Description

This is the webpage for the Champaign-Urbana Pokémon group!
You can find current events, League meeting times, and all other Pokémon related information for the area.
Be sure to check back regularly for more information and updated calendar events!

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Tentative Open Tournament Schedule

Hey guys! Here is the tournament schedule:


Event Calendar:


Tuesday August 11th- Dry Run of Mossdeep Open (Expanded)


Sunday August 16th- Mossdeep Open #2 (Expanded)


Sunday August 23rd- Mossdeep Open #3 (no stream) (Expanded) Cancelled because of many conflicts


Sunday August 30th- Mossdeep Open #3 (Expanded)


Sunday September 6th- Finals of Mossdeep Open (XY-on) (not sanctioned) (tournament is invite-only, but everyone is welcome to come and play regular league play as always!)

Sunday September 13th- Regular, relaxing league play

Sunday, September 20th- Sootopolis Open #1 (XY-on)


Sunday, September 27th- Sootopolis Open #2 (XY-on)


Sunday, October 4th- Sootopolis Open #3 (Expanded)


Sunday, October 11th- No tournament, Lancaster Regionals (tentative)


Sunday, October 18th- No tournament, Ft. Wayne Regionals

Finals of Sootopolis Open: TBD upon approval of those in the finals.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

"Better Call Paul"- An Interview with Paul Nicholas

Paul is a relatively new player in the C-U area, but he is definitely someone not to be underestimated. He managed to take home the win at the first C-U Mossdeep Open with his Metal deck.

On to the interview!

--


Where are you from?

I'm from Thomasboro originally, but my family and I moved here to Champaign after 1st grade.

How old are you?

I just recently turned 22.

Can you tell us about your history with the game? When did you first start? When did you first get competitive?

In 2012, one of my high school friends (Colton Bagby) messaged me and asked if I still had my Pokemon cards, which of course I did! He then went on to explain how he wanted to get into playing pokemon competitively, and that's where he caught my interest. The thought of getting involved with something I love , and being able to compete with it was mind blowing! Not only that but, he mentioned there was a small tournament (a Battle Roads) in Rantoul that weekend! Granted when we showed up we had no experience, out of format cards, and what bugged Sam Peters the most.... no sleeves. But I'll never forget that day meeting the Krew®, and everyone else that helped Colton and I with getting started.

As far as actually buckling down and being competitive goes, The beginning of the 2015 Circuit is my first season to go for the gold.

Do you intend to try for a Worlds invite?

As of the beginning of this season, absolutely.

How many tournaments did you travel to this season?

For this past season I went to 3 Regionals: Ft. Wayne, St. Louis, and Philly. I went to a few Premiere Challenges as well. Oh which reminds me, I played VGC for this past season, just to clarify. And the season before that, I played TCG. By the end of all the grinding to finish out the VCG season with a mere 34 championship points, I decided to play in TCG for the 2014 season Nationals, and I don't regret it one bit. It took me a couple seasons to figure out where my best interests lay, and TCG takes the cake!

How far do you travel for tournaments?

For the 2014 season, the main people I play with all decided that we were going to make a nice trip to Philadelphia Regionals! Minus the long and constant drive, it was well worth the awesome experience and memories.

Are there any big matches from your career that stick out to you?

Well there was that one time I beat Damien....

What are the main differences between the VGC and TCG?

Being a person who is familiar with both sides of the spectrum, the absolute biggest difference is the amount of time the rounds last. With VGC everything happens at once and both opponents pokemon attack within the turn, then when the dust settles you go about your next turn. Its more "You go, then I go" kind of thing with tcg. I've also noticed there is more preparation with VGC, considering you have a create your pokemon to play with. That doesn't go without saying TCG also takes a lot of preparation, just not as much in my opinion.

What decks do you think you’ll play this year in Standard and Expanded?

For standard it'll either be Mega Manectric or Straight Metal. And Expanded has so much to play with I'm 

so unsure of what to use. I'm fine with Metal but I don't think Mega Manectric has the power to keep up.


What is your favorite card of all time?


Geez, there are so many to choose from! I'd have to stick with the secret rare Sigilyph from the Plasma 
Freeze Set. Considering Sigilyph is my favorite Pokemon!!

What is your favorite deck of all time?

Keep in mind I've only played since 2012 right after the big basics came into play, I'd have to go with RayEels! So much acceleration and so much damage.

Who do you test with the most? How much do you play online?

I test with Damien a lot, he's a tough competitor and always has great ideas. Especially recently with me buckling down and getting serious.
Playing online is to slow, I like a faster play style personally.

What do you do outside of Pokemon?

I work a lot.

What would you do if Pokemon suddenly stopped existing?

...*chuckles*

Any shoutouts?

SHOUT OUT TO YA BOIZ COLE, DAMIEN, NICK, COLTON, BRANDON, NICK, DANIEL, BEN, AND SOGGY!!


"SEE YA NERDS"

  • --

  • Thanks for the interview, Paul!

