Pokémon Card Game Online: Difference between revisions

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Jump to navigationJump to search
mNo edit summary
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 26: Line 26:


==List of constructed decks==
==List of constructed decks==
The game originally contained four decks, with a fifth one available at {{TCG|Reviving Legends}}'s release. The Leafeon and Metagross decks have the same contents as the [[Leafeon vs Metagross Expert Deck (TCG)#Deck lists|physical decks]] included with the CD-ROM.
The game originally contained four decks, with a fifth one available at {{TCG|Reviving Legends}}'s release and another deck at {{TCG|Clash at the Summit}}'s debut. The Leafeon and Metagross decks have the same contents as the [[Leafeon vs Metagross Expert Deck (TCG)#Deck lists|physical decks]] included with the CD-ROM.
<div style="display: inline-block">
<div style="display: inline-block">
==={{p|Leafeon}} deck===
==={{p|Leafeon}} deck===
Line 136: Line 136:
{{decklist/entry|13|{{TCG|Darkness Energy}}|Energy|Darkness|None}}
{{decklist/entry|13|{{TCG|Darkness Energy}}|Energy|Darkness|None}}
{{decklist/entry|4|{{TCG ID|Reviving Legends|Darkness Energy|79}} (Special)|Energy|Darkness|Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|4|{{TCG ID|Reviving Legends|Darkness Energy|79}} (Special)|Energy|Darkness|Uncommon}}
{{decklist/footer}}
</div>
<div style="display: inline-block">
==={{p|Machamp}} deck===
{{decklist/header}}
{{decklist/entry|4|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Machop|42}}|Fighting||Common}}
{{decklist/entry|3|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Machoke|43}}|Fighting||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Machamp|44}}|Fighting||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Machamp|45}}|Fighting||SuperRare Holo}}
{{decklist/entry|3|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Ponyta|10}}|Fire||Common}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Rapidash|11}}|Fire||Rare Holo}}
{{decklist/entry|1|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Aipom|68}}|Colorless||Common}}
{{decklist/entry|4|{{TCG ID|HeartGold Collection|Professor Oak's New Theory|68}}|Supporter||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|3|{{TCG ID|HeartGold Collection|Professor Elm's Training Method|67}}|Supporter||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Leafeon Deck|Emcee's Chatter|13}}|Supporter||None}}
{{decklist/entry|3|{{TCG ID|Leafeon Deck|Cheerleader's Cheer|14}}|Supporter||None}}
{{decklist/entry|3|{{TCG ID|SoulSilver Collection|Copycat|69}}|Supporter||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Clash at the Summit|Black Belt|77}}|Supporter||None}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|HeartGold Collection|Switch|64}}|Item||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|SoulSilver Collection|Pokémon Communication|65}}|Item||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|Reviving Legends|Rare Candy|71}}|Item||Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|13|{{TCG|Fighting Energy}}|Energy|Fighting|None}}
{{decklist/entry|4|{{TCG|Fire Energy}}|Energy|Fire|None}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|HeartGold Collection|Double Colorless Energy|70}}|Energy|Colorless|Uncommon}}
{{decklist/entry|2|{{TCG ID|SoulSilver Collection|Rainbow Energy|70}}|Energy|Rainbow|Uncommon}}
{{decklist/footer}}
{{decklist/footer}}
</div>
</div>
{{-}}
{{-}}
==Trivia==
*From April 23, 2010 to May 10, 2010, a [https://web.archive.org/web/20100311023550/http://www.pokemon.co.jp/special/wcs0910/online/ tournament] inside the game has been used as a qualification method to the Last Chance Qualifier event for the [[2010 World Championships]].


==See also==
==See also==
Line 149: Line 177:
[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:PC games]]
[[Category:PC games]]
[[Category:Pokémon Trading Card Game video games]]
[[zh:宝可梦卡牌游戏Online]]

Revision as of 07:03, 21 May 2022

Not to be confused with the Pokémon Trading Card Game Online.

