Top 8 Decks Regional Sacramento Surging Sparks – Pokemon TCG

Check out the top 8 Pokemon TCG decks from the Sacramento Regionals, Surging Sparks meta.

The Pokemon TCG Regionals in Sacramento took place this weekend on the 23rd of November. 1705 players participated in this tournament, fighting tooth and nail to make it into the top cut. This is our first Pokemon TCG Regional tournament in the Surging Sparks meta, so players are still experimenting with the new cards and trying to find the best competitive decks out there.

We knew Regidrago would be a strong deck in the Surging Sparks meta, but we still saw underdog decks make it far in this tournament, even beating the popular Regidrago. Let’s take a look at the top 8 decks in the Sacramento Regionals!


1st Miraidon – Landen Kaetler

The Sacramento Regionals had two Miraidon players in the finals, battling it out for the first place! This deck is heavy on Ligthing-type Pokemon, mainly because of Miraidon’s ability, Tandem Unit. Tandem Unit lets you search your deck for 2 Lightning Pokemon and put them on the Bench, helping you find the cards you need and thin out your deck.

Magneton’s Overvolt Discharge plays an important role in making use of discarded Lightning Energy, helping you set up one of your attackers immediately. Keep in mind that activating Overvolt Discharge will knock out Magneton and give the opponent 1 Prize card.

Miraidon deals 220 damage with Photon Blaster, but you can’t activate it again on the upcoming turn, which means you need to have another attacker take its place. Raikou V and Raichu V are great damage dealers to switch in Miraidon’s place and keep the damage going. We’ll use Latias ex’s Skyliner to switch out Pokemon, removing the retreat cost and making things easier.

2nd Miraidon – Kenneth Gilman

The second place Miraidon list. This one has Greninja and Rotom V as draw options and adds Irida. It also has a Switch Cart and an extra 1 Lightning Energy.

3rd Gholdengo Victor de Velasco

Gholdengo ex decks focus on its “Make It Rain” attack, which deals 50 damage per Basic Energy discarded from your hand, making Energy retrieval and draw power essential. Its “Coin Bonus” ability helps sustain resources, while cards like Superior Energy Retrieval and Earthen Vessel ensure Energy flow. Radiant Greninja and other draw engines accelerate setup, and the deck’s simplicity as a Stage 1 evolution offers consistency. Success relies on managing resources to maintain high-damage output.

4th Regidrago Grant Shen

4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th places are all Regidrago, proving that it’s the most consistent deck in the format. Players will have to keep Regidrago in mind going forward when picking their deck. The deck you bring has to have a fighting chance against Regidrago since you’ll likely face off against it multiple times.

Regidrago VSTAR is the main damage dealer in this deck, using Apex Dragon to copy one of your Dragon Pokemon’s attacks. Those Dragon Pokemon need to be in the Discard Pile for Regidrago to copy, so we have multiple cards that can discard them.

Giratina VSTAR’s Lost Impact is the strongest single target attack to knock out a Pokemon, dealing 280 damage to the opponent’s Active Pokemon. Dragapult’s Phantom Dive is another strong option, capable of dealing 220 damage to the opponent’s Active Pokemon and 60 damage to their Bench. As for Kyurem’s Trifrost, it deals 110 damage to three of the opponent’s Pokemon.

The attack you choose will depend on the state of the game. Giratina VSTAR’s Lost Impact is great for knocking out the Active Pokemon, Kyurem’s Trifrost to get multiple knockouts on low-health Pokemon, and Dragapult’s Phantom Dive is the best of both of worlds, dealing a lot of damage to a single target and still chipping at the opponent’s Bench.

5th Regidrago Brent Tonisson

6th Regidrago Jon Eng

7th Regidrago Noah Sakadjian

8th Regidrago Isaiah Williams