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Flareon EX & Leafeon EX Deck Guide

Energy Types
FireFire
Simbozz Published June 7, 2026 Updated June 7, 2026

Flareon EX & Leafeon EX is a flexible Eeveelution toolbox built around Eevee's evolution lines. Flareon EX's Combust ability pulls a Fire energy from the discard onto itself for an easy 130-damage Fire Blast, while Leafeon EX's Forest Breath ability accelerates Grass energy from the Energy Zone. Eevee EX's Veevee 'volve lets you evolve straight from hand on the first turn, and Eevee's Boosted Evolution allows early evolution into either eeveelution on the first turn it's played.

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Strengths

  • Flareon EX hits 130 with Combust and self-recycles Fire energy
  • Leafeon EX accelerates Grass energy onto your Active Pokémon
  • Eevee EX's Veevee 'volve enables turn-one evolutions
  • Eevee Bag and Sightseer search the Eeveelution line consistently

Weaknesses

  • Flareon EX and Leafeon EX are 2-prize liabilities
  • Vulnerable to Water and Fire counters depending on the matchup
  • Requires careful energy sequencing across two attack types
  • Bricks without an early Eevee or Eevee EX

Key Matchups

  • Stage 2 setup decks Favored
  • Single-prize aggro Even
  • Fast Fire / Water aggro Unfavored
  • Tempo midrange Favored

Strategy Overview

Open Eevee EX or Eevee, attach the right energy type for the matchup and evolve into either Flareon EX or Leafeon EX on the first turn. Use Flareon EX's Combust to recycle Fire energy for repeated Fire Blast knockouts, and Leafeon EX's Forest Breath to ramp Grass energy onto your attackers. Sightseer and Eevee Bag keep the Eeveelution line flowing. Detailed matchup data will be updated as the format develops.

Gameplay Video

Key Cards

Flareon EX

Fire attacker — Combust recycles Fire energy from the discard onto itself.

Leafeon EX

Grass attacker — Forest Breath accelerates Grass energy from the Energy Zone.

Eevee EX

Enables turn-one evolution with Veevee 'volve.

Eevee

Boosted Evolution lets you evolve on the first turn it's played.

Eevee Bag / Sightseer

Search the Eeveelution line and refill the hand.

Early Game

Bench Eevee EX and Eevee, attach Fire or Grass energy depending on the matchup and aim for a turn-one evolution. On turn one with Flareon EX & Leafeon EX, your priority is finding Flareon EX or Leafeon EX so you can start attaching Fire energy on schedule. If you open with the wrong basic, search aggressively with Professor's Research or Poké Ball before committing energy you might waste. Bench every basic you intend to evolve as early as possible — Flareon EX and Leafeon EX need time to come online, and an empty bench turn one usually loses you the tempo war. Preserve removal Supporters like Cyrus or Sabrina for the mid game; using them on turn one is rarely worth the lost draw. Against fast aggressive openings hinted at by your unfavored matchups (flareon ex and leafeon ex are 2-prize liabilities), bench a pivot so a surprise knockout on the active does not strand your evolution line.

Mid Game

Use Combust and Forest Breath to power up Flareon EX and Leafeon EX, swinging for 130 or chipping with Solar Beam. By the mid game Flareon EX & Leafeon EX should have Flareon EX powered and at least one back-up attacker on the bench. This is the window where the deck's core engine — Flareon EX, Leafeon EX, Eevee EX — has to actively trade prizes. Sequence your attacks so each knockout sets up the next: leave a damaged opposing Pokémon active for Cyrus, or use Sabrina to drag out a benched threat before it can power up. Track your prize trade carefully. Flareon EX & Leafeon EX leans on the strengths "Flareon EX hits 130 with Combust and self-recycles Fire energy" and "Leafeon EX accelerates Grass energy onto your Active Pokémon", so push the board state that maximises those lines rather than auto-attacking the active. If you fall behind on board, pivot to a single-prize attacker and use this turn to rebuild instead of giving up a multi-prize knockout.

Late Game

Refill the bench with Eevee Bag and Sightseer, then close out games with Flareon EX Fire Blasts. Late game with Flareon EX & Leafeon EX is about closing on your terms. Count your remaining prizes and the opponent's, then build the exact attack sequence that wins before they can stabilise. If you are ahead, deny the comeback: knock out their last realistic attacker or use Sabrina to strand a benched Pokémon that cannot retreat. If you are behind, look for an OHKO line using Flareon EX — Flareon EX & Leafeon EX typically wins from behind by chaining a single huge turn rather than grinding back evenly. Be ready to spend every remaining Supporter and energy on the closing turn; holding resources "just in case" after the prize race is decided is the most common way to throw a winning position with this deck.

