
| HIGH | 4.99 | USD | |
| MID | 0.13 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 0.03 | USD |
Stufful (ME1-111) enters the battlefield as an unassuming Basic Colorless Pokémon that might not immediately catch the eye of competitive players.
This fluffy contender packs 70 HP and a pair of simple attacks, but is its potential hidden beneath that adorable exterior? Let's examine whether this cuddly creature deserves a spot in your tournament deck.
Offensive rating: 2/10Stufful's offensive capabilities leave much to be desired in the current meta.
Light Punch delivers a mere 10 damage for one Colorless energy, while Flop deals only 20 damage for two energy.
This translates to an extremely poor damage-to-energy ratio that fails to threaten even the weakest defending Pokémon.
With no additional effects attached to either attack, Stufful lacks any form of damage amplification, defensive bypass, or special conditions that might compensate for the low numbers.
Even factoring in potential support cards, the damage ceiling remains disappointingly low, making it virtually impossible for Stufful to secure meaningful knockouts against competitive threats.
Survival rating: 3/10With 70 HP, Stufful sits at the lower end of the durability spectrum for Basic Pokémon.
This modest health pool makes it vulnerable to being knocked out in a single attack by most competitive attackers.
Its Fighting weakness is particularly problematic in the current meta where Fighting-type attackers are prevalent.
The two-energy retreat cost is relatively heavy for such a small Pokémon, potentially leaving it stranded in the active position.
Stufful possesses no inherent defensive abilities, healing mechanisms, or damage reduction effects to extend its lifespan on the field.
Without significant defensive support from other cards, Stufful will struggle to survive long enough to make any meaningful impact in a tournament setting.
Versatility rating: 2/10Stufful's versatility is limited by its straightforward design and lack of unique abilities.
As a Basic Colorless Pokémon, it does benefit from type-agnostic support and can fit into various deck archetypes technically.
However, its low damage output and absence of special effects severely restrict its utility across matchups.
It cannot function effectively as a main attacker, wall, or tech card against specific threats.
The only notable aspect of its versatility is that it evolves into Bewear, which might possess more competitive viability.
In essence, Stufful exists primarily as an evolution stepping stone rather than a versatile contributor to diverse strategies.
Its Colorless typing, while flexible for energy attachment, fails to compensate for its otherwise one-dimensional design.
Speed/Setup rating: 5/10As a Basic Pokémon, Stufful earns points for immediate playability without evolution requirements.
Its Colorless typing means any energy can power its attacks, allowing for flexible energy attachment strategies.
Light Punch requires just one energy, enabling Stufful to attack on your first turn if going second.
However, the effectiveness of this quick setup is undermined by the minimal damage output.
The more damaging Flop attack requires two energy, slowing its offensive timeline by at least one turn in most scenarios.
Stufful's primary role in competitive play would likely be as an evolution base for Bewear, requiring additional setup time and resources to reach its evolved form where the real potential presumably lies.
Stufful functions best when paired with cards that can either accelerate its evolution into Bewear or provide significant damage modification.
Energy acceleration supports like Raihan or Melony can help power up its evolved form faster.
Defensive tools such as Big Charm or Focus Sash might give it the survivability it lacks inherently.
The deck should prioritize search cards to ensure consistent evolution into Bewear, where the true competitive potential of this evolutionary line likely resides.
As Stuffuls evolution, Bewear is the primary reason to include Stufful in your deck. The evolved form presumably offers significantly better attacks and HP, making the evolutionary investment worthwhile.
Accelerates Stuffuls evolution process by allowing you to skip straight to Bewear if Stufful has been in play since your previous turn, reducing the vulnerability period where Stufful is exposed to easy knockouts.
This Supporter card helps search for both Water Pokémon and Items, potentially allowing you to find Stufful and evolution pieces or tools in one turn, improving consistency for your evolution strategy.
Stufful emerges as a distinctly below-average contender in the competitive Pokémon TCG landscape.
Its minimal offensive capabilities, fragile defensive profile, and limited versatility create a package that cannot stand on its own merits in tournament play.
Where Stufful finds its purpose is solely as an evolution stepping stone to Bewear.
Tournament players should view Stufful as nothing more than a necessary evolutionary base—a means to an end rather than a strategic component.
When building a deck with this evolutionary line, focus on accelerating through the Stufful stage as quickly as possible using search cards, Rare Candy, and protective items to ensure it survives long enough to evolve.
The card might find minimal utility in very specific niche strategies or casual play, but serious tournament players will recognize that Stuffuls true value lies entirely in what it becomes, not what it is.
![]() | 20 |
The card has been added!
You can find it in the MY CARDS section
The card has been removed!
Our free website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.