  • ---

Glossary:

Battle Roads- Before League Challenges, entry level tournaments were called Battle Roads. Instead of being year-round, they happened in the spring and the fall.

Standard vs. Expanded- The Standard format changes every year, and for the upcoming season will include every set released from the XY block, including the Kalos Starter Set. Feel free to ask a league member if a card is Standard-legal! The Expanded format consists of every set released since the base set of Black & White, but you don't need to worry about that unless you are traveling to a Regional tournament.

"Let's Party, Hardy"- An Interview with Damien Hardy

Damien has been a part of the Champaign Pokemon League for almost as long as it has existed, and has stayed competitive throughout much of that time. He had one of the highest Championship Point totals in the area this season, and it looks like he is going to represent the area well this next year as well.

Here is the interview!

--

Could you introduce yourself?
I am from Tolono, a small town just outside of Champaign-Urbana. It's a 20 minute drive to league, but it's always worth it. I am currently 19, and will be 20 in December. I am a sophomore at the University of Illinois. My major is actuarial science with a minor in philosophy.
Can you tell us about your history with the game? When did you first start? When did you first get competitive?
I first started playing Pokémon before I could read. My dad bought cards for us to play with and taught me what each card in my deck did. I went to league for about a year at the local Toys R Us. When that shut down I stopped playing Pokemon and just casually bought cards and traded with my friends. I got back into the game in 2009 by finding a league at a local card shop. My friends and I started playing casually at the league and by the end of the year I starting getting into the more competitive aspect of the game. By 2010 I knew enough to start really traveling for tournaments and competing with some of the top players. I haven't ever left the game since. Some years I play less than others, but I always compete in a good amount of tournaments.
How many times have you tried for a Worlds invite?
I've never went a entire season trying for a Worlds invite. In 2010 I traveled for tournaments, but didn't take my Worlds invite serious until I got back to back 2nd place finishes at state championships. That's when the idea of getting my worlds invite became real and I started pursuing that dream. 
Last year I started the season off trying to get my Worlds Invite and I traveled to a lot of tournaments trying to get enough points for Worlds, but by the end of the year, school had just drained too much out of me and I ended up missing a few key tournaments that kept me from getting my Worlds invite this year.
When did you succeed? What do you attribute to your success?
2010 was my first and only Worlds invite. Most of my success has to be attributed to the great testing partners and friends I had that year. Lucas Selig, Ryan Alperstein, and Robby Skeffington have always been a huge part of my pokemon success. Without them I'm sure I wouldn't have nearly as many tournament wins as I do now. Of course I had a bunch of other great people around me that year, and having a consistent league that met every week was a key part in the success I had that year.
What was Worlds like?
Worlds was a blast. I went with Lucas, his mother, and his brother. We had a ton of fun adventuring around Hawaii, but most of our time was spent on preparing for the World Championship. It was really cool to see everyone I had met from traveling around that year at Worlds. It was also an awesome experience to play against people from foreign countries. It seems like it would be difficult to communicate with people who speak a different language, but for Pokemon players it's surprisingly easy. It seems like all Pokemon players speak a universal language when playing the game. Unfortunately that year I just missed out on making top cut at Worlds, but I was lucky enough to make it into the top 32 players in the world!
Are there any big matches that stick out to you from your career?
Last season (2014) Plasma was doing really well during City Championships. The local City Championship for Champaign was coming up and I didn't really know what deck I wanted to play. So the morning of the tournament I build a Plasma variant, but instead of the standard Kyurem or Lugia build, I play Snorlax. I ended up winning the Champaign City Championship with Snorlax, and I guess I wasn't the only one that saw potential in Snorlax. Multiple players around the country were winning City Championships with Snorlax. I didn't even realize Snorlax was a big name deck until someone at the tournament asked me if I was playing the secret deck and I said no I'm just playing Snorlax. Apparently that was the secret deck. (My Snorlax list was actually very different than the "secret deck" list that was going around)
Is there a specific deck you played/got most of your points with this year? Why do you particularly like that deck?
Seismitoad/Manectric/Garbodor got me all but 15 of my 235 championship points this year. I started playing it in the Chicago Cities marathon when I got the list from a good friend in Canada. Jay Lesage set me a list late one night while I was struggling to find a deck to play for the next day of the marathon. I didn't have very much success in the first two tournaments I played it in, and quickly found out where I was making my mistakes during my games. It took me two tournaments to finally get adjusted to the deck, but when I did it really worked for me. I played it for the rest of my cities run and even won one in Avon, Indiana against my good friend Dustin Zimmerman playing Virizion/Genesect, one of the decks more feared matchups. I went away from the deck for the first two weekends of states, fearing both of the primal Pokemon. For the fourth weekend of states I decided to go back to Seismitoad/Manectric/Garbodor and ended up getting Top 8 at Kansas states.
What decks do you think you’ll play next year in Standard and Expanded? Is there a particular deck you see yourself playing in the same manner as you played Toad/Manectric this year?
Next year I hope Seismitoad/Manectric will still be a solid play, but with the format constantly shifting back and forth between Standard and Expanded and new sets coming out, I think I'll just have to wait and see. I don't really see myself going away from a Seismitoad deck. I really like that it limits the opponent to specific plays and I can play around those plays.


