Analyze decks and scores
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What you’ll accomplish
Analysis answers a different question than readiness. Readiness asks: can I build this deck with my collection? Analysis asks: does this deck have a healthy structure and playable opening patterns? By the end of this workflow you can read both layers, spot when they disagree, and convert the signal into a concrete deck edit.
Before you start
- A target deck created and populated — see Build decks.
- A working sense of your format’s metagame. Coverage scores are calibrated against format meta; without that context the numbers float.
Steps
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Start with the coverage radar
Coverage is a structural read of why the deck should work. Five dimensions, each scored 0–4:
- Access — how reliably the deck reaches its engine card
- Conversion — how reliably access becomes payoff
- Protection — how well the deck plays through interaction
- Answer density — how well it answers opposing threats
- Recovery — how well it keeps playing after the first exchange
The radar’s shape tells you the deck’s style. A combo deck looks like a spike on access and conversion with low answer density. A control deck looks square — moderate on everything, high on answer density and recovery.
A score is directional. Use it to guide decisions, not to replace testing.
Screenshot pending /img/docs/analyze/analyze-coverage-radar.pngA radar with one collapsed dimension is informative. A perfectly square radar usually means the model couldn't tell what the deck is trying to do. -
Cross-check with simulation
Simulation samples opening hands (10,000+ by default) and reports observed rates: starter access, extender access, interaction density, playable hand rate, dead hand rate, engine-online rate.
When simulation agrees with coverage, the structural read is trustworthy. When they disagree — coverage says “high access,” simulation says “starter access 38%” — believe the simulation. The structural model has context boundaries; the simulation is empirical.
Screenshot pending /img/docs/analyze/analyze-simulation-metrics.pngA 'good' starter rate depends on the deck. 60% is great for control, mediocre for combo. -
Read structural risks separately
Risks aren’t part of the score. They’re warning flags about how the deck behaves in edge cases:
- Brick risk — too many uncastable hands
- Single point of failure — entire game plan hinges on one card resolving
- Normal summon dependence — collapses to any normal-summon negate
- Extra deck dependence — folds to extra-deck disruption
- Graveyard dependence — folds to graveyard hate
- Going-second fragility — needs to go first to function
- Low follow-up risk — runs out of gas in grind games
A deck can have acceptable scores and still carry a risk that matters in your local environment. If your locals all play Droll & Lock Bird, “graveyard dependence” stops being theoretical.
Screenshot pending /img/docs/analyze/analyze-risks-list.pngRisks are context-dependent. 'Severe' in one meta is 'acceptable' in another. -
Identify the bottleneck and act
The action loop is small:
- Identify the weakest coverage dimension.
- Confirm in simulation that the dimension’s metric is actually low.
- Read findings and risks for the same dimension — they often suggest a direction.
- Open the Compare and improve flow for candidate swaps.
- Save the new list as a deck version before applying the change.
Screenshot pending /img/docs/analyze/analyze-bottleneck-callout.pngThe suggestion is a hypothesis to test in a new version — not a directive.
What success looks like
You can name your deck’s structural weakness in one sentence, point to the simulation metric that confirms it, and have a candidate edit lined up as a new version ready to test. The full analysis page is a tool for diagnosis, not for grading — if you walked away with a number and no next action, you stopped reading too early.
Going deeper
The five dimensions and their weight tuning are documented in Scoring model. The simulation methodology — sample size, opening-hand definition, mulligan rules — lives in the same reference. The format-specific calibration corpus is YGOPRODECK tournament meta lists, joined to current format banlist state.
For why a structural score and a simulation rate can diverge, see Core concepts.
For the field-by-field reference of the analysis surface — every coverage dimension, every simulation metric, every risk type — see Quick Analysis (reference).