else runs on Colourless, so Water slots in just fine.

Put plainly, then, this is unparalleled bulk. You’re not mixing Erika with a pair of Potions. You’re mixing her with Irida, who will heal all your Pokemon with Water Energy attached to them for 40 HP. \\Toss in those Giant Capes to shore up Eevee’s and Yanma’s low health, and to make Leafeon ex and Yanmega ex even bulkier, and it’s a lot to handle if you’re in the line of fire here.

Alternative Cards

Celebi ex against a Gaussian Blur in Pokemon TCG Pocket

There are plenty of other viable builds for Leafeon ex. The most popular among them pairs Leafeon ex with Celebi ex. Some suggest just one Celebi ex, while others roll with two. Either way, you’ll have even more Trainer Card slots available than our favourite version does.

If you don’t mind the need to rely on chance, there’s no two ways about it: Leafeon ex will be able to use its Ability (which we’ll get into shortly) to fuel Celebi ex with heaps of Grass Energy, at which point there is a distinct statistical likelihood that Celebi will dish serious damage.

Personally, we tend to avoid chance-based attacks. (Yes, this makes our choice of Mythical Island Eevee curious, but that version still trumps its peers.) It’s just that Celebi ex’s relentless coin-flipping could just as easily end up with a string of eight tails as eight heads. That’s just us, though. There’s no denying that Celebi ex typically performs quite strongly with Leafeon ex.

Some players also use Shaymin. Not just one kind, either. Mythical Island Shaymin grants you even more healing with its Ability, which can heal all of your Pokemon for 10 HP per turn. The newer Shaymin, from Triumphant Light, instead reduces your Active Pokemon’s retreat cost by one so long as it’s on the board.

And here’s the thing: Eevee, Yanma, Leafeon ex, Yanmega ex, and Celebi all have a single retreat cost, making Triumphant Light Shaymin essentially a permanently-online Leaf. Well, you know. Unless it’s knocked out. Therein lies the rub, really.

You could add Potions to press your healing capabilities even further, but at a certain point, we feel like it’s overkill relative to what you’ll lose out on by eating up those card slots.

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Deck Strategy

Irida against a Gaussian Blur in Pokemon TCG Pocket

The Setup

If you follow our decklist, you’re either going to end up placing an Eevee or a Yanma in the Active Spot when the match begins.

The former’s Continuous Steps costs one Colourless Energy and will task you with flipping a coin until you get tails, dealing 20 damage for each heads. In other words, you’re 50/50 on even landing a single blow, but you could end up doing far more. Yanma’s Flap instead hits for a guaranteed 20 damage.

Should you wind up with the chance to choose between the two,check your opponent’s Energy type before making your decision. Eevee is weak to Fighting, and Yanma is weak to Lightning. Our best advice if the opponent’s Energy type isn’t helpful is to go with Eevee. You’ll need Leafeon ex in the Active Spot in order to use its Ability, so it’s better to get Eevee out there from the get-go.

Hook a Giant Cape to your opener. You’ve got two of them, after all, and only four “sets” of Pokemon the entire match. If you have Eevee, and you go first, you’ll probably want to sacrifice the chance to attack on turn three (your second turn) in favour of evolving Eevee if possible.

This is because Leafeon ex’s all-important Ability, Forest Breath, allows you to hook one Grass Energy to one of your Pokemon per turn, so long as it’s in the Active Spot. On turn three, you will able to attach Energy for the first time.

Have Leafeon use Forest Breath on itself in conjunction with the Energy attachment. This will put it two-thirds of the way to using its 70-damage attack, Solar Beam. From turn five onward, you can attach one more Energy to Leafeon ex while using Forest Breath on your Benched Pokemon from hereon out.

Suffice it to say, you may go second. Or you may have Yanma to start out with. Or both. Whatever the case may be, work on getting Leafeon ex out there ASAP. The deck truly comes online once Leafeon is out there; that’s the crux here.

The Goal

Once Leafeon ex is in prime position, the magic happens. It’s undeniable that Solar Beam’s 70 damage isn’t impressive in its own right. But think of it this way. That’s 70 guaranteed damage every round while you’re setting up your Yanmega(s) and even your other Leafeon ex.

Yanmega ex is your heavy hitter. For three Colourless Energy, its attack, Air Slash, deals an eye-opening 120 damage. You do need to discard an Energy after each usage, but that’s hardly going to be a problem, because you can just attach another to it whenever necessary on subsequent turns.

Along the way to hopeful victory, you’re going to be “watering your plants” as required. Erika heals any Grass Pokemon for 50 HP, making her a mainstay in Grass-type decks ever since Pokemon TCG Pocket’s grand debut. Irida, introduced in Triumphant Light, heals all Pokemon with Water Energy attached for 40 HP.

And that’s the beauty of it, as we’ve previously mentioned – your Leafeon ex and Yanmega ex will qualify for both. Armed with Giant Capes, they’re going to make for able tanks against all but their worst match-ups, and you’re going to overwhelm your opponents in due course unless things go terribly sideways. Which can always happen, but you’ll be prepared for plenty of problems.

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Matchups And Counters

Darkrai ex in Pokemon TCG Pocket

For every solid deck, there are dreams and disasters.

Best Matches

If you’re lucky, you’ll be up against a Darkrai ex deck. Darkrai ex dominated the scene during the heyday of Space-Time Smackdown, with several mighty variants, ultimately culminating with the spectacular Darkrai ex and Magnezone deck.

The thing is, Darkrai ex, like several Darkness-type Pokemon introduced in Space-Time Smackdown, is not weak to Fighting. It is, in fact, weak to Grass. That gave Grass-types a handsome comeback, but there wasn’t a fresh frontrunner to pit against the Pitch-Black Pokemon.

Indeed, Leafeon ex has fulfilled that role. Solar Beam hits for 90 against Darkrai ex, which will two-shot Darkrai ex even if it’s got a Giant Cape equipped. It’ll do the same to Weavile ex, one of Darkrai ex’s boon companions.

And that’s not even getting into Yanmega ex, of course. Air Slash will dish 140 damage to them, which knocks them out in a single-shot. Even if they have Giant Capes, they’re perilously close to incapacitation afterward.

There are other great match-ups to consider. Two of the current heavyweights include:

  • Garchomp ex decks, whose star player is weak to Grass
  • Lucario and Rampardos decks; Lucario isn’t weak to Grass, but Rampardos sure is

Worst Matches

On the flip side, you’re going to have a tough time against Fire-type decks and Lightning-type decks. The former because Leafeon ex is weak to Fire; the latter because Yanmega ex is weak to Lightning. It’s nice that they don’t share a weakness – Celebi ex, for the record, does share Leafeon ex’s weakness – but it’s still an issue.

Of the two potential troubles, it’s arguably better to be up against a Lightning deck than a Fire deck. This is because Leafeon ex is the one who will need to spend more time in the Active Spot, building up your ambitions through Forest Breath.

While it’s not the strongest deck to ever hit the meta, the Infernape ex deck is possibly Leafeon ex’s greatest nightmare. Though Infernape ex is a Stage 2 Pokemon, both Chimchar and Monferno will be capable of hurting Leafeon ex aplenty, eating up your healing cards.

Infernape ex‘s own attack, which costs just two Fire Energy, will flat-out K.O. Leafeon ex even with a Giant Cape attached.

As we often stress, you’re not going to win every single match with any deck in Pokemon TCG Pocket. That’d rather spoil the fun, besides. But Leafeon ex, as of this writing, numbers among the best of the best.

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