Damien won the Avon City Championships this winter
When I first came back into the game last year, you said to me something along the lines of "It used to be that you could play several decks throughout the season, but now people play one deck and get really, really good at it." You pointed to Israel Sosa as evidence.
This season, you only got your points with one deck, and I only got my points with two. Do you stand by that statement? Do you want to refine it a bit? Does it depend on the player?
Sosa stuck with Yveltal again this year, and that led to him playing it even when it wasn't necessarily the best option (e.g. Nationals).
I'll stand by that statement for the most part. I think it's in a players best interest (especially a new player) to find a single deck or play style and get comfortable with it. The more comfortable you are with a deck or play style, the more dangerous the deck becomes even in a meta it's not suited for. The more you play a deck, the more you figure out the little tricks that can help you beat a bad matchup.
A perfect example of this is during this year when I started playing Seismitoad/Manectric/Garbodor, I really struggled against Yveltal decks because they applied so much pressure and kept their energy well protected. Later on in the season I finally found out how to deal with yveltal, and it made that matchup a lot easier. A "complete player" will be able to play any kind of deck and do well with it. Going into a tournament I never know what deck these players will be playing, because they are so well diverse. Being diverse is important. It allows you to easily adapt to any format and any meta you might be playing against. It also allows you to know the weaknesses of certain decks, because you've played them before and see when they struggle. 
Overall I believe it's a good idea to get comfortable with a single strategy and play that deck for as long as the format will allow you. I also think it's important to be diverse and know how to play several different kinds of decks so it's easier to adapt to the meta.
What is your favorite card of all time?
My favorite card of all time has to be Regigigas Lv. X. Sacrifice was such a cool ability, and it was one of the first competitive decks I build. Robbie Skeffington also played the deck so I always had someone to talk with about the deck.
What is your favorite deck of all time?
Favorite deck is easily Blaziken/Luxray/Garchomp. After losing to it in the finals of the Indiana State Championship, I quickly built the deck and played it the next week in Kansas. I played BLG for the rest of that season, which got me to a top 32 finish at Worlds that year. Every once in a while someone will ask if I want to play their 2010 format deck and I am always down to play BLG again. The deck allowed you to find an out against almost every deck in the format.
What was your favorite format of all time?
My favorite format is probably 2010. 2009 was also a cool format I enjoy revisiting. 2010 had some many different options when it came to what deck you wanted to build. Deck-building was also extremely important in that era because you couldn't just burn through your deck with a Professor Sycamore or shuffle your opponent's win condition back into their deck with N. Instead you had to carefully build your deck to deal with multiple situations.
Who do you test with the most? How much do you play online?
Testing is something I need to do more of. I play a lot of Pokémon with my friends, but I don't think I ever really test for tournaments. Instead I just play Pokemon the week before the tournament until I feel comfortable with the deck I've chosen. I wish I had testing figured out a little more and could actually test matchups and fine-tune my decks, but instead I usually make an initial list, tweak it ever so slightly, and just play it in the tournament.
What do you do outside of Pokemon?
I like to play a lot of basketball. I also enjoy playing other card games. Magic: The Gathering is something I am starting to get involved with, and so far I enjoy it.
What do you think of the general state of the game? Is it in decline, is it especially accessible, etc.
I really enjoy the game right now. Most people's gripe with Pokemon right now (mine included) is the EX Pokemon. I think if people would step back and realize that EX Pokemon are just a part of the game and accept them, I think they would find it more enjoyable. I think the current formats (both expanded and standard) are very fun and exciting. The game as it stands is not very accessible. While going to Wal-Mart and picking up a starter deck is fairly easy, picking up a competitive deck and doing well with it is not. Not to mention the start-up costs for just about any competitive deck right now is absurdly high due to Shaymin-EX being so widely used. Playing a deck without Shaymin -EX is possible, but you are at a severe disadvantage.
What would you do if Pokemon suddenly stopped existing?
I'd probably pick up a different card game. Card games interest me because there is so much to think about when playing a game or building a deck.
What is your favorite Pokemon?
Dragonite. Snorlax is a close second.
Any shoutouts?
Any whats?
Huge shout out to all the players that have come and gone through the Champaign-Urbana area. I don't get to see them at league anymore, but each and everyone of them has had a huge impact in my Pokemon career. 
Another huge shout out to all the players who play with me today. Without you guys I wouldn't be playing Pokemon still. The community is the reason I continue to play Pokemon.
---

Thanks for the interview, Damien!

