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Great Tusk Palossand Deck Guide

Energy
FightingFighting
Published July 10, 2026 Updated July 10, 2026

Great Tusk Palossand is a Pokémon TCG Pocket archetype that generally aims to set up Sandygast alongside Palossand as its main attacker, supported by Fighting energy. Based on 6 recent tournament lists.

Palossand

Deck List

Total Cards
21
Pokémon
7
Trainers
14
Energy
Fighting
Sample Size
6
Tournaments
6
Last Updated
Jul 10, 2026

Pokémon (7)

Sandygast

Palossand

Great Tusk

Koraidon ex

Trainers (14)

Acerola

Professor's Research

Copycat

Cyrus

Poké Ball

Arena of Antiquity

Pokémon Center Lady

Ancient Booster Energy Capsule

Giant Cape

Energy

Fighting
Get the list on Discord

Strengths

  • Highly consistent core: Sandygast appears in nearly every tournament list, so the build has a settled identity.
  • Clear win condition built around Sandygast paired with Palossand, so lines of play are easy to rehearse.
  • Single-type Fighting energy keeps attachments efficient and rarely bricks on the wrong type.
  • Built from 6 tournament lists across 6 events, so the consensus reflects real competitive play rather than ladder theory.

Weaknesses

  • Needs its evolution line on board; a slow opener can leave the deck without a fully powered Sandygast.
  • Predictable single-type Fighting energy lets opponents plan blockers and resistance once your attacker shows up.
  • Disruption Supporters like Cyrus and Sabrina chain knockouts against the benched Pokémon this deck needs to keep alive.
  • Stage 1/2 Pokémon in the list take an extra turn to come online — pure-Basic decks can race you before Sandygast attacks.

Key Matchups

  • Aggressive Basic-only decks Even
  • Mirror or other Sandygast lists Even
  • Disruption / Cyrus + Sabrina decks Unfavored

Strategy Overview

Common builds of Great Tusk Palossand aim to evolve into Sandygast and Palossand as quickly as possible, then trade prizes through repeated knockouts. The deck leans on Fighting energy attachments each turn, with draw Supporters and search items to find the key pieces. The list shown here is a consensus across 6 tournament decklists (top card appears in nearly every tournament list, average 2.00 copies).

Gameplay Video

Gameplay video coming soon.

Key Cards

Sandygast

appears in nearly every tournament list (average 2.00 copies). Core part of the archetype's engine.

Palossand

appears in nearly every tournament list (average 2.00 copies). Core part of the archetype's engine.

Great Tusk

appears in nearly every tournament list (average 1.67 copies). Core part of the archetype's engine.

Koraidon ex

appears in nearly every tournament list (average 1.00 copies). Core part of the archetype's engine.

Early Game

On turn one, prioritise finding Sandygast or Palossand and getting a basic on the bench so you can evolve next turn. Use Professor's Research or Poké Ball aggressively if your opener is weak. Avoid attaching Fighting energy to a Pokémon that will never attack.

Mid Game

By the mid game, Sandygast should be online with a back-up attacker on the bench. Sequence knockouts so each attack sets up the next. Use Cyrus to drag damaged opposing Pokémon active, and Sabrina to force unfavorable switches.

Late Game

Late game, count remaining prizes and build the exact line that closes the game. If ahead, deny the comeback with Sabrina; if behind, look for a single-turn knockout chain through Sandygast.

Card Replacements

SandygastNo direct replacement (craft this card)

Sandygast appears in nearly every tournament list and defines the archetype. If you cannot craft it, consider a different deck rather than substituting.

Professor's ResearchIono

Iono is the closest universal draw Supporter if you are short on Professor's Research, though it trades raw card quantity for a hand reset.

CyrusSabrina

Sabrina forces a switch from the opponent's choice; less precise than Cyrus but keeps disruption pressure.

Poké BallPokémon Communication

Pokémon Communication swaps a Pokémon in hand for any from the deck — useful if Poké Ball's random pull is unreliable for this build.

Common Mistakes

  • Benching Sandygast before you can protect it, letting the opponent snipe your main attacker.
  • Attaching Fighting energy to a Pokémon that will not attack this game.
  • Spending Cyrus or Sabrina too early when they would close a prize two turns later.
  • Auto-attacking the active Pokémon instead of sequencing knockouts with Sabrina/Cyrus.
  • Burning Professor's Research with a full hand and losing closing-turn resources.

Tips & Tricks

  • Mulligan aggressively for Sandygast or Palossand in the opener.
  • Bench every basic you intend to evolve as early as possible — empty benches lose tempo wars.
  • Track prize counts carefully; this deck usually wants to chain knockouts in the mid game.
  • If you fall behind on board, pivot to a single-prize attacker and rebuild rather than giving up a multi-prize knockout.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Great Tusk Palossand deck in Pokémon TCG Pocket?

Great Tusk Palossand is an archetype built around Sandygast and Palossand, using Fighting energy. This guide is built from 6 real tournament decklists across 6 events.

Is Great Tusk Palossand good right now?

Based on current tournament lists, Great Tusk Palossand appears regularly in competitive play. We do not claim a win rate — refer to the tier list for current placement.

What are the key cards in Great Tusk Palossand?

The most-played cards across tournament lists are Sandygast, Palossand and Great Tusk. The list usually runs around 9 different Trainer cards for consistency and disruption.

What energy does Great Tusk Palossand use?

Most lists run Fighting energy.

Where does this guide's data come from?

This is a generated draft based on 6 tournament decklists imported from Limitless. The card list reflects what appears most often in real competitive play, not a fixed recipe.

How This Deck Guide Was Generated

This guide is based on 6 tournament decklists across 6 tournaments imported from Limitless. The decklist shown reflects the most common competitive build at the time of generation.

Sample updated July 10, 2026 Published July 10, 2026