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🔋 OP11 Weekly Power Rankings - Final Recap🏴‍☠️

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OP11 Meta Report – Final Week Recap

With OP12 now officially live on OPBounty, the OP11 era comes to a close. As we shift into a new format, we’re sending off OP11 with a full retrospective based on 1B+ ladder data. Rather than a snapshot of just this past week, this report offers a comprehensive summary of the meta as it developed across the entire lifespan of OP11 — from launch to the final week.

Over the course of the format, we’ve seen decks rise, fall, and evolve in response to shifting strategies and tech choices. This final ranking reflects not only raw winrates but also matchup data, deck consistency, and high-rank ladder impact. It’s a look back at which leaders truly defined the OP11 meta — and how they earned their place in the final top 10.

How Our Rankings Are Calculated

Our list isn’t simply based on winrate — it’s shaped by a layered evaluation:

This gives us a realistic view of how each deck stacks up when it matters most.

1. Blue/Purple Luffy – The Format’s Apex

From week one to the final day, Blue/Purple Luffy remained the most dominant force in OP11. Its ability to control the board, generate hand advantage, and pivot between aggression and defense made it the most well-rounded leader in the format. Despite constant targeting and counter-prep, it never left the top spot — a true hallmark of meta-defining strength.

2. Belo Betty – Refined and Ruthless

Belo Betty started OP11 in an explosive fashion. Over time, with better builds and cleaner sequencing, it became a serious meta staple. Its rise through the rankings was driven by relentless early-game pressure, a strong ability to snowball leads, and favorable matchups into slower leaders. By the end, Betty was unquestionably Tier 1.

3. Buggy – The Meta’s Reliable Workhorse

Buggy maintained consistent top-tier presence throughout the format thanks to its balance of tempo, disruption, and late-game threat density. While never flashy, it was rarely a bad pick and performed well into nearly every leader. Players who mastered its lines found steady success at high-rank play.

4. Green/Purple Luffy – Volatile but Lethal

G/P Luffy was one of OP11’s highest-ceiling decks. It could absolutely explode out of the gate and end games early, but its performance was often tied to draws and matchup flow. Still, when piloted aggressively and with the right list, it had tournament-winning potential. A constant threat to even the most consistent decks.

5. Bonney – The Control Player’s Choice

Bonney’s early OP11 performance hinted at a top-tier deck, and while it lost ground over time to faster strategies, it never fully faded. Strong draw engines, resource loops, and grind potential made it a favorite for players who liked slow, calculated games. Though eventually eclipsed, Bonney remained solid throughout the season.

6. Purple Luffy – Quiet Climber

Often overshadowed by its Blue/Purple cousin, pure Purple Luffy steadily climbed the ranks as the format matured. Efficient removal and powerful finishers like 8-cost Katakuri gave it strong late-game inevitability. It never had the flashiest winrate spikes, but its consistency and adaptability earned it a firm place in the top half.

7. Zoro – Always a Threat

Zoro thrived early in OP11 by punishing unrefined lists and greedy mulligans. As the format slowed slightly, its dominance faded, but it still excelled in tempo-heavy matchups. Straightforward but deadly, Zoro remained a strong option for players who wanted to pressure early and often.

8. Blackbeard – Feast or Famine

Blackbeard was one of OP11’s most high-variance decks. When it hit the right curve, it felt unstoppable — but inconsistencies in early turns and some brutal matchups held it back from rising further. It rewarded deep matchup knowledge, but punishing hands made it a riskier ladder pick across the format.

9. Red/Green Smoker – The Tech Pick

R/G Smoker didn’t dominate the format, but quietly carved out a niche as a smart meta call. Its flexible control tools, access to removal, and ability to pivot into aggression made it a tricky deck to play against. While never widely played, it consistently overperformed in the hands of skilled pilots.

10. Yamato – Starter Upgrade Sleeper

Yamato entered OP11 with low expectations, but thanks to starter deck upgrades and refined lists, it slowly found a foothold. It performed well into slower matchups and punished greedy lines. Though rarely a top ladder pick, it proved capable in the right hands and ends the format as a dark horse success.