---

Glossary:

Pokemon League- A Pokemon League provides a nearby place for you to get together with other fans of both the Pokemon Trading Card Game and the Pokemon video games, and have some fun. Using your own cards and Pokemon video games, you can play, trade, and even earn cool prizes! The best part is that you can do all this with other Pokemon players who love collecting and playing just as much as you do.

Worlds Invite- At the end of a year's cycle of Pokemon, top players in both the Pokemon TCG and the VGC qualify for an exclusive, invitation-only event. This years Worlds is in Boston this August, but past locations include Florida, British Columbia, California, D.C., and even Hawaii!

In general, one must do very well at tournaments throughout the year to receive the prestigious invitation to the World Championships. Past Worlds invitees from the C-U area include Damien Hardy, Daniel Bernstein, and Josh Wittenkeller.

"Ben On The Bubble"- An Interview With Ben Barham

Ben Barham has been coming to the Champaign Pokemon League for at least as long as I have, and even though he can't show up every week, it's always a treat when he does. 

On to the interview!

--



Where are you from?

Champaign.

What year are you in school? 

I’m going into senior year.

How old are you? 

Just turned 17!

Where are you going to school? 

Centennial high school.


Can you tell us about your history with the game? 

Well my history with Pokemon in general, probably not. I can’t remember a time before it was part of my life. However, I have been playing competitively on and off since I was a junior, if you can do the math there.

When did you first start? 

The first tournament I ever went to was some tiny Battle Road in Rockford for my 8th birthday. I think I played a deck focused around Holon Phantoms Colorless Deoxys. I won a few games but I didn’t play again for a few years due to my parents not wanting to fund me.

When did you first get competitive?


The first time I really remember going to league on a consistent basis was after the release of Stormfront in 2009, I think. 

Have you ever tried for a Worlds invite? 

I would if I was able. My parents are super serious about school and me being involved in sports and stuff so if a tournament ever gets in the way of school (or at any point in swim season from like November to March), I probably just can’t make it. I’ll probably try more seriously once I’m out of high school.

What is the best you’ve ever done at a tournament? 

I’ve won some Cities and Battle Roads, but mostly I just bubble.

In Seniors and in masters? 

In seniors and juniors I was actually just bad at the game. I didn’t, mostly because I couldn’t, test enough. When I went to tournaments it was with bad decks because my only method of buying cards was with my parents’ money who didn’t really like me spending money on the game.

Are there any big matches from your career that stick out to you?

This past year at nationals I was playing Kyogre and the Metal player I was against had an Aegislash with 30 damage on it, a benched Cobalion with 150 damage on it, and a Jirachi and Shaymin benched with 30 damage on them each. I Ultra Balled for the one Absol I played, moved the 30 from the Shaymin to the Jirachi and Tidal Stormed for six prizes in one game. That was pretty sweet.

How many Championship Points did you have this year? 

Shoot, I don’t even know. I’m not eligible for worlds, so that’s pretty much effectively zero. 

How many tournaments did you go to this year? 

I went to the last three city championships in the Chicago marathon when I got a small break from swimming, and I went to Kansas States as well as Ft. Wayne Regionals. Add on Nats and some LC’s and [the total is] probably around 8.

What decks did you play this year? 

Yveltal. Darkrai has been my thing since it stopped being 40 bucks. I played Kyogre at Nats because I was expecting a lot of Bats and Metal, though.

What decks do you think you’ll play next year in Standard and Expanded? 

I have no idea. Whatever does well in testing, I guess. If not, just Yveltal. It’s a safe play that I have a lot of experience with, and it’s super cheap.

What is your favorite card of all time? 

I love N. Comeback potential I think is really important in all games. 

What is your favorite deck of all time?
I honestly couldn’t tell you. I love old Darkrai with Dark Patch and Sableye, but I also like DialgaChomp and Scizor/Cherrim. RayEels and VileGar were cool too. My favorite deck is usually just the one I’m currently playing.

What was your favorite format of all time? 

I always feel obligated to answer this question with “Oh it’s definitely SP format, so skill based and fast paced," but honestly when that format was a thing, I was a Junior/Senior and I wasn’t great at the game. It just wasn’t very enjoyable for me. My favorite format is usually like my favorite deck; whichever format we’re currently in.

Who do you test with the most? 

Damien, Paul, CR and Daniel mostly. Luke when I can.

How much do you play online? 

Barely. It seems like a hassle to me and the quality is never as good as when I actually sit down with the cards in my hands.

What do you do outside of Pokemon?

I swim during swim season but when it isn’t, I have a lot of friends at my church that I like to hang out with. I also play League of Legends and Hearthstone a lot. 

What would you do if Pokemon suddenly stopped existing?

Pick up Magic or something. I like card games and any excuse to hang out with the guys I test with is a good one.

What is your favorite Pokemon?

Growlithe, but Trapinch and Breloom are close runner-ups.

Any shoutouts?

Everyone I test with, plus my non-Pokemon related friends who support me and ask how I’m doing at tourneys and stuff.

