
| HIGH | 4.99 | USD | |
| MID | 0.07 | USD | TREND![]() |
| LOW | 0.02 | USD |
Ferroseed enters the arena as a Basic Metal-type Pokémon with modest 60 HP.
While it may not immediately stand out among flashier options, tournament players should examine this card's potential as both an early-game defender and evolution foundation.
Let's analyze how this spiky seed performs in competitive environments.
Offensive rating: 2/10Ferroseed's offensive capabilities are severely limited, offering only the most basic attacks with minimal impact.
Tackle delivers a meager 10 damage for one Metal energy, while Rolling Tackle requires two energy (one Metal, one Colorless) for just 20 damage.
Both attacks lack additional effects, making them purely utilitarian.
The damage-to-energy ratio is extremely poor, and neither attack provides any strategic advantage, status conditions, or defensive benefits.
In the current meta where even Basic Pokémon often deal 30+ damage with single energy attachments, Ferroseed falls significantly behind the offensive curve.
Survival rating: 4/10With 60 HP, Ferroseed sits at the lower end of Basic Pokémon durability, making it vulnerable to being knocked out in a single hit by many common attackers.
Its Fire weakness is particularly problematic in a meta where Fire-type Pokémon remain prevalent.
However, Ferroseed does have a valuable Grass resistance (-30), which provides significant protection against Grass attackers.
This resistance can allow it to survive attacks from popular Grass-types like Leafeon VMAX or Rowlet.
The heavy retreat cost of two energy is another drawback, potentially trapping it in the active position when you'd rather have it safely on your bench.
Versatility rating: 3/10Ferroseed's versatility is primarily limited to its role as an evolution stepping stone to Ferrothorn.
As a standalone card, it offers little tactical flexibility or utility.
It lacks any Abilities, can't generate energy acceleration, and doesn't provide bench protection or deck manipulation.
Its attacks are too basic to serve specialized roles against particular threats.
The Grass resistance does create some matchup advantages, but these are too situational to significantly enhance its versatility.
In deck construction, Ferroseed occupies a narrow niche as evolution material rather than offering the multi-role capability that characterizes truly versatile cards in the current TCG landscape.
Speed/Setup rating: 5/10As a Basic Pokémon, Ferroseed benefits from immediate playability from hand, requiring no prior evolutions or setup.
This is its primary advantage in the speed category.
However, even its weaker Tackle attack requires an energy attachment, and Rolling Tackle demands two turns of energy commitment for minimal payoff.
The card lacks any inherent energy acceleration or self-searching capabilities that would enhance its setup efficiency.
When compared to other Basic Pokémon that can impact the game immediately through Abilities or more powerful single-energy attacks, Ferroseed's setup effectiveness is limited.
It essentially serves as a placeholder until you can evolve it.
Ferroseed demands support cards that can enhance its survivability while accelerating its evolution into Ferrothorn.
Energy acceleration cards are crucial to power up its attacks more efficiently, while tools or stadium cards that boost Basic Pokémon can temporarily improve its battlefield presence.
Recovery cards may also be valuable if Ferroseed is targeted before evolving.
This Trainer card attaches a Metal Energy from your discard pile to one of your Benched Metal Pokémon, accelerating Ferroseed's energy requirements and preparing it for evolution without waiting multiple turns for manual attachments.
Helps search out Ferrothorn from your deck, ensuring you can evolve Ferroseed as quickly as possible rather than having it remain vulnerable on the field in its basic form.
Adds +50 HP to Basic Pokémon, significantly improving Ferroseed's survivability from 60 to 110 HP, giving it a much better chance to remain on the field until evolution.
Ferroseed serves primarily as an evolutionary stepping stone rather than a standalone competitor in tournament play.
Its modest HP, weak attacks, and high retreat cost make it a liability if stranded in the active position for multiple turns.
However, when properly supported with Metal energy acceleration and protective tools, it can fulfill its role as a precursor to Ferrothorn.
The Grass resistance offers niche utility against certain matchups, potentially allowing it to absorb hits from popular Grass attackers while you prepare your strategy.
In competitive play, aim to get Ferroseed onto your bench early, prepare it for evolution as quickly as possible, and avoid having it trapped in the active spot.
Its tournament viability depends almost entirely on the competitive strength of its evolution rather than its own characteristics.
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