Pokemon TCG Pocket: Lunala and Mismagius Team Up with Rayquaza

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In Pokémon TCG Pocket's latest Lunar Meteor event, Lunala ex and Mismagius have become the ideal energy shuttles for Rayquaza ex, forming a Psychic-Dragon deck that's taking ranked matches by storm. The combo works because Lunala can move Psychic Energy from the bench to the active Pokémon, while Mismagius dumps energy back to the bench after attacking Pokemon TCG Pocket Cards. This fuels Rayquaza's Draco Meteor for massive damage across the board, making it a bench-sniping powerhouse—especially after recent patches improved Rayquaza's multi-target hits. Players are calling the deck "ridiculously efficient," clearing threats before opponents can even evolve.

The setup usually starts with evolving Cosmog into Lunala ex to begin cycling energy, while Fantina helps generate extra Psychic resources for Mismagius. Misdreavus evolves into Mismagius, chips away at opponents, and sends energy to benched allies like Rayquaza or extra Lunala, keeping your active spot flexible. Rayquaza ex comes in via Ilima retreats or Copycat mirrors, soaking damage while Lunala continues pumping energy. Opponents struggle to disrupt the loop because energy movement remains consistent, even under status effects like sleep from Hypno.

The deck itself is tight and focused: typically 2 Lunala ex lines, 2 Mismagius for consistency, and 1 Rayquaza ex as the closer, supported by 2 Cosmog, Rare Candy, and tech cards like Poke Ball, Professor's Research, and Giant Cape for stall. Trainers like Fantina handle draw and energy generation, Ilima helps with retreats, and Sabrina or Red offer pivots against aggressive decks. This 20-card build excels in the A3 Celestial Guardians format, with Alolan Pokémon shining and counters like Chingling minimized by prioritizing Lunala over fragile Mismagius early.

In practice, the game flow feels smooth: bench Cosmog and Misdreavus on turn one, evolve Lunala with Fantina by turn two, then chip with Mismagius while sending energy to Rayquaza. Against Dragonite mirrors, Lunala's Full Moon Ray can secure OHKOs after energy transfers, and Rayquaza's four random 40-damage pings handle spread benches, often finishing games before Mega Absol or Giratina setups develop. Weak spots include heavy Fighting decks like Iron Hands, though cards like Giant Cape buy time, and the deck's speed usually outpaces slower evolution lines.

This team works so well now because of Lunar Meteor buffs: Rayquaza's multi-hits take advantage of spread damage metas, Lunala fixes energy starvation post-Moone, and Mismagius adds redundancy against sniping decks. Many YouTubers are posting long win streaks in Platinum-Diamond, with optional tweaks like Leaf for healing or Pokémon Center Lady for clutch revives. The deck is also friendly to free-to-play players—Fantastical Parade pack pulls provide most of the pieces, so you only need Rayquaza from promo missions.

The deck is flexible too. Swap Fantina for Giratina in stall mirrors to self-generate energy, or run double Rayquaza against bench-heavy opponents, letting Lunala recharge after Draco Meteor self-damage. Mismagius holds early game, trading with basic Pokémon while setting up the KO engine. For ladder climbs, protecting evolutions and using switches wisely keeps your energy cycle flowing, aiming for Rayquaza bombs by turn four Pokemon TCG Pocket tool.

The Lunala-Mismagius-Rayquaza core has become a staple in the current Pokémon TCG Pocket meta. It combines mobility, burst damage, and sustain in a way that punishes slow starts while remaining adaptable for ladder play. As Celestial Guardians transitions toward B2 Fantastical Parade, expect refinements, but the energy-moving loop remains central—master it, practice your pivots, and watch this Psychic-Dragon powerhouse dominate Sanctuary's digital battles.

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