--


Thanks for the interview Ben!

---

Glossary:

Battle Roads- Before League Challenges, entry level tournaments were called Battle Roads. Instead of being year-round, they happened in the spring and the fall.

Chicago Marathon- Every year, around Christmas and New Years, Jimmy Ballard runs a "marathon" of City Championships in Chicago. The series is nicknamed the "Chicago marathon," and lots of great players come out and play for the Championship points at stake.

Standard vs. Expanded- The Standard format changes every year, and for the upcoming season will include every set released from the XY block, including the Kalos Starter Set. Feel free to ask a league member if a card is Standard-legal! The Expanded format consists of every set released since the base set of Black & White, but you don't need to worry about that unless you are traveling to a Regional tournament.

DialgaChomp- Dialga/Garchomp was a deck that was played upon the release of Garchomp C Lv. X, and the deck continued to exist until both Dialga G Lv. X and Garchomp C Lv. X saw rotation. The deck could tech in Palkia G Lv. X, Luxray G. Lv. X, or even Blaziken FB Lv. X. The deck had lots of options and had almost 50/50 matchups against any deck, meaning that a skillful player could pilot it very far. It was, however, a very difficult deck to play.

Friday, August 14, 2015

"A Very Dapper Lorelei" - An Interview With Lorelei Pang




Today I am interviewing Lorelei Pang. I have personally known Lorelei ever since I was the first person to play against her back when she joined our league that met at the Champaign Public Library. She was playing Sablelock, I was playing Kyogre & Groudon Legend, and I was lucky enough to beat her! Ever since then, Lorelei's smile and cheerful attitude has been a major part of our small Pokemon community here in the C-U area, and we're sad to see her go this year.

Without further ado, here is the interview!

--



Where are you from?

I'm from a suburb of Chicago called Aurora. It's the place they filmed the movie Wayne's World. Have you seen Wayne's World?

How old are you?

I am twenty-three years old.

Where did you go to school and what did you major in?

I went to the beautiful and illustrious The University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign for computer science.

Where do you currently reside? How often will you come down and visit us for our weekly tournaments?

Still in Aurora. I'm planning on visiting at least a couple of times, but the first priority is to find a job, and my second priority is to hold that job. It's hard to afford Pokemon cards without a source of income.

Can you tell us about your history with the game? When did you first start? When did you first get competitive?

So one boring summer day in 2009, my friend asked me if he can borrow my Pokemon cards. Ironically, he had been in Japan during the 90's Pokemon craze, so he had nothing to participate with when his neighbors pulled out their old cards to make decks out of. So I joined in, and my other friends joined in. While I try to be chill, sometimes I'll just get super competitive about something, and I had another friend who was the same way. So I looked up guides and stuff online, found the meta decks, and then discovered he had done the same. It kind of became a Cold War of Pokemon until we graduated high school and he quit playing (I won).

When I got to the beautiful and illustrious University of Illinois, I met up with an old childhood friend, Alan Johnson. I mentioned going to the local Pokemon League to explain that I would be incredibly busy that day, but Alan was actually interested in going. So we went, built more competitive decks, and I suppose the rest is history. All the way until I moved away of course.

How many times have you tried for a Worlds Invite?

Have you ever gotten that feeling where you get up in the morning, and you think to yourself, "Yeah, I'm going to get out there and make the world my burrito! There are people I have never met, food I've never eaten, places I've never been, things I've never done, and today is the day to LIVE!" And then at three in the morning you realize you've been watching Netflix all day? That about sums up my Worlds aspirations.

What's the best you've ever done at a tournament?

Top 4 at the 2011 Missouri Regionals, baby! I had the absolutely genius idea (if I say so myself) of teching Blaziken FB Lv. X into my Vileplume/Gengar deck. Not only is Luring Flame incredibly irritating under Item-lock, but the fire typing helps VileGar's two worst matchups in Steelix and DialgaChomp. I could write a whole article on why that worked out.
Nowadays, when people are building old VileGar decks, the go-to tech is Blaziken FB Lv. X. I get all teary-eyed just thinking about it. My brain-child is all grown up now!

(You can read Lorelei's tournament report from that event here.)

Are there any big matches from your career that stick out to you?

The funniest one was Top 16 against Jason Klacynski at the 2012 Illinois States, right when Mewtwo EX started its reign of terror. I absolutely hated that format so I was ecstatic when I discovered Quad-Terrakion. [You would] run four of the most irritating anti-meta card, a ton of ways to stream them, and a million ways to keep your opponent from playing Pokemon. It exemplified everything wrong with the game.

So when my deck ran into Jason's Vanilluxe/Vileplume, an Item/Paralysis-lock, there was literally nothing I could do. Add in that I'm literally only running four Pokemon, and I mulliganed eleven times before I experienced the joy of draw/pass 'til game.

Oh, and the cherry on top was that it was the featured match. I think that video's still on TopCut's YouTube channel if you dig for it.

