7/6/2023 0 Comments Passimian electrowebIf your Mew has the Wide Lens, you can hit Psychic Weakness on the Bench for 60, and this may be enough to sway the match in your favor, ESPECIALLY in a mirror match. If using Mew to attack with, only attach 1 Basic Fighting Energy to use Fling (can't attach Strong Energy to non-Fighting type Pokemon -OR- you can use 2 Basic Energy or a Double Colorless to use the Team Play). By the way, Umbreon-GX can be dealt with by hitting more than once (the urgency of OHKO is not there like it is for Tauros-GX). Numbers say its possible, but a lot depends on skill and luck. With 3 Strong Energy, you are hitting Weakness for 180 (enough to knock out Tauros-GX). Still not enough for a one-shot knock out, but with 2 Strong Energy, you are hitting Weakness for 140 (enough to knock out Oranguru). If that one Fighting Energy is a Strong Energy, Fling hits for 50 (times 2 for Weakness). Now, the Fling is hitting the Benched Pokemon with Fighting Weakness for 60 (Professor Kukui and Regirock-EX only gives a damage boost when attacking the Active opponent Pokemon). The Tool called Wide Lens becomes interesting by allowing for attacks against the Bench to have Weakness applied. Here is where the concept of "Fling Fun" comes in. At this point, smart people are looking back at Fling and saying that it only hits the Bench for 30, and without applying Weakness. Every deck build around Passimian seems to include 4 Strong Energy, and why not since it only makes perfect sense to get that +20 for each one you use.Īnother key aspect to this deck is to boost the HP from 110 to 150 with the Fighting Fury Belt, and I keep seeing builds with three of them as the standard (plus 1 Float Stone).Ī lot of the hype around Tauros-GX is that "if you hit me, I hurt you back even more" set of moves it has. I have tried both methods on PTCGO and it seems like the use of Mew is situationally good and sometimes optimistically optimistic for 'getting your way' early. There are variations that have a Mew from Fates Collide in the active and all Passimians on the bench, but most have a Passimian in the active. When starting your matches with Passimian, the goal is to get all four into play as quickly as possible. Actually, every Colorless type Pokemon from Sun and Moon that is not a bird, is weak to Fighting. In Sun and Moon, among those cards hyped, I keep seeing Tauros-GX, Umbreon-GX, and Orangugu mentioned. For opposing decks with a Fighting type weakness, this can become a real pain, if played right. The more I look at this move, the more I think about it, the more I think it may be underrated. I believe that decks using Passimian really need to be good at making this attack work. Most people I see putting out deck lists are focusing on how to make the Team Play work, and there are some really good videos out there showing a lot of success. (Don't apply Weakness and Resistance for Benched Pokemon.)Ģ) 2-Colorless Energy - Team Play 10+: This attack does 30 more damage for each of your Benched Passimian. Its a Basic Fighting type Pokemon with 110 HP, Psychic Weakness, and these 2 moves:ġ) 1-Fighting Energy - Fling: This attack does 30 damage to 1 of your opponent's Benched Pokemon. Can a deck built around Passimian be competitive? Maybe? Maybe in an expansion or two, but what about now?įor those not yet familiar with Passimian, here are the basics. There has been a lot of discussion around the GX cards, and they are really powerful. Now that Sun and Moon is out and people are experimenting with different deck builds that incorporate some of the expansion's cards into existing builds and deck builds centered around them specifically.
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