Maliss is one of the clearest Cyberse decks Egyptian Yu-Gi-Oh! players should watch right now. Recent uploaded tournament lists on YGOPRODeck show @Ignister Maliss appearing in high-level June 2026 results, including Top 32 at the UK National Championship 2026, Top 4 at the Sweden National Championship 2026, and Top 4 at the Central America WCQ 2026.
That does not mean every local player must copy the same 40 cards blindly. It means the core idea is worth testing: Maliss gives you Cyberse pressure, recursion, link climbing, and strong follow-up turns, while the @Ignister package can add explosive combo lines and extra board-building power.
Why Maliss @Ignister matters in June 2026
- Cyberse consistency: the deck can convert small starters into real pressure.
- Layered interaction: good lists can play through some disruption instead of losing to one hand trap.
- Flexible Extra Deck: Cyberse engines reward players who understand sequencing and link zones.
- Good testing value: even if you do not main the deck, you should know how it builds boards so you can side correctly.
Core game plan
The deck aims to establish Cyberse bodies, climb into Link monsters, and keep enough follow-up to survive the opponent’s answer. The @Ignister side helps create explosive lines, while the Maliss side gives the deck a modern engine identity instead of feeling like a one-turn gamble.
Cards Egyptian players should test around
- Hand traps: test how your list handles Ash Blossom, Nibiru, Droll, and Impermanence before taking it to locals.
- Board breakers: if your local scene is heavy on combo decks, prepare answers like Dark Ruler-style effects, Evenly-style cards, or targeted removal depending on your format legality and budget.
- Anti-Cyberse tech: if Maliss becomes popular locally, players will start preparing for Link-heavy boards.
- Extra Deck slots: do not copy lists without understanding why every Link monster is there. One wrong Extra Deck cut can break your combo map.
Is Maliss @Ignister good for beginners?
It is not the easiest deck for a brand-new duelist. The deck rewards practice, sequencing, and knowing when to stop extending. If you are new, start by learning the basic Cyberse combo routes first, then add the full Maliss @Ignister package once the lines feel natural.
How to build it in Egypt
If you want to test Maliss @Ignister without hunting every card one by one, use the Stiva Deck Builder and send your list for a custom-made deck. You can build the exact list you want, adjust tech cards for your local meta, and prepare a clean testing version before committing to tournament changes.
Quick side-deck questions before locals
- Can my deck interrupt the first Cyberse starter?
- Do I have answers if the opponent ends on multiple Link-based interactions?
- Can I win going second if they protect their main combo line?
- Do I know which card to stop, or am I wasting hand traps too early?
Bottom line: Maliss @Ignister is worth serious testing in June 2026. For Egyptian players, the smartest move is to build a tuned list, practice the combo map, then adjust the side deck around what your local scene actually plays.
Build your Maliss @Ignister deck with Stiva Deck Builder or message Stiva Store for a custom card list made for your budget and local meta.