(You can find the first game here, the second game here, and the third game here.)

Do you plan on still playing the game next year? Will you still go to tournaments?

I hope to be able to judge or otherwise help out for local tournaments. I have to drive a minimum of forty-five minutes to even find an unsanctioned league all the way up here in not-Champaign-Urbana, so keeping up with the metagame and playing for fun isn't quite worth the effort. Especially since I cannot stand playing online.

What is your favorite card of all time?

Pidgey POP4 12/17. Just look at him! He don't care what you think! He'll just stroll right on past your Seismitoads and Mega Rayquazas and just dare you to take a wrong step. And if you do, so what? He don't care!

What is your favorite deck of all time?

DialgaChomp. I absolutely love the level of skill the existence of that deck brought to the metagame. The deck did not have a clear-cut win condition, but it was particularly good at disrupting enemy strategies. So every single matchup became a skill matchup and a serious war of attrition. It absolutely punished linear strategies and forced you to think several moves in advance to both play and play against.

What was your favorite format of all time?

The one right before Lysandre's Trump Card rotated (Editor's note: the card was banned). Hey, if I wanted to have fun thinking, I'd be studying and getting better grades, not playing Pokemon.

Do you play online?

I'm a spacial/visual kind of guy, and I learn with my hands. I can't deal with not being able to physically interact with cards. Also, different cards catch your eye in different ways. The way the colors shine, the foil patterns, stuff like that. It absolutely does not translate to the computer screen, where every card is uniformly bright.

What do you do outside of Pokemon?

There's a life outside...? Oh, like other card games? I play Yugioh too. I only have to drive forty minutes to play that.

What do you think of the general state of the game? Is it in decline?

It's slowly recovering from the biggest slap in the face the format has ever received. If they could tone down the ridiculousness of big basics or make more ways to punish their use, I think this format could be A-okay. I'm a little upset they chose not to reprint Shaymin EX [in a tin] though. Pokemon's low price point was one of the most attractive things about it.

What would you do if Pokemon suddenly stopped existing?

I would cry. A lot. That's a lot of money I could have spent on Yugioh!
What is your favorite Pokemon?

Glaceon is pretty cool. Seems like the sort of Pokemon I could just sit and chill with.


Any shoutouts?

Shoutouts to everyone I leave behind at the beautiful and illustrious University of Illinois! Brandon Flowers, Andrew Weiss, Daniel Bernstein, Damien Hardy, Lucas Selig, Robert Williams, and of course to the amazing Charles Randall! And also to Richard Vanmanisone, Carver Warning, and The J-Wittz, YouTube Sensation, for making my first year of competitive Pokemon one of the most memorable!

---



Thanks for the interview, Lorelei!

---

Glossary:

Mulligan- To start the game, each player draws seven cards and selects a Basic Pokemon they find there to start with as their Active Pokemon. Sometimes however, a player will find themselves with no Basic Pokemon, and this is called a mulligan. Then, the player has to shuffle their hand back into their deck and try again. Each time they do this, their opponent gets a chance to draw an extra card (they must draw all of the mulligans at once).

When Lorelei mulliganed many times against Jason Klacynski, she was giving her opponent a huge advantage by letting him draw many extra cards. This was, however, a risk you took when you played a deck like Lorelei's. Lorelei's Quad-Terrakion deck played four Terrakion and nothing else, meaning that in a sixty card-deck, she only played four Basic Pokemon! For this reason, it isn't so crazy that Lorelei mulliganed so many times in the featured match.

DialgaChomp- Dialga/Garchomp was a deck that was played upon the release of Garchomp C Lv. X, and the deck continued to exist until both Dialga G Lv. X and Garchomp C Lv. X saw rotation. The deck could tech in Palkia G Lv. X, Luxray G. Lv. X, or even Blaziken FB Lv. X. The deck had lots of options and had almost 50/50 matchups against any deck, meaning that a skillful player could pilot it very far. It was, however, a very difficult deck to play.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

"Manito Man"- An Interview with Allen Schneider

This is Charles Randall, and today I'll be talking to Allen Schnider of Manito, who is a frequent visitor to the C-U area considering the distance of roughly two hours. A big thank you goes to Allen for volunteering to be interviewed!

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Where are you from?

I am from a small town called Manito, Illinois


Is there a lot of Pokemon there?

There are five of us. Four of us. It depends, some of them go back and forth.

What year are you in school? How old are you?

I am 21, and I'm going to be a senior in college.

Where are you going to school and what's your major?

I'm going to Bradley University and I am a Civil Engineering student.

Can you tell us about your history with the Pokemon Trading Card Game?

Beautifly from PlatinumAbsolutely! My first tournament was actually Nationals in 2009. I had no idea what I was doing. A friend of mine, Cole Bernhardt, walked up to me in school one day and he said Hey, there's a Pokemon tournament we should go to, it kind of looks fun! And we didn't know anything about it, we just kind of went in there blind. He was playing VGC at the time, and I think my current TCG deck was Beautifly from, I want to say Legends Awakened or Stormfront? I think that shows how well adjusted I was to the game. And so I go to Nationals, I don't know how anything works. I assume it's double elimination, so I lose two and then I just stop. Yeah, that was my first tournament.

