I know this is off topic but I’m new to glc and I was just wondering if anybody knows why the decks on limitless TCG are so different than the ones in these videos. On limitless nobody plays hexmaniac or Dialga and everybody plays Heatran in metal. Would somebody be able to explain this to me?
Its all up to personal preference. You can only fit 60 cards in there so some people are going to prioritize different things. Sometimes it depends on whats good against your locals as well, if applicable. Just test out both versions yourself and see what feels better. Hopefully in a few weeks we will have Twinleaf GG for the community to play GLC online once again and make it way easier to test.
@@shaggyrogers8015 I think people confused with a Jirachi from gen 4 that did a similar thing, but it was pokepower. Pokepowers could not be used if the pokemon was affected by a status condition
Morse Makes has done it again! His latest vlog showcasing GLC perfectly captures the heart and soul of our local community. The way he highlights the atmosphere, the people, and the events truly brings the experience to life. This vlog, featuring Dillon, a "washed" standard player who surprisingly shined this week, was a standout. Morse's commentary was engaging and insightful, shedding light on Dillon's journey and the community's support. I always look forward to these videos, and this one didn’t disappoint. If you want a genuine glimpse into what makes GLC special, Morse Makes is your go-to channel. Keep up the fantastic work!
If theres time and people are willing, it would be great if you could do some video flyovers of peoples' decklists. Now that live ruined the availability of getting decklists on limitless, there really isnt anywhere except the cardboard warriors discord to see decklists iterated on and improved. Would be great to see what kind of cooks you guys are coming up with.
It's really tough to survive Guzma / Boss's order for consecutive turns. Something similar happened to me at locals, I was playing rain dance and couldn't set a moth or bax due to back to back gusting. Better luck next time Ben! Greetings from Brazil 🇧🇷
@@garfieldliang3359 Attacks works in multiple steps, simplifying it a lot here but it checks if it has enough energy to fulfil the attack first then it carries out the attack and effects of the attack. Then just like playing rescue stretcher for shuffle less than 3 Pokemon, you discard as much energy as you can to fulfil the effect. However if the effect of the attack was “you must discard 3 energy in order to use this attack”, mimiku wouldn’t be able to copy it with only 2 energy
I really liked your use of hex game 1. I usually look for hex as a "im nuking you this turn and im going to try to stop you from responding so i can do it again next turn" style of play, but using it instead of raihan to buy an extra turn is a really heads up way of using it. I'll try to recall that in the future
Using it a key turn when they are most vulnerable is usually great! If Alex was attacking with someone who kept energy on board, i would have definitely gone with Raihan instead to keep up. But this way i could preserve raihan and establish my board more without much fear of getting KOd
What do you think about the cresselia from shrouded fable over latios? It' doesnt discard energy in exchange for kinda killing town map. Been about 50/50 on it in my testing
I think Cress would be decent in a basic psychic Xatu list; it is just a bit unfortunate that it takes 3 psychic. You can't reduce its cost with Dimension Valley which is one of the best parts of psychic. Town map is also great. I think you have enough other attacking options without those downsides that Cresselia probably doesn't make the cut
Great Match, but judges should be more on the look out for player mistakes, Drawing 7 cards off Iono might not be a big deal, but it’s not the first time we’ve seen this player make mistakes and not been called right away. Great Game Guys, Plopal And HTH created an Amazing Lightning Deck ❤
Judges aren't actively watching games; its on players to catch it and ask judges to come make a ruling. Unfortunately sometimes things slip by, people make mistakes all the time, and Hunter just happens to be on camera more often than most of our players
@@michaelashbrook3195 bud, this isn’t subjective, it’s objective, I don’t care how many cards you THINK you counted, my guy drew 7 cards: 1. Speed Energy 2. Air Balloon 3. Prof.Resarch 4. Guzma&Hala 5. Volkner 6. Electron Power 7. Hex Maniac
You missed that hunter discarded BOTH super rod and rescue stretcher early game without use. Had O-rod left, but he obviously mis-estimated how many free prizes he could take with spread and ran out of attackers
Oops, forgot to add! They are in the description now. Also here: Lightning - cardboardwarriors.net/decks/Broken-Lightning-Spread-665e2b74d6050504cc116573 Colorless - cardboardwarriors.net/decks/Full-Grip-Badge-Winner---Jon-P.---9-5-24-66e2638e31a7fe14dd9e3d41
Colorless decklist here; I do not have the dark deck list unfortunately. cardboardwarriors.net/decks/Full-Grip-Badge-Winner---Jon-P.---9-5-24-66e2638e31a7fe14dd9e3d41
Tough game for cole. Really slow start, but games where you're down are the ones where it's extra important to tighten up your play, find a prize map that might work, and stick to it super hard. You're going to be down in 50% of the games you play, and if you get tilted and start misplaying all over the place every time, you're going to lose a lot of those games that are savable. This game also illustrates why it's so important to pick your targets instead of extending to swing into whatever you can. Using his buffed up spiritomb early on the cyclizar was likely incorrect, as he had no other backup attackers ready and the snorlax was looking like WAY more of a threat. Then he got punished for having nothing else ready when that snorlax needed 0 help going nuts the next turn. Hope he comes back with a vengeance! Would love to see him get the comeback win next time!