Dream box: Purple Hybrid

bolbalzak bolbalzak 150 views May 29, 2026 Updated Jun 12, 2026
Purple Budget
Playtest Purchase

Ban List Violation

This deck does not conform to the current ban list:

  • Calling From the Darkness (BT7-107) is restricted to 1 copy, but this deck contains 4.
  • Matt Ishida (BT2-090) is banned and cannot be included in decks.
Deck Primer

Curated battle box environment:

Dream box

Purple Hybrid — The Value Engine

Deck Summary + Modernization

Purple Hybrid was the most ambitious and rewarding deck to build in the entire Dream Box.

Historically, Purple Hybrid had the shortest lifespan of all the Hybrid archetypes. While Yellow, Blue, Green, and Red all enjoyed periods of sustained success, Purple largely disappeared after BT7 before eventually returning years later in a form that barely resembled its original design. The challenge therefore

...

Curated battle box environment:

Dream box

Purple Hybrid — The Value Engine

Deck Summary + Modernization

Purple Hybrid was the most ambitious and rewarding deck to build in the entire Dream Box.

Historically, Purple Hybrid had the shortest lifespan of all the Hybrid archetypes. While Yellow, Blue, Green, and Red all enjoyed periods of sustained success, Purple largely disappeared after BT7 before eventually returning years later in a form that barely resembled its original design. The challenge therefore was not simply updating the deck, but discovering what Purple Hybrid actually wanted to become.

The answer was recursion.

The final build focuses on turning every resource into another resource. Digimon become Tamers. Tamers become memory. Memory becomes recursion. Recursion becomes board presence. Every exchange is designed to generate small amounts of value until those small advantages become overwhelming.

The key breakthrough was BT18 Duskmon. More than any other card in the deck, Duskmon finally gives Purple Hybrid the ability to generate value instead of merely preserving it. Combined with Rhihimon and the LordKnightmon package, the deck gains a recursive engine capable of competing with the inevitability of Yellow while remaining distinctly proactive.

The modernization does not increase Purple's raw speed. Instead, it gives the deck purpose, direction, and an identity that feels like a natural evolution of the original BT7 design.

Purple Hybrid represents the value-oriented control deck of Dream Box.

---

Individual Cards

Digitama

4 Upamon BT3-*****p>

A simple but highly effective defensive Digitama. Purple expects games to go long, making Upamon a natural fit for the deck's patient playstyle.

---

Level 3

4 Salamon BT2-034

One of the deck's most important defensive tools. Recovery is valuable in every matchup, and Salamon's On Deletion effect naturally supports Purple's sacrifice and recursion themes.

---

Level 4

4 Duskmon BT18-078

The card that makes the entire deck function. Duskmon transforms deleted stacks into future Tamers, provides recursion, and finally allows Purple Hybrid to generate value instead of simply maintaining parity.

3 KaiserLeomon BT7-073

An incredibly elegant role-player. KaiserLeomon allows Duskmon stacks to trade efficiently, preserves value through inherited effects, and provides much-needed interaction through Retaliation.

---

Level 5

4 Rhihimon BT7-075

The core payoff for the Hybrid engine. Rhihimon converts the Tamer infrastructure into meaningful board presence while generating the memory and value necessary to sustain Purple's long-game plan.

---

Level 6

3 LordKnightmon BT19-072

The deck's modernized Cherubimon. Rather than rebuilding after things die, LordKnightmon begins rebuilding immediately upon evolving. It generates tempo, creates defensive utility, and acts as the bridge between Purple's recursion engine and its board presence.

2 LordKnightmon AD-01-018

Purple's equivalent of Susanoomon. This card exists to cement winning positions, reward successful setup, and provide a true endgame payoff without fundamentally changing how the deck plays. Importantly, it relies heavily on BT19 LordKnightmon to reach its full potential.

---

Tamers

4 Matt Ishida BT2-090

The deck's primary memory setter and one of its most important engine pieces. Matt enables the classic BT7 recursion loops while providing a stable foundation for the entire deck.

4 Koichi Kimura BT7-091

Arguably the deck's strongest Tamer. Koichi fills the trash, generates memory, enables Duskmon, and rewards Purple for doing exactly what it wants to do.