After that we started attending events in Rantoul because that was the closest place to us, an hour and forty minute drive, but we thought it was worth it. We enjoyed it, it was fun. We started attending Prereleases and City Championships, and then we started going down to St. Louis for their Regional tournament, so that was my first tournament where I actually knew what was going on. I played Charizard from Arceus, so that's my favorite deck from that format. So I kept going and I just kept playing!

So you've been playing since 2009, which means you've been playing for more than six years. What has kept you playing this game for so long?

Just all the people I meet. I mean, I've met so many people through this game. I enjoy this game so much. Not to mention I'm pretty heavily invested in it, financially, so it'd take a little bit to get me out of it.

Have you ever tried to get a Worlds Invitation?

Not too seriously. I usually only go to Pokemon events when I have time between school and work. Also when I have money to afford them. Traveling takes a lot out of my wallet, so that's also a negative.

What's the farthest you've ever traveled for a tournament?

Wisconsin. We went to Madison Regionals.

How far of a drive is that?

It was about three and a half hours out to the house we were staying at, which was Brandon's house, and then it was another forty five or fifty minutes on top of that to get to the actual venue.

So four hours is probably your limit for how far you will travel?


Usually my limit for how far I'll travel is how far the people going with me will travel. I'm always down for a road trip but we usually cut it off at three [hours]. Usually I think Indianapolis for Nationals, or Chicago, is as far as we'll want to go.

So even if we had a car going to Philly would you go?

I would probably go, I don't think anyone else from this area would go.

Are there any big matches that stick out to you from all the years that you've played?

Nationals 2011. I was currently 5-1 at this point and I was playing against some guy, I don't know his name, I don't even remember what he was playing, but I was playing Reshiboar with a 2-2 RDL, and I start out terribly. And somehow I come back: in one turn I got an RDL (Rayquaza & Deoxys Legend) all set up, and in two turns I'd taken four prizes to tie him at one, and then I topdeck my last energy, which was the last card in deck, and I Inferno Fandango with Fisherman in hand and I take my last prize and the guy was super salty. There was a bunch of people watching it too. All my friends I went there with, they [had] finished their matches, and it just so happened that it [my match] was at the end of one of the tables. I kind of looked over and seven of the eight people I knew at the tournament were just standing there watching me. That was a pretty fun moment.




What is your favorite card that's ever been printed?

I really like Spiritomb, I think it was from [Platinum:] Arceus too. That was a really fun card, that was the basis of most of my rogue-level decks back in the day. But I have to say my favorite card was probably Pichu from HeartGold SoulSilver.


What decks did you play that in?

I played that in The Truth for a while, I played that in Vileplume/Cobalion/Serperior, which I want to say I actually went 6-3 at a Regionals with it. I bubbled out, so that was fun.


So what's your favorite deck that you've ever played with?

Blastoise, definitely Blastoise from 2013. I loved that deck so much, and then they made Virizion/Genesect which kind of just wrecked me.

You should have just played RayBoar!

I tried, I didn't like it so much.

What's your greatest achievement in the Pokemon Trading Card Game?

With Blastoise at 2013 Fort Wayne Regionals, I started out 0-2, and then I had a seven win-streak to make Day Two. It was a Top 32 with five rounds of Swiss and all five rounds were against a Virizion/Genesect deck, so I went 0-4-1 Day Two.

Hey, you tied one!

Yeah I did tie one! The guy actually scooped because he said he had a call from work coming.

You lose some, you tie some, that's what they say. So what are your hobbies outside of Pokemon?

I disc golf a lot. I usually go at least six, seven times a week.

Can you quick tell us what disc golf is? Just for those of us who might not know, including me...

It's like golf, but instead of hitting a ball you throw a plastic aerodynamic disc, and it's literally just like golf, you try to make it into a basket.

Interesting, does the wind affect that?

Oh yeah, I currently carry twenty four discs in my bag, they all fly differently, they all have to be flown differently, they all have different flight paths through the wind and everything.

Are you living in Peoria? Is that where Bradley is?

Bradley is in Peoria, I currently live at home [in Manito].

Is there a large disc golfing community in Manito or Peoria, wherever you disc golf?

There is a very large community in Peoria, I'm actually entering my first couple tournaments in a week or two. The Peoria area has six full-length disc golf courses, three of which are in the top fifteen in Illinois. It's pretty nice.

What would you do if there was no such thing as Pokemon?

I hate to say it, but I would probably be playing another trading card game. I don't want to say it would be Yugioh, but I like it more than Magic. If Dragon Ball Z, the card game, was around when I started playing Pokemon, I'd probably be playing that. I've been picking that up lately, it's pretty fun. I don't have enough money for it but it's pretty fun.

