
| HIGH | 59.95 | USD | |
| MID | 4.85 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 3.90 | USD |
Mienshao enters the fighting arena with swift precision and calculated power.
This Stage 1 Fighting-type brings a combination of efficiency and specialized combat techniques that can bypass certain defensive strategies.
Its modest HP and energy requirements make it a consideration for trainers looking to add a focused attacker to their Fighting-type lineup.
Offensive rating: 7/10Mienshao's offensive capabilities revolve around two straightforward attacks.
Low Sweep delivers 40 damage for just one Fighting energy, providing a decent damage-to-energy ratio of 40:1.
The more impactful Smash Uppercut requires two Fighting energy and deals 80 damage with the crucial ability to ignore Resistance.
This resistance-bypassing effect gives Mienshao a tactical edge against traditionally resistant Pokémon like Electric or Steel types.
While neither attack features additional effects like status conditions or energy disruption, the guaranteed damage output against resistant Pokémon can be situationally powerful.
The damage ceiling isn't particularly high without modifiers, but the efficiency is respectable.
Survival rating: 5/10With 100 HP, Mienshao sits at the lower end of the survival spectrum for Stage 1 Pokémon, making it vulnerable to being knocked out in a single hit by many meta attackers.
Its Psychic weakness is particularly problematic in formats where Psychic-type Pokémon see regular play.
The single colorless retreat cost is a bright spot, offering flexibility to pivot when needed without consuming too many resources.
Mienshao lacks any built-in defensive abilities or HP-boosting mechanics, making it reliant on external support cards like healing items or protective stadium cards to extend its battlefield presence.
This Fighting-type will typically function as a glass cannon rather than a durable attacker.
Versatility rating: 6/10Mienshao demonstrates moderate versatility through its energy-efficient attacks and resistance-bypassing capability.
As a Stage 1 Pokémon, it requires less setup than Stage 2 counterparts but still demands finding both Mienfoo and Mienshao to deploy.
The card slots naturally into Fighting-type decks where its resistance-ignoring attack provides utility against typically resistant matchups.
However, it lacks the supplementary abilities or attack effects that would make it truly versatile across different situations.
Mienshao performs one role adequately—dealing direct damage—but doesn't offer energy acceleration, card draw, or board control options that more versatile cards provide.
Its specific niche is countering resistance-heavy strategies.
Speed/Setup rating: 7/10As a Stage 1 Pokémon, Mienshao requires finding both Mienfoo (its pre-evolution) and itself to enter play, creating moderate setup demands.
Its attacks are relatively energy-efficient, with Low Sweep requiring just one Fighting energy to start dealing damage.
Getting to the full potential of Smash Uppercut requires two Fighting energy, achievable by turn 2 under normal energy attachment patterns.
The single retreat cost provides decent pivoting flexibility if Mienshao finds itself in an unfavorable position.
Evolution accelerators like Rare Candy won't work here, but cards that search for Stage 1 Pokémon can expedite its deployment.
Without any special abilities that affect its setup speed, Mienshao relies on standard evolution mechanics.
Mienshao performs best alongside cards that enhance Fighting-type damage output, accelerate energy attachment, or improve consistency in finding evolution pieces.
A backbone of strong Basic Pokémon can provide time for Mienshao to evolve, while Fighting-type support cards can amplify its modest damage numbers into more threatening attacks.
Koraidon ex provides Fighting energy acceleration, potentially allowing Mienshao to attack with Smash Uppercut earlier than normal. This partnership addresses Mienshao's setup limitations and turns it into a more efficient attacker.
Diancie's ability to boost Fighting Pokémon's damage output would directly enhance Mienshao's attacks, turning the modest 40 and 80 damage into more substantial numbers that threaten additional knockout thresholds.
Level Ball can search for both Mienfoo and Mienshao (since both have 100 HP or less), significantly improving consistency in completing this evolution line and reducing the chances of dead draws.
Mienshao occupies a specific niche in the Pokémon TCG landscape—a moderately efficient Stage 1 attacker with the valuable ability to bypass resistance.
Its greatest strengths lie in its reasonable energy costs, single-energy first attack option, and specialized anti-resistance technique.
However, its limited HP, lack of built-in protective mechanics, and straightforward attack effects without supplementary benefits restrict its competitive ceiling.
The card performs best in Fighting-type focused decks that can support it with damage boosters and energy acceleration.
Trainers should view Mienshao as a role player rather than a deck centerpiece—it can provide valuable coverage against resistant Pokémon while serving as an efficient secondary attacker when its resistance-ignoring capabilities are needed.
While not a format-defining powerhouse, this swift martial artist can deliver precise strikes in the right competitive environment.
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