Pokémon Card Game Online
ポケモンカードOnline
Pokemon Card Game Online Logo.png
Logo of Pokémon Card Game Online
Basic info
Platform: PC and Mac
Category: Strategy
Players: 2
Connectivity: Internet
Developer:
Publisher: The Pokémon Company International
Part of: Generation IV misc
Ratings
CERO: N/A
ESRB: N/A
ACB: N/A
OFLC: N/A
PEGI: N/A
GRAC: N/A
GSRR: N/A
Release dates
Japan: November 20, 2009
North America: N/A
Australia: N/A
Europe: N/A
South Korea: N/A
Hong Kong: N/A
Taiwan: N/A
Websites
Japanese: Game site (Archive)
English: N/A

Pokémon Card Game Online (Japanese ポケモンカードOnline) was a Japanese-exclusive browser game built in Flash and the first Pokémon game of the MMOTCG (massively-multiplayer online trading card game) genre. It was based on the Pokémon Trading Card Game or TCG aspect of the Pokémon franchise and followed the same rules. Players were only able to play the game by registering with the unique acess number included in the Leafeon vs Metagross Expert Deck CD-ROMs and played against other opponents with fixed decks. The game's services were active between November 20, 2009 to August 31, 2010.

Gameplay

With any deck of choice, players could engage in ranked and unranked battles against random or chosen opponents, as well participate in scheduled tournaments. A monthly leaderboard based on ranked matches displayed the best 100 players of each age division (Junior, Senior and Masters), and the player's rank position. Players were also automatically assigned to a "team" upon registration based on the Legendary Pokémon Ho-Oh, Lugia, Entei, Suicune and Raikou, and the leaderboard's "Team Score" was an indicator of the team's perfomance against players of other teams.

Tournaments could be participated by using a tournament ticket or with no entry free at early events. Players were automatically awarded 5 tickets every Friday, and could have up to 10 tickets stored in an account. These events were always 4-player tournaments with single eliminations, divided by age divisions and often restricted to a single deck. Winning these tournaments rewarded players with cosmetic items.

Other minor features were the possibility of sending friend requests to players and using cosmetic items such as coins, playmats, deck boxes and changing the game's background, which were unlockable from tournaments and playing cumulative ammounts of matches.

List of constructed decks

The game originally contained four decks, with a fifth one available at Reviving Legends's release and another deck at Clash at the Summit's debut. The Leafeon and Metagross decks have the same contents as the physical decks included with the CD-ROM.

Leafeon deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Eevee Colorless
Leafeon Grass
Roselia Grass
Roserade Grass
Carnivine Grass
Shaymin Grass
Torkoal Fire
Good Rod I
Super Scoop Up I
Dual Ball I
Interviewer's Questions Su
Professor Elm's Training Method Su
Emcee's Chatter Su
Cheerleader's Cheer Su
Grass Energy Grass E
Psychic Energy Psychic E
Rainbow Energy Rainbow E

Metagross deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Beldum Psychic
Metang Psychic
Metagross Psychic
Misdreavus Psychic
Mismagius Psychic
Jirachi Psychic
Dunsparce Colorless
Dual Ball I
Rare Candy I
Pokémon Circulator I
Professor Elm's Training Method Su
Emcee's Chatter Su
Engineer's Adjustments Su
Judge Su
18× Psychic Energy Psychic E

Feraligatr deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Totodile Water Common
Croconaw Water Common
Feraligatr Water Uncommon
Growlithe Fire Common
Arcanine Fire Rare Holo
Teddiursa Colorless Common
Ursaring Colorless Rare
Girafarig Colorless Common
Pokémon Communication I Uncommon
Switch I Uncommon
Pokémon Reversal I Uncommon
Bill Su Uncommon
Professor Oak's New Theory Su Uncommon
Copycat Su Uncommon
Pokémon Collector Su Uncommon
10× Water Energy Water E
Fire Energy Fire E
Double Colorless Energy Colorless E Uncommon

Donphan deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Phanpy Fighting Common
Donphan Fighting Uncommon
Natu Psychic Common
Xatu Psychic Rare Holo
Spearow Colorless Common
Fearow Colorless Rare
Farfetch'd Colorless Rare
Shuckle Grass Rare Holo
Moomoo Milk I Uncommon
Switch I Uncommon
Bill Su Uncommon
Professor Oak's New Theory Su Uncommon
Professor Elm's Training Method Su Uncommon
Copycat Su Uncommon
Psychic Energy Psychic E
10× Fighting Energy Fighting E
Double Colorless Energy Colorless E Uncommon