What decks do you think you will play next year in Standard and Expanded?

In Standard, I know it's not going to be good but I've been testing Mega Gallade with Forretess, I like it a lot. I think Vespiquen has potential, and I really like Mega Tyranitar but it seems kind of clunky.

In Expanded, it really depends if they actually make a ban list. If they don't, I think the only two possible plays are either Shiftry or like Wobbuffet, just because I've been testing Shiftry. I've got like ninety percent accuracy of going off turn one, and I think the only way it's going to lose is if they flip over Wobbuffet.

Do you think Gallade works better with Forretress or bats?

I like it better with Forretress because ten on everything. I also play two Absols in it, and the math works out really well with [hitting] Shaymins.

Do you think Tyranitar works better in Expanded with Dark Patches?

Oh definitely, it would be a lot better in Expanded.

Who do you test with the most, and do you play online?

I usually test with Cole or Evan, because they're one of the few people around here who actually play. I usually play about two hours on TCGOne.net per day.

What is your favorite Pokemon?

Snorlax.

Last question: do you have any shoutouts?

Cole Bernhardt, Evan Hopkins, Michael Patterson and Tater Tot.

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Thanks for the interview Allen!


Glossary:

Prerelease- A Prerelease is an event that takes place a couple weeks before the release of a set. Each player pays $30 and builds a deck from six packs of the upcoming set. At the end of the event, each player receives two more packs. You can read more about that here.

City Championships- City Championships, commonly known as "Cities", are the smallest level of tournament other than League Challenges. Winning a Cities gets you one sixth of the way towards an invitation to the World Championships, so they are a very competitive event. You can read more about them here.

Platinum: Arceus- Platinum: Arceus was the fourth and final set released in the Platinum expansion in the winter of 2009. It was centered around the God-like Pokemon Arceus, but unfortunately only two cards from the set were ever played in real decks: Expert Belt and Spiritomb. The set rotated in record time after the midseason rotation in 2011.

Worlds Invitation- At the end of a year's cycle of Pokemon, top players in both the Pokemon TCG and the VGC qualify for an exclusive, invitation-only event. This years Worlds is in Boston this August, but past locations include Florida, British Columbia, California, D.C., and even Hawaii!

In general, one must do very well at tournaments throughout the year to receive the prestigious invitation to the World Championships. Past Worlds invitees from the C-U area include Damien Hardy, Daniel Bernstein, and Josh Wittenkeller.

"Nationals"- Every year, in early July, all players with at least fifteen Play! Points are welcome to come out to Indianapolis for the annual National Championships. The stakes are high, with the winner taking home an extraordinary amount of packs. The top eight also receive an invitation to that year's World Championships. U.S. Nationals always has the highest attendance of any tournament. At this year's Nationals there were over 900 players!

"RDL"- Rayquaza & Deoxys Legend (nicknamed "RDL") from the HS: Undaunted set saw play in just one type of deck at U.S. Nationals in 2011. RDL's Poke-BODY let it take extra prizes from knockouts, and it was a common inclusion in Emboar decks since it was easier to get four energy accelerated onto it.

The Truth- The Truth was the name of the new rogue deck that Ross Cawthon piloted to 2nd Place at the World Championships in 2011. The deck ran Vileplume to lock Items, Reuniclus to make it so that nothing ever got knocked out, and many, many other cards. The deck ran Pichu HS to set up along with Twins to draw cards once the Pichu went down.

Blastoise- Blastoise decks revolved around using Blastoise BCR to accelerate Water energy, in a similar manner to Emboar. Popular attackers with Blastoise included Black Kyurem EX and Keldeo EX.

Virizion/Genesect- Virizion/Genesect is a deck that uses Virizion EX to accelerate energy with the Emerald Slash attack to load up several Genesect EX to deal some big damage. The deck won the World Championship in 2014 and the Houston Regional Championships in the same year, but it has been in decline ever since.

RayBoar- RayBoar is a deck that used Emboar BLW to accelerate Fire Energy to load up Rayquaza EX. The deck also ran Delphox as an alternate attacker and to draw extra cards.

Day Two- Normally after the Swiss rounds of a tournament have ended, the top eight players face off in single-elimination rounds, commonly known as the top cut. However, this system is not adequate with a very high amount of players. At events with over 256 players, there is a Day Two. One Day One, nine rounds of Swiss are played. Then, the top 32 players continue onto Day Two, where they play five more rounds of Swiss before cutting to a Top Eight.

This format is usually used at large Regionals. However, Texas States had a Day Two this year because of how large it was! At Nationals, the Top 64 players move onto Day Two.

Standard vs Expanded- The Standard format changes every year, and for the upcoming season will include every set released from the XY block, including the Kalos Starter Set. Feel free to ask a league member if a card is Standard-legal! The Expanded format consists of every set released since the base set of Black & White, but you don't need to worry about that unless you are traveling to a Regional tournament.