
| HIGH | 59.95 | USD | |
| MID | 14.32 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 13.38 | USD |
Tepig enters the battlefield as a Basic Fire-type with modest 70 HP and a clear evolutionary path to Pignite.
While not immediately impressive at first glance, this little fire pig brings fundamental utility that deserves careful consideration for players looking to build competitive Fire-type evolution lines in the current meta.
Offensive rating: 2/10Tepig offers straightforward but unimpressive offensive capabilities.
Its primary attack, Tackle, deals only 10 damage for one Fire energy, resulting in a poor damage-to-energy ratio.
The secondary attack, Rollout, requires two Fire energy for just 30 damage, which is similarly inefficient.
Without any bonus effects, status conditions, or damage modifiers attached to either attack, Tepig struggles to make a meaningful offensive impact.
Its attacks will rarely secure knockouts against anything but damaged Pokémon with very low remaining HP.
Essentially, Tepig serves primarily as an evolutionary stepping stone rather than a legitimate attacker.
Survival rating: 4/10With just 70 HP, Tepig sits at the lower end of the durability spectrum for Basic Pokémon.
Its Water weakness is particularly problematic in the current meta, where Water-type attackers can easily exploit this vulnerability for one-hit knockouts.
The single colorless retreat cost is a silver lining, allowing for relatively easy switching when necessary, which partially compensates for its fragility.
Without any built-in defensive abilities or damage reduction mechanics, Tepig cannot withstand concentrated attacks.
Its survival strategy must rely entirely on external support cards like Quick Healing Potion or protective Stadium cards.
Versatility rating: 3/10Tepig demonstrates limited versatility within the competitive landscape.
Its primary function is serving as an evolutionary base for Pignite and ultimately Emboar, rather than offering diverse strategic options itself.
The card lacks any auxiliary abilities that might provide utility beyond its basic attacks.
Its Fire typing does allow it to benefit from Fire-specific support cards like Sizzlin Sage or Energy acceleration effects.
However, without any ability to counter specific strategies or fill multiple roles, Tepig remains a one-dimensional card that performs a single function in your deck—evolving into something stronger.
Its versatility score suffers from this narrow application.
Speed/Setup rating: 6/10Tepig scores reasonably well in the setup department primarily due to its status as a Basic Pokémon, allowing immediate bench placement without prerequisites.
The low retreat cost offers tactical flexibility when pivoting to better attackers.
Its evolutionary path to Pignite and potentially Emboar provides clear strategic direction.
However, the requirement of specifically Fire energy for both attacks limits energy acceleration options and creates consistency issues in decks running multiple energy types.
While easily searchable through cards like Nest Ball or Capturing Aroma, Tepig itself requires multiple turns of setup before evolving into more impactful forms, making it vulnerable during this development phase.
To maximize Tepigs potential, pair it with Fire energy acceleration cards to speed up evolution, protection cards to ensure it survives until evolution, and its evolutionary line for long-term strategy.
The card works best in decks focused on powerful evolved Fire-type attackers rather than as a standalone threat.
This Stadium card allows you to attach a Fire energy from your discard pile to a Pokémon, accelerating Tepigs attack readiness and potentially preparing energy for its evolved forms.
Skips Pignite to evolve Tepig directly to Emboar, significantly boosting setup speed and allowing you to bypass the vulnerable middle evolution phase.
As Tepigs natural evolution, any competitive deck running Tepig should include Pignite to access stronger attacks and higher HP, creating a more threatening board presence.
Tepig exemplifies a foundational evolutionary piece rather than a standalone powerhouse.
Its primary strength lies in its accessibility as a Basic Pokémon with a reasonable retreat cost, allowing it to function as the starting point for potentially stronger evolved forms.
However, with lackluster attacks, minimal HP, and no special abilities, it wont win matches on its own merits.
Players should view Tepig as an investment—a necessary first step toward more formidable Fire-type attackers.
To maximize its effectiveness, protect it with support cards while accelerating toward evolution, preferably with energy acceleration tools to bypass its inefficient attack costs.
In the current meta, Tepig serves its purpose adequately if youre committed to its evolution line, but remains outclassed by other Fire-type basics with more immediate impact or utility.
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