Mulligan Guide & Opening Priorities

The ideal opener for Flareon EX & Leafeon EX is Flareon EX + Leafeon EX in hand with a way to attach Fire energy on the first turn. Mulligan decisions in Pokémon TCG Pocket are limited, so focus on what you keep: prioritise basics that evolve into your key attackers, plus at least one draw Supporter like Professor's Research or Iono. Hold onto Rare Candy or stage-up pieces even if they look dead early — they enable the explosive mid game this deck depends on. Preserve removal cards (Cyrus, Sabrina) for when the opponent has a damaged or vulnerable bench rather than spending them on the first available target.

Common Mistakes

  • Benching Flareon EX too early without protection, letting the opponent snipe your main attacker before it is powered.
  • Attaching Fire energy to a Pokémon that will not attack this game instead of building toward your win condition.
  • Spending Cyrus or Sabrina on turn one for tempo when they would have closed a prize two turns later.
  • Evolving on curve into Flareon EX without first checking whether you have the energy to attack the same turn.
  • Ignoring the weakness "Flareon EX and Leafeon EX are 2-prize liabilities" and not boarding a pivot or single-prize back-up in unfavored matchups.
  • Auto-attacking the active Pokémon instead of using Sabrina/Cyrus to set up the knockout sequence the deck actually wants.
  • Burning Professor's Research with a full hand and losing the cards you still needed for the closing turn.

Card Replacements

Flareon EXNo direct replacement

Flareon EX fills a unique role in Flareon EX & Leafeon EX (fire attacker — combust recycles fire energy from the discard onto itself.). If you do not own it, the deck cannot be rebuilt around a single swap — consider playing a different Fire archetype until you can craft it.

Leafeon EXNo direct replacement

Leafeon EX fills a unique role in Flareon EX & Leafeon EX (grass attacker — forest breath accelerates grass energy from the energy zone.). If you do not own it, the deck cannot be rebuilt around a single swap — consider playing a different Fire archetype until you can craft it.

Eevee EXNo direct replacement

Eevee EX fills a unique role in Flareon EX & Leafeon EX (enables turn-one evolution with veevee 'volve.). If you do not own it, the deck cannot be rebuilt around a single swap — consider playing a different Fire archetype until you can craft it.

Professor's ResearchIono

Iono is a strong universal draw Supporter and slots into nearly any deck if you are missing copies of Professor's Research, though it costs you raw card quantity.

CyrusSabrina

Cyrus pulls a damaged bench Pokémon active; Sabrina lets the opponent choose, but still forces a switch and keeps your closing pressure alive.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Flareon EX & Leafeon EX beginner friendly?

Flareon EX & Leafeon EX is a tournament deck build in Tier A. It has a few decision-heavy turns and a real evolution line to manage, so newer players should expect a learning curve before they pilot it well. Read the Early/Mid/Late Game sections above before queuing into ranked.

Is Flareon EX & Leafeon EX good for ranked ladder?

Yes — Flareon EX & Leafeon EX sits in Tier A of the current meta, and its strengths (Flareon EX hits 130 with Combust and self-recycles Fire energy, Leafeon EX accelerates Grass energy onto your Active Pokémon) line up well against most ladder decks. It is not the absolute top tier, but it is consistent enough to ladder with if you respect its unfavored matchups.

What are the hardest matchups for Flareon EX & Leafeon EX?

The toughest matchups are Fast Fire / Water aggro. These decks attack the parts of your plan flagged in the Weaknesses section — usually flareon ex and leafeon ex are 2-prize liabilities. Mulligan harder for your fastest opener and lean on single-prize attackers to slow down the prize trade.

What should I craft first for Flareon EX & Leafeon EX?

Prioritise Flareon EX and Leafeon EX — these are the cards the deck cannot function without. Draw Supporters (Professor's Research, Iono) and removal (Cyrus, Sabrina) are universal staples and worth crafting even if you later swap archetypes.

Can I play Flareon EX & Leafeon EX without the main Fire engine?

Not really. Flareon EX & Leafeon EX is built around Flareon EX and the Fire energy line — removing that core turns it into a different deck. If you are missing pieces, check the Card Replacements section above for the closest realistic alternatives, or play a budget archetype until you can craft the missing cards.

Is Flareon EX & Leafeon EX tournament viable?

Flareon EX & Leafeon EX has a real tournament track record — its favored matchups against Stage 2 setup decks and Tempo midrange cover a meaningful share of the expected field. Bring it if the meta you are reading is heavy on those archetypes.

How long does a game with Flareon EX & Leafeon EX usually take?

Most games end inside the Pokémon TCG Pocket turn clock once Flareon EX is online. The slow games are the ones where you miss the evolution or energy attachment on the key turn — those usually decide themselves before turn six.