Final Thoughts

OP11 gave us a rich and evolving metagame. While Blue/Purple Luffy was the undeniable format leader, the rest of the top 10 saw plenty of movement as players innovated and countered week after week. Aggro decks like Betty and Zoro pressured from below, midrange mainstays like Buggy and Bonney held firm, and tech picks like R/G Smoker and Yamato showed that underdogs could thrive with the right meta read. With OP12 now live, we say goodbye to a format that rewarded adaptability, tight sequencing, and creative deckbuilding.

Decklists

About the Decklists
For this final OP11 recap, we’ve chosen to use the same decklists featured in last week’s report. Rather than compiling a list from across the entire format—which could include outdated builds—we felt it was more appropriate to highlight the most recent and refined versions of each deck. As metas evolve, so do optimal card choices, and these lists reflect the latest adaptations that were performing well at the close of OP11.

U/P Luffy:

1xOP11-040

2xOP06-047

3xOP11-054

1xOP11-118

1xOP01-070

4xOP06-119

4xOP05-067

4xST18-001

4xEB01-061

4xOP07-064

3xOP11-067

4xOP08-069

1xOP04-056

1xOP06-058

4xOP09-078

4xOP11-080

3xOP08-076

3xOP10-079

Belo Betty:

1xOP05-002

4xOP05-015

1xOP06-016

4xOP05-006

4xOP05-011

3xOP05-003

4xOP05-004

4xOP05-005

4xOP05-017

3xOP06-003

1xOP07-015

2xOP11-106

4xOP09-100

4xP-073

3xOP09-103

2xOP09-104

3xOP05-021

Buggy:

1xOP09-042

4xOP09-056

4xST25-001

4xST25-002

2xST25-004

4xST25-005

4xOP09-045

1xOP09-053

3xP-082

4xOP09-048

3xOP09-046

3xP-084

2xST03-009

4xST25-003

4xOP09-051

2xST03-015

2xOP06-058

Purple Luffy:

1xOP05-060

4xST18-001

4xEB01-061

4xOP05-073

2xST10-010

2xST18-002

4xST18-004

2xOP02-085

3xOP03-066

2xOP05-070

4xOP07-064

4xOP09-065

4xOP11-067

4xOP09-119

2xOP03-072

4xOP09-078

1xEB01-039

G/P Luffy:

1xEB02-010

4xEB02-017

2xEB02-036

4xEB02-037

4xST18-001

4xST18-004

4xEB02-035

2xOP05-070

3xEB02-061

4xOP07-064

2xST18-005

1xOP07-036

2xOP08-036

2xOP03-072

4xOP05-076

4xOP09-078

4xEB02-041

Bonney:

1xOP07-019

4xEB01-015

4xST02-007

4xOP05-030

3xST24-001

4xOP10-032

4xOP07-021

3xST24-003

4xEB01-012

4xOP08-023

4xOP06-035

3xOP01-051

3xOP06-118

3xST16-004

1xST24-004

2xOP05-037

Yamato:

1xOP06-022

3xOP01-033

4xOP06-035

2xOP06-118

4xST28-005

4xOP04-109

1xOP06-101

3xOP06-106

3xOP11-106

4xST28-002

4xST28-001

2xOP06-104

4xST28-003

3xOP06-107

4xST28-004

2xST02-017

3xOP06-115

Blackbeard:

1xOP09-081

4xOP09-089

3xOP09-095

4xOP11-083

1xST27-002

4xOP09-090

4xOP09-086

1xOP10-086

2xST27-004

4xOP09-083

4xOP10-082

2xST27-005

3xOP09-093

4xOP07-096

4xOP09-096

2xOP09-098

4xOP09-099

Green/Red Smoker:

1xOP10-001

3xOP10-004

4xOP11-004

2xOP10-016

4xOP10-005

2xOP11-014

4xOP10-011

2xOP11-008

2xOP11-017

2xOP07-015

4xOP05-030

4xOP10-032

4xOP10-030

4xOP06-035

3xOP01-051

2xOP10-018

3xST21-017

1xOP11-018

Zoro:

1xOP01-001

4xOP01-016

4xOP02-015

3xOP03-008

2xOP08-015

4xOP01-013

4xEB01-006

4xEB02-003

4xOP01-025

4xOP04-010

4xOP08-007

4xOP08-010

2xST21-014

4xEB01-009

3xST21-017


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