Pokémon TCG: Sword and Shield—Brilliant Stars

Bdif ?

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If there really WAS a BDIF, only the newest of new players would need to ask what it was.

No-one was going round in 2008 asking what the BDIF was, were they?
 
There may not be a "clear bdif", but the fact is there will always be one strategy that has more advantages/less bad match ups than the rest. It's not clear by any means as of now, but I'd give it a couple of weeks after cities start.
 
Stop this guessing people, it will only get you in a world of pain...

WHATS THE BDIF I WANT TO KNOW TELL ME NOW...

XD
 
Now I'm curious... Take the BDIF's from various formats and pit them against each other. Not unlimited versions, but like Metanite and GG and LBS and Haymaker, true to their respective formats.
 
Luxchomp is the overall winner. It won worlds, States, BR's, and Nats. There you go. Disscusion over.
 
Quotes from the article:

THIS IS NOT A DECK THAT IS EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD IN TODAY'S META. It was, however, a very good deck back in the meta that it was designed to counter, and can still work as a standalone deck. It's not a deck nowadays that I'd take to a tournament (aside from a fun BR)...

I know the deck's not that great any more (it's playable, but not great), but I wanted to share my knowledge of it anyway.

^As I've said, I wouldn't take this into a tournament any more - it was only really in its prime in the DP-UD format.

Let's not derail the topic.
 
Gengar isnt too bad either (kills machamp, does well against sp, and gyarados) if you have a good head on your shoulders and can pioneer a good list :)

but regardless play sumthin with sp in it dog
 
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