Ancient Toolbox (TCG)

Ancient Toolbox

Box Art
Release date May 16, 2025
Types used Darkness

Ancient Toolbox is the name of the deck used by Sakuya Ota, the Junior Division champion at the 2024 Pokémon World Championships. It is one of the 2024 World Championship Decks released May 16, 2025. Each deck comes with a two-sided playmat/poster, an event booklet, a Pokémon Trading Card Game Live code card, and a special Worlds 2024 deck box, pin, and coin. The cards included in the deck are not the exact prints used by Ota, but are the most recent, lowest-rarity print with any Holofoil removed. The cards have a unique card back and Ota's signature, and in place of the set symbol and rarity, they have a note stating, "This card cannot be used in official tournaments".

Description

Packaging

Sakuya Ota earned the title of Junior World Champion with a deck few of his competitors were expecting—and the power of math! Nearly half the deck is made up of Ancient cards, which work together to discard the opponent's cards, recycle Energy, and grant extra HP—and when they hit the discard pile after their work is done, they help power up massive Vengeance Fletching attacks from Roaring Moon. In a world of Pokémon ex, this deck's focus on single-Prize Pokémon offers a major advantage—and presents the opponent with an uphill battle!

Booklet

It was an intense finals match that felt neck-and-neck the whole time, and after the opponent took a surprise win in Game 2, any other player might have struggled to recover. But not Sakuya. He was calm, cool, and collected to the very last turn, carefully assessing his discard pile and double-checking all the math before declaring the final attack that made him World Champion. "I knew how to win and how to get there," he said afterward. "I knew I could do it." And he's already strategizing about how to defend his title in 2025—he thinks Technical Machine: Devolution might be a worthwhile inclusion to counter the many Stage 2 Pokémon he expects to see!

Deck List

Quantity Card Type Rarity
Roaring Moon Darkness
Flutter Mane Psychic
Great Tusk Fighting
Fezandipitiex Darkness
Radiant Greninja Water
Explorer's Guidance Su
Professor Sada's Vitality Su
Boss's Orders Su
PokéStop St
Earthen Vessel I
Nest Ball I
Pokégear 3.0 I
Counter Catcher I
Dark Patch I
Night Stretcher I
Pal Pad I
Hisuian Heavy Ball I
Secret Box I
Superior Energy Retrieval I
Super Rod I
Ultra Ball I
Ancient Booster Energy Capsule PT
Defiance Band PT
Darkness Energy Darkness E


Pokémon World Championships
Pokémon Trading Card Game only 2004-2008; TCG and Video Games 2009-on
2004: Blaziken TechMagma SpiritRocky BeachTeam Rushdown
2005: Bright AuraDark TyranitarKing of the WestQueendom
2006: B-L-SEeveelutionsMewtrickSuns & Moons
2007: FlyveesLegendary AscentRamboltSwift Empoleon
2008: Bliss ControlEmpotechIntimidationPsychic Lock
2009: StallgonCrowned TigerQueengarLuxdrill
2010: LuxChomp of the SpiritHappy LuckPower CottonweedBoltevoir
2011: MegazoneReshiphlosionThe TruthTwinboar
2012: Pesadelo PrismTerraki-MewtwoEeltwoCMT
2013: Anguille Sous RocheAmerican GothicDarkraiUltimate Team Plasma
2014: Plasma PowerTrevgorEmerald KingCrazy Punch
2015: The Flying HammerPunches 'n' BitesHonorStoisePrimal Groudon
2016: Black DragonBebe DeckMagical SymphonyNinja Blitz
2017: Infinite ForceGolisodorIce Path FTWSamurai Sniper
2018: Victory MapDragones y SombrasGarbanetteBuzzroc
2019: Pikarom JudgeFire BoxMind BlownPerfection
2022: ADPThe Shape of MewCheryl AgainIce Rider Palkia
2023: Mew's RevengePsychic EleganceColorless LugiaLost Box Kyogre
2024: Crushing ThornThe 'DonRegidrago VSTAR
2025: TBA
2026: TBA
Champions Jason KlaczynskiJun HasebeRay Rizzo
This article is part of Project TCG, a Bulbapedia project that aims to report on every aspect of the Pokémon Trading Card Game.