Top 16 Decks From Pokemon World Championship 2024 – Pokemon TCG

A lot of action happened in the Pokemon World Championship! Unexpected decks performed well, insane clutch games, and Ian Robb was disqualified in the top 4. Many of the decks we expected showed up in the top 32, but some unpopular decks held up well, with Iron Thorns winning it all in Worlds 2024!

Here are the top 16 decks that performed in Worlds!

First Place: Iron Thorns

Fernando Cifuentes managed to win worlds with Iron Thorns! This is a meta call, which uses Iron Thorn’s Initialization to take advantage of decks that rely on their Pokemon’s abilities. By shutting opponents from activating their Pokemon’s Ability, you’re slowing them down immensely, giving you enough time to start Knocking Out their Pokemon with Iron Thorn’s Volt Cyclone.

Only one Iron Thorns deck made it into the top 16 and it kept on winning until it won it all!

Second Place Roaring Moon

Roaring Moon came in second place, just close to winning it all, but ended up losing to Iron Thorns. Seinosuke Shiokawa did a fantastic job piloting this deck and has definitely left his mark in Worlds 2024.

Roaring Moon ex relies on Calamity Storm as a damage dealer, but it has to discard a Stadium in play for the Power boost. However, Frenzied Gouging can knock out Pokemon with more than 220 HP, but the drawback is that Roaring Moon will deal 200 damage to itself, putting you at risk of a knockout on the upcoming turn.

Third Place: Miraidon

Jesse Parker brought Miraidon, another meta call, mostly because it has a great matchup against Lugia and Gardevoir, two decks that are expected to have a high representation in Worlds.

Miraidon ex is the main damage dealer, threatening 220 damage with its Phantom Blaster. However, once activated, you can’t attack on the upcoming turn with Miraidon ex.

Fourth Place: Regidrago

Raz Wolpe finished 4th place with Regidrago, a deck we expected the most from in this year’s Worlds and it didn’t disappoint. Many players performed with Regidrago, 6 of which made it into the top 16!

Regidrago VSTAR lets you copy any Dragon Pokemon’s attacks from your discard pile. You’ll mainly copy Dragapult ex’s Phantom Dive attack to spread damage counters, however, this list also includes Giratina VSTAR’s Lost Impact to deal 280 damage. With the addition of Kyurem, you can copy Trifrost attack to hit three Pokemon.


Top 8

5th Regidrago

Player: Isiah Bradener

6th Raging Bolt Ogerpon

Player: James Goreing

7th Regidrago

Player: Ian Rob

8th Regidrago

Player: Michael Davidson

Three Regidragon finished in the top 8! We knew the deck would perform and it did not disappoint for those players!

One Raging Bolt Ogerpon deck ended its run in the top 8. Raging Bolt ex works alongside Teal Mask Ogerpon ex to activate Bellowing Thunder and deal tons of damage to the opponent’s Pokemon.

Teal Mask Ogerpon ex can attach a Basic Grass Energy through Teal Dance ability and at the same time, it draws a card. So you’re not losing card value, and you’re attaching Basic Energy for Ranging Bolt ex to discard and power up Bellowing Thunder’s damage.


Top 16

Lugia Archeops

Player: Rahul Reddy

Charizard Pidgeot

Player: Tord Reklev

Regidrago

Player: Grant Shen

Gardevoir

Player: Luo Tian Qing

Regidrago

Player: Miloslav Posledni

Lugia Archeops

Player: Konsta Kallama

Miraidon

Player: Ryan Harris

Chien-Pao Baxcalibur

Player: Lucas Xing