|
|
News
Pokedex
Price
Guide
Pokemon Polls
Nintendo Tips
- Pokemon SNAP
- Pokemon Pinball
- Gameboy TCG
cart
- Gameboy Yellow
- Gameboy Red/Blue
- Gold & Silver
- Pokemon Stadium
Trading Card Game
- Price Guide
- Killer Deck Reports
- Deck Garage
- Featured Articles
- TCG Strategies
- Single Card Tips
- Rules: Q & A
- Top of the
World
- Apprentice & Patch
- Apprentice League
- Spoilers & Translations
- Collector's Corner
- Places to Play
Cartoon
Info
- Episode
Listing
- The Characters
-
What's a Pokemon?
Featured
Articles
Release
Dates
Books & Videos
Downloads
- Pokemon
Wallpaper
Advertise With Us
- Sponsors
- Links
Chat
About Us
Contact Us
Join Our Mailing List
for your chance to win free prizes!
|
|
|
Tom's Bunker
Strategy Session #1
Sun Tzu – “The Art of War”
Hello Pokemaniacs!
This is the first of many strategy sessions that I
will post on Tom’s Bunker – some of you will
definitely benefit from the words of this great Chinese
Master. Sun
Tzu was a general and a philosopher who lived 2,500 years
ago, and revolutionized ancient warfare.
His maxims are still taught to military students
today – and for good reason!
My goal is to take the wisdom of this great
strategist and try to explain it to you in terms of deck
building, tournament preparation, and general pokemon
training advice.
A pokemon trainer is just like a general.
Your forces are the pokemon in your deck, your
trainer cards, and the energy to allow your pokemon to
attack. To be
a good general, Sun Tzu says that you must follow the 5
constant factors:
Sun Tzu’s Pokemon Advice
Know all the rules of the game
Improve your physical condition
Know all the cards and popular deck types
Build a deck and rehearse
Your mental state
Let’s spend a minute talking about these 5 bits
of advice. First,
to be an effective player, you must know the rules of the
game. This
means reading the latest rule book (sold in the theme
decks for the latest expansion) and checking on-line with
the latest rule changes.
When you practice with your friends, you must
play by the rules. That
way, you will always play as if you were in a tournament.
Your overall physical health is very important –
if you are in good shape physically, you won’t run out
of gas in the later tournament rounds. Remember that the tournament gets tougher with each round,
and if you are tired and hungry, you will be more likely
to make bad decisions and lose games.
Keep up your energy with healthy snacks – bring
them with you in your backpack to snack on between rounds.
The food for sale at most tournaments is mainly
quick energy snacks – candy, sodas, chips.
This type of food will give you a burst of energy,
but you will crash even harder in the next round.
Bring fruit, juice, nuts, a sandwich, granola bars,
celery, carrots, and stuff like that.
You have to be an expert at the most popular and
most effective decks in order to win.
Let’s face it, some players will just take a deck
off of the internet and play it in a tournament and lose
horribly. They
won’t understand why they lost, when someone else won a
whole tournament with it.
The main reason is that they don’t understand how
to play the deck most effectively.
This leads into the next point – rehearsing your
deck. Play
your new deck against as many of the most popular deck
types you can. Strive
to play against the best players in your area – that
will be the kind of player you will face in a tournament,
and the bigger the tournament, the tougher the
competition. When
your deck does well, note the cards and combinations that
worked. When
your deck does poorly, write down the cards you wished you
would have had. After
about 20 games, take a look at your piece of paper and add
some cards and take away cards that didn’t work.
You have just tuned your own deck!
Finally, your attitude can make the difference
between winning and losing.
It is easy to be happy when you are winning, but
you must be positive even when you are losing –
especially when you are losing.
With a properly built deck, even a hopeless
situation can be turned around with a professor oak and a
full bench. Think
positively and keep your spirits up.
When you lose, lose gracefully.
Shake his hand and tell him ‘good job’.
Make your opponent earn the victory, and when he
does, congratulate him on a great game.
You really do learn more from the games you lose
than from the ones you win!
Sun Tzu also said that we must rely on our own
abilities, not the opponent’s lack of preparedness.
This means that we must strive to be the best
we can be, and to treat each opponent as the hardest
master we ever fought.
That way, we are using all of our skill to defeat
him, and are really trying hard not to make mistakes.
If we assume that the opponent is weak, we will
make more mistakes and play more sloppily.
Sun Tzu reminds us of the 5 faults of a bad
general:
Recklessness
Cowardice
Hasty Temper
Shame
Worry
All these things will cause you to lose a game.
If you play too fast, using your trainers once you
draw them, you may be playing recklessly.
You must wait for the right time to use your
trainers…but Sun Tzu also says that if you are afraid to
try a bold or risky move, then you will surely lose too! He knows that there is the right time to play your trainers,
and only through experience will you realize when that
time is. That’s
why you have to playtest your deck so much – to be able
to see the point in the game when things can take a major
turn for the worse or better by your actions.
One of the worst things you can do after losing a
game in a tournament is to dwell on it.
When you are angry or ashamed about a loss, you
will keep thinking about that game, the one you lost,
instead of thinking about the one you are currently
playing. This
will lead to mistakes, and maybe another loss.
Finally, don’t spend too much energy worrying
about your next opponent – especially if he is a really
highly ranked player, or someone who always beats you.
Remember that any given deck can be beaten with
skillful play and a little luck.
You must always think positively!
Remember, Sun Tzu said that if you know your deck,
but you don’t know your opponent’s deck, you can win
half of your games. If
you know your opponent’s deck, but you don’t know your
own, you can also win half of your games.
It is the master who knows his own deck (playtest,
build it properly, good mental and physical condition) and
knows his opponent’s deck (know all the cards, know the
rules) who can win all of his games!
Next week I will finish up with the rest of Sun
Tzu’s lessons for Pokemon Trainers.
Good luck and keep writing!
Tom
Pojo.com is here to provide guidance to all Pokemon
trainers out there. Whether it's the Gameboy Game, N64 or the Trading Card Game,
PoJo.com provides all the wisdom you desire.
If you have cool game tips, a killer deck, or breaking
news ... send them to us. We'll post it on the site
... and give you all the credit.
|
|
|