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Colorless Corruption
The main goal of Colorless Corruption is to stall while building up
energy on Wigglytuff and then strike at your opponent's pokemon
with Wigglytuff's Do The Wave attack. This deck focuses mainly on
2 pokemon: Hitmonchan, Starmie, and Wigglytuff. Hitmonchan can
take out a few of your opponet's pokemon while you build up
Wigglytuff. If Hitmonchan is taken out, Starmie can Paralyze and
hurt the defending pokemon while using recover to stay in there
a LONG, LONG, time. Then, when Starmie is finally taken out (if he
is taken out, for that matter) send Wigglytuff in there to do some
serious damage. Squirtle And Wartortle are in there as some
seriously good backup. The PokeBall is in there if you have a
Wigglytuff but not the Jigglypuff. I have included a lot of Energy
Removals in this deck incase your opponet has a Charizard or
something like that that is taking out all your essential pokemon.
Trust me, it may seem not like much, but I have never lost a
match to anyone using this deck.
Deck:
2 Wartortles
3 Onix
1 Seaking
1 Goldeen
1 Machoke
4 Squirtle
3 Machops
2 Staryu
1 Starmie
2 Sandshrew
1 Jigglypuff
1 Wigglytuff
2 Farfetch'd
1 Hitmonchan
1 Super Energy Removal
2 PokeBall
3 Energy Removal
1 Professor Oak
1 Plus Power
15 Fighting Energy
15 Water Energy
Submitted by visser3
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The concept of the Pokemon universe, in both the video games and the general fictional world of Pokemon, stems from the hobby of insect collecting, a popular pastime which Pokemon executive director Satoshi Tajiri-Oniwa had enjoyed as a child. Players of the games are designated as Pokemon Trainers, and the two general goals (in most Pokemon games) for such Trainers are: to complete the Pokedex by collecting all of the available Pokemon species found in the fictional region where that game takes place; and to train a team of powerful Pokemon from those they have caught to compete against teams owned by other Trainers, and eventually become the strongest Trainer, the Pokemon Master. These themes of collecting, training, and battling are present in almost every version of the Pokemon franchise, including the video games, the anime and manga series, and the Pokemon Trading Card Game.
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