First, the deck:
4 Growlithe FRLG
4 Arcanine FRLG
4 Solrock DX
3 Koffing TRR
3 Weezing DX
3 Tangela RG
3 Grass
1 Scramble
6 Fire
2 Heal
3 Rainbow (to be reprinted in EF)
1 Boost
1 Strength Charm
2 Battle Frontier
2 Desert Ruins
1 Mt. Moon
4 Celio's Network
3 Rocket's Admin
2 Copycat
4 Steven's Advice
3 Professor Oak's Research
1 Crystal Shard
Second, a history lesson: the Cleaner deck started out in 1999, during the Base Set/Jungle era, as a deck made of only commons and uncommons. It featured Arcanine, which was an uncommon back then, but the attacks stayed the same. The goal was to use statuses to make the opponent switch their Pokémon out, and after enough damage was dealt to each of your opponent's Pokémon, you bring the fully powered Arcanine and clean your opponent's side of the table and your prize cards. The strategy remains the same.
Too bad we do not have Professor Oak reprinted. :frown:
Comments, insults, anything?
4 Growlithe FRLG
4 Arcanine FRLG
4 Solrock DX
3 Koffing TRR
3 Weezing DX
3 Tangela RG
3 Grass
1 Scramble
6 Fire
2 Heal
3 Rainbow (to be reprinted in EF)
1 Boost
1 Strength Charm
2 Battle Frontier
2 Desert Ruins
1 Mt. Moon
4 Celio's Network
3 Rocket's Admin
2 Copycat
4 Steven's Advice
3 Professor Oak's Research
1 Crystal Shard
Second, a history lesson: the Cleaner deck started out in 1999, during the Base Set/Jungle era, as a deck made of only commons and uncommons. It featured Arcanine, which was an uncommon back then, but the attacks stayed the same. The goal was to use statuses to make the opponent switch their Pokémon out, and after enough damage was dealt to each of your opponent's Pokémon, you bring the fully powered Arcanine and clean your opponent's side of the table and your prize cards. The strategy remains the same.
Too bad we do not have Professor Oak reprinted. :frown:
Comments, insults, anything?