Houndoom deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Houndour Darkness Common
Houndoom Darkness Rare Holo
Houndoom Darkness
Sneasel Darkness Common
Weavile Darkness Rare
Rattata Colorless Common
Raticate Colorless Common
Cleffa Colorless Rare Holo
Pokémon Communication I Uncommon
PlusPower I Uncommon
Emcee's Chatter Su
Team Rocket's Trickery Su Uncommon
Flower Shop Lady Su Uncommon
Professor Elm's Training Method Su Uncommon
Professor Oak's New Theory Su Uncommon
Pokémon Collector Su Uncommon
13× Darkness Energy Darkness E
Darkness Energy (Special) Darkness E Uncommon

Machamp deck

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Machop Fighting Common
Machoke Fighting Uncommon
Machamp Fighting Uncommon
Machamp Fighting SuperRare Holo
Ponyta Fire Common
Rapidash Fire Rare Holo
Aipom Colorless Common
Professor Oak's New Theory Su Uncommon
Professor Elm's Training Method Su Uncommon
Emcee's Chatter Su
Cheerleader's Cheer Su
Copycat Su Uncommon
Black Belt Su
Switch I Uncommon
Pokémon Communication I Uncommon
Rare Candy I Uncommon
13× Fighting Energy Fighting E
Fire Energy Fire E
Double Colorless Energy Colorless E Uncommon
Rainbow Energy Rainbow E Uncommon


Trivia

  • From April 23, 2010 to May 10, 2010, a tournament inside the game has been used as a qualification method to the Last Chance Qualifier event for the 2010 World Championships.

See also


Nintendo DS: Learn with Pokémon: Typing Adventure
Pokémon ConquestPokéPark: Fishing Rally DS
Nintendo 3DS: Pokédex 3D (Pro) • HarmoKnightPokémon Art Academy
The Thieves and the 1000 PokémonPokémon Shuffle
Nintendo Badge Arcade
Wii U: Pokkén Tournament
Nintendo Switch: Pokkén Tournament DXPokémon QuestPokémon Café ReMixPokémon UNITEPokémon TV
PC: Pokémon Project Studio Red and BluePokéROMsPokémon the Movie 2000 Adventure
Pokémon Masters ArenaPokémon PC MasterPokémon Team Turbo
Pokémon Team Rocket Blast OffPokémon Poké Ball LauncherPokémon Seek & Find
Pokémon GardenPokémon Medallion BattlePokémon Tower Battle
Mobile: PokématePokémon Say Tap?Pokédex for iOSPokémon TVCamp PokémonPokémon Jukebox
Learn Real English Through Pokémon: XY Translation ScopePokémon Shuffle Mobile
Dancing? Pokémon BandPokémon Photo BoothPokémon GOPokémon Duel
Pokémon: Magikarp JumpPokémon PlayhousePokémon QuestPokémon PassPokémon Masters EX
Pokémon Wave HelloPokémon SmilePokémon Café ReMixPokémon UNITEPokémon Sleep
Smart speakers: Pikachu Talk
Arcade: Print Club Pokémon BDance! PikachuPikachu's Great Surfing AdventurePokémon: Crayon Kids
Pokémon: Wobbuffet Fell Down!Pokémon Get Round and Round
Pokémon Tug of War Tournament: Absolutely Get Medal!Pokémon Medal World
Pokémon Card Game GachaPokémon: Battle NinePokkén TournamentPokémon Corogarena
Sega Pico: Pokémon: Catch the Numbers!
Pokémon Advanced Generation: I've Begun Hiragana and Katakana!
Pokémon Advanced Generation: Pico for Everyone Pokémon Loud Battle!
CoCoPad: Pocket Monsters Advanced Generation: Pokémon Super Drill Let's Learn Numbers from 1 to 20!!
Advanced Pico Beena: Pokémon Advanced Generation: Pokémon Number Battle!
Intellectual Training Drill Pokémon Diamond & Pearl: Letter and Number Intelligence Game
Pokémon Diamond & Pearl: Search for Pokémon! Adventure in the Maze!
Pokémon Best Wishes: Intelligence Training Pokémon Big Sports Meet!
Tech demos: Pikachu: DS Tech Demo
Self-contained: Pokémon PikachuPokémon Pikachu 2 GSPokémon Poké BallCyber Poké Ball
Cyber PokédexCyclone 2Digital Poké Ball D & PElectronic Hand-Held Yahtzee
Eevee × Tamagotchi
Pokémon game templates


Project Sidegames logo.png This article is part of both Project Sidegames and Project TCG, Bulbapedia projects that, together, aim to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon Sidegames and TCG, respectively. Project TCG logo.png