
| HIGH | 5.00 | USD | |
| MID | 0.30 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 0.02 | USD |
Maschiff enters the battlefield as a Basic Darkness-type with minimal HP but some sneaky potential.
This pup may not look intimidating at first glance, but its ambush tactics might surprise unsuspecting opponents.
With a single Energy requirement and low retreat cost, Maschiff offers an accessible early-game option for Dark-type decks.
Offensive rating: 2/10Maschiff brings a single attack to the table - Ambush, costing just one Darkness Energy.
At baseline, you get 10 damage, with a coin flip offering the chance to boost to a more respectable 30.
This damage output is decidedly low-tier in the current meta, where even early-game attackers typically need to threaten 50+ damage to be relevant.
The coin flip mechanic adds inconsistency, making it difficult to rely on Maschiff for critical knockouts.
Even with the flip bonus, 30 damage rarely threatens meaningful trades against competitive Pokémon.
Without any defensive bypass mechanics or secondary effects, Maschiff struggles to justify its attacking role.
Survival rating: 2/10With just 60 HP, Maschiff falls into the extremely vulnerable category of Basic Pokémon.
This health pool leaves it susceptible to being knocked out by virtually any established attacker in the format, often before it can even execute its strategy.
Its Grass weakness further compounds this fragility, turning already manageable attacks into one-hit knockouts.
The single retreat cost is one of Maschiff's few saving graces from a survival perspective, offering reasonable mobility when you need to pivot.
However, without any built-in defensive abilities, damage reduction, or recovery options, Maschiff remains a glass cannon without the cannon part - easily targeted and eliminated before making an impact.
Versatility rating: 2/10Maschiff suffers significantly in the versatility department.
Its singular attack offers no utility effects beyond simple damage, and even that comes with inconsistent output due to the coin flip.
The card lacks any Ability that might provide strategic options or synergy with other cards.
As a Basic Darkness-type, it does benefit from type-specific support cards in the format, but brings nothing unique to capitalize on those interactions.
Maschiff cannot effectively pivot between roles, functioning neither as a reliable attacker nor as support.
Its matchup profile is limited, as it lacks the tools to counter specific strategies or adapt to different battlefield situations.
Without secondary functions, Maschiff struggles to find a defined role in constructed decks.
Speed/Setup rating: 8/10One area where Maschiff shows a glimmer of potential is its setup efficiency.
Requiring just one Darkness Energy to attack, it can become operational on the first turn with minimal investment.
This low energy requirement allows for immediate pressure, albeit minor.
Its Basic status means no evolution chain to navigate, eliminating evolution-related inconsistencies.
Cards like Dark Patch can accelerate its already minimal energy needs, getting it battle-ready instantly.
The low retreat cost also factors positively here, providing flexibility if your strategy changes mid-game.
While Maschiff can be set up quickly, the question remains whether that quick setup translates to meaningful impact - and unfortunately, in most competitive scenarios, it doesn't.
Maschiff benefits most from companions that can either boost its damage output or provide it with utility beyond its limited attack.
Cards that manipulate coin flips can help improve its consistency, while Dark-type support can maximize its minimal offensive capability.
Victini with its Victory Star Ability allows you to reflip attack coin flips once per turn, dramatically improving Maschiffs Ambush consistency and raising its damage ceiling from inconsistent to somewhat reliable.
Oranguru with Primate Wisdom helps filter through your deck to find necessary support pieces while Maschiff serves as an early attacker, improving your board development while using Maschiff as a temporary placeholder.
As Maschiffs evolution, Mabosstiff provides a natural progression path, allowing Maschiff to serve as an early-game placeholder before evolving into a more impactful attacker with significantly better damage output.
Maschiff represents a bare-bones Basic Darkness Pokémon that struggles to find relevance in the competitive landscape.
While its quick setup and low energy requirements are commendable, they simply dont compensate for its abysmal damage output, fragile defenses, and limited strategic flexibility.
In a format where even starter Pokémon need to bring meaningful impact or utility, Maschiff falls short across most evaluation metrics.
Its most practical application might be as an early-game placeholder in Darkness decks, applying minimal pressure while you build toward more formidable attackers.
Newer players might appreciate its straightforward design, but experienced competitors will quickly identify more efficient options.
Unless paired with significant support or used as evolution material for a more powerful form, Maschiff remains firmly in the category of cards that rarely make the final deck cut.
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