4 Kari Kamiya BT4-097

A subtle but powerful inevitability tool. Kari taxes opponents over the course of the game and combines beautifully with Salamon and LordKnightmon to create a surprisingly effective defensive package.

3 Alice McCoy EX2-064

One of the most flavorful inclusions in the deck. Alice transforms Purple's board into a reusable resource, enabling sacrifice lines and rebuild sequences that perfectly complement the deck's recursive identity.

4 Analog Youth EX1-066

Part consistency tool, part memory engine, part combo piece. Analog Youth supports every stage of Purple's game plan and helps ensure the deck continues functioning even after resources have been traded away.

4 Bokomon BT7-081

Unlike Green, Purple does not need Bokomon because it lacks Tamers. Purple needs Bokomon because it lacks engine Tamers. Here Bokomon functions as both consistency piece and combo enabler.

---

Options

4 Calling From the Darkness BT7-107

The deck's most important option card. Calling serves as sacrifice outlet, recursion tool, and value engine all at once. Few cards embody Purple Hybrid's philosophy more perfectly.

3 Schwarz Lehrsatz BT7-108

Chosen over narrower removal options because it scales naturally with the deck's game plan. Schwarz provides answers to developed boards and gives Purple meaningful interaction against go-wide strategies.

---

Position in the Dream Box Meta

Purple Hybrid occupies one of the most unique positions in the Dream Box.

Against Red and Green, Purple often begins on the back foot, forced to navigate the early turns carefully before its recursion engines begin to take over. These matchups reward precise resource management and careful sequencing.

Against Blue, Purple faces its most difficult challenge. Blue's disruption naturally interferes with Purple's slower setup, forcing Purple to find creative ways to generate value under pressure.

Against Yellow, Purple enters one of the format's defining matchups. Both decks are built around inevitability, but they reach it from opposite directions. Yellow seeks stability, recovery, and memory superiority. Purple seeks recursion, value generation, and gradual board control. Neither deck truly wants to be the aggressor, yet eventually one of them must become it.

What makes Purple special is that no other deck in the box asks so many questions about resource conversion. Every deletion, every sacrifice, every recursion target, and every Tamer placement matters.

If Yellow is the deck of inevitability, Purple is the deck of inevitability earned.

It is the most intricate deck in Dream Box, the one that rewards long-term planning the most, and ultimately the deck that best captures the idea that every resource in Digimon can become something else if used correctly.

Deck List

Digimon (24)
4 Bokomon BT7-081
$0.25 Lv.3 2000
4 Salamon BT2-034
$0.10 Lv.3 2000
4 Duskmon BT18-078
$2.16 Lv.4 6000
3 KaiserLeomon BT7-073
$0.14 Lv.4 6000
4 Rhihimon BT7-075
$0.11 Lv.5 7000
3 LordKnightmon BT19-072
$0.22 Lv.6 11000
2 LordKnightmon AD1-018
$0.47 Lv.6 11000
Option (7)
4 Calling From the Darkness BT7-107
3 Schwarz Lehrsatz BT7-108
Tamer (19)
3 Alice McCoy EX2-064
4 Analog Youth EX1-066
4 Kari Kamiya BT4-097
4 Koichi Kimura BT7-091
4 Matt Ishida BT2-090
Egg Deck (4)
4 Upamon BT3-003
$0.11 Lv.2

Card Types

Digimon 24
Tamer 19
Option 7
Digi-Egg 4

Levels

Lv.3 8
Lv.4 7
Lv.6 5
Lv.5 4
Lv.2 4

Colors

Purple 38
White 8
Yellow 8

Play Cost

1 Cost 4
2 Cost 7
3 Cost 12
4 Cost 8
6 Cost 10
7 Cost 4
11 Cost 5

Traits

Holy Warrior 5
Royal Knight 5
Mutant 4
Mammal 4
Wizard 4
Warrior 4
Cyborg 3

Blocks

Block 00 12
Block 01 37
Block 02 12
Block 04 7
Block 05 2

Comments

No comments yet…

You must be logged in to comment.