Night March (TCG) - Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokmon encyclopedia

Publish date: 2024-05-19

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.

Night March
Era2014–2019


Night March was a Pokémon Trading Card Game deck archetype popularly played in the 2014-2015 and 2015-2016 season, remaining as a contender in the Expanded format even despite cards specifically created to counter this deck and the introduction of Pokémon with more Hit Points. The deck's strategy revolved around Pokémon from the Phantom Forces expansion that have the Night March attack, which deals damage for each Pokémon in the discard pile with the same attack. This could allow the player to hit the opponent's Pokémon for up to 220 damage without other effects, given at least one of the Pokémon stays in play. The banning of Lysandre's Trump Card, which should directly disrupt this deck, and further additions such as Mew and Puzzle of Time kept the deck's streak through the new expansions. This archetype was heavily seen in tournaments and favored by many players due to its lower physical cost in contrast to more expensive Pokémon-EX decks and by many of its cards being available on the same expansion. While it did not make Top 4 at the 2015 and 2016 Pokémon Trading Card Game World Championships due to opposing strategies that could damage Benched Pokémon, it still ranked many first places and Top 16 appearances up to the 2018-2019 format.

Atsushi Nagashima, the game director of the TCG, has stated that Night March is his favorite strategy.[1] Nagashima had worked on creating the archetype and believed it could appear in the championships, but had underestimated its viability. Nagashima went on to claim that later expansions were affected by Night March's success.[2]

Strategy

Night March focused in discarding as many possible Night March Pokémon (Joltik, Pumpkaboo and Lampent) in the first turns to maximize the damage output while still having one attacker in play and use these attacks with Double Colorless Energy. Because all attackers were single-prized Pokémon dealing high damage for one energy card, their low Hit Points were not a strict concern as the player should get prize cards faster than the opponent. By having Lightning and Psychic attackers, it was also favored against Pokémon with these Weaknesses. Because Lampent was an Evolution Pokémon and its pre-evolution cards had no synergy in the deck, it was never used as an attacker and its only purpose was to be discarded for the damage output.

To get a fast setup, many copies of Battle Compressor, Ultra Ball and Professor Juniper were essential in these decklists. Dimension Valley was also crucial so Pumpkaboo's attack would cost   , not needing extra energy to attack. Empoleon and Mew-EX were secondary attackers only during the 2014-2015 format to counter certain Pokémon and benefit from the Diving Draw Ability. Many notorious synergizing cards were released in the 2015-2016 format, such as Puzzle of Time, Teammates, Hex Maniac, Fighting Fury Belt and as well Memories of Dawn Mew as a backup attacker. After this deck rotated out of the Standard format, Night March lost Hex Maniac and Puzzle of Time that have been then banned in the Expanded format and got Marshadow-GX as a better backup attacker.

Due to its focus in sending Pokémon to the discard pile, this archetype was sometimes part of Vespiquen decklists for having a similar strategy.

Key cards

Typical decklist

Brad Curcio's decklist at the 2016 World Championships


Igor Costa's decklist at the 2019 Toronto Regional


Possible tech cards

The following cards are often used in Night March in place of certain cards included in the above lists.

References

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