As we enter the final week of the regular season, it is once again time to talk about the previous weeks usage trends! Let's get into it.
Micaiah and Leni did not play an OU game in their BO3 game, so there are 15 games/30 separate teams this week.
Most Used Pokemon:
Well, if any Pokemon was gonna dethrone Zamazenta as the most used Pokemon in a week, it was surely going to be the role compression aficionado themselves. With 13 usages, Gholdengo clocked in at around 43% usage this week, and its set variety was on full display. Nasty Plot wallbreaker sets (with both Ghostium and Steelium Z), bulky Nasty Plot, Thunder Wave, and Choice Scarf sets all saw various appearances. There wasn't anything particularly out of the ordinary in terms of the Ghold sets run this week (although a few of them had unrevealed items so there may have been some funny business that just didn't get a chance to be used), although the almost complete lack of Focus Blast (again, as far as we know based off of revealed movesets) was certainly worth noting. Most builds went with STABs+Recover as their moves of choice. This has been a trend for a while, but it is certainly interesting to see how many teams are ok with Gholdengo being walled by Kingambit and are instead choosing to blast away with the powerful neutral coverage that its STAB moves provide. Fortuitously, both Kingambit and Hisuian Samurott had bad usage weeks, so the Gholdengo's lacking Focus Blast weren't missing out on much.
Other High Usage Pokemon to Highlight
Alomomola checked in as the next highest used Pokemon with 9 usages. The majority of these uses were the Assault Vest set, as players looked for ways to check the myriad of dangerous special attackers in the tier and keep up momentum for their teams. We also saw an example of the moveset variance that this set can run, as Aqua Jet and Play Rough saw use as players used their AV Mola's to handle specific threats that their teams were weak to. The more traditional WishTectFlip variant also saw a couple of uses.
It was a three way tie for the next highest usages. Iron Treads, Zamazenta, and Zapdos all checked in with 8 uses. It was largely business as usual for these three in terms of sets run, although a bunch of different Iron Treads ended up running Air Balloon over the classic Leftovers. Mega Lopunny also had a surprisingly excellent week with 7 uses, which goes starkly against trends of low usage up until this point. Corviknight was the second most used B ranker with 4 usages.
Lots of C subrankers got used this week, although only a couple got more than one use. Both Celesteela and Excadrill were used twice this week. Interestingly, these were both used on Sand teams with Mega Tyranitar, although the other three teammates on both teams differed. One of the Excadrills was also an unorthodox Air Balloon set, which goes against the Z-Move grain that most Excadrills follow. One of these teams was also victorious in a 200 turn marathon, which I will not be analyzing any further since there's no way I'm wasting my free time watching that. Base Venusaur was also used twice, more than its mega form. While one of the Venusaurs was used on a full sun team, but the other was used on a Zard Y sun team, where it is far more unusual do to the limited sun duration and amount of support that Zard Y needs. Hydrapple, Kommo-o, Primarina, Clodsire, Mega Sableye, Dondozo, Ogerpon-C, Enamorus, and Iron Hands were the other C subrankers to see use.
Highest Ranked Pokemon to not be used:
Every A subranker was used once again, so we must delve into the B+ rank, where Mega Scizor is the odd one out. Sciz has a ton of great traits, but the meta is not particularly kind to it and it hasn’t been for a while. Mega Sciz is undoubtedly very bulky, and it checks some cool stuff like Kyurem, but both offensively and defensively it is currently an awkward fit onto most teams. Scizor lacks key resistances to Fighting-, Water-, Ghost-, and Ground-type attacks that leave it overwhelmed by many common attackers, and it has to Roost frequently thanks to its vulnerability to all entry hazards and inability to hold Leftovers. It is also not a great switch in to many common Psychic- and Fairy-types, as many of them carry Fire coverage. Offensively, it finds itself struggling in many late game scenarios thanks to a plethora of defensive Pokémon that deal with it, such as Zapdos, Toxapex, Moltres, and Corviknight, all of which have very reliable recovery. Not a great spot for this metallic bug, but maybe it’ll find use next week.
Other low usage Pokemon to highlight
Whilst every A subranker was used, a bunch of them had overall poor weeks of usage. An influx of Iron Treads and Ting-Lu usage had negative effects on most of the other Ground-types, but Gliscor and Landorus-T lost out big, returning to their week one/two “glory” with only 2 uses apiece. Mega Charizard Y, Kingambit, and Ogerpon-W were all only used 2 times as well, while Slowbro, Cinderace, Heatran, Tapu Koko, Mega Latios, Volcarona, and (most surprisingly) Galarian Slowking were all used just once.
Iron Valiant and Melmetal continued their trends of poor usage, with just one usage apiece. The dichotomy between the current B+ ranked Pokemon has been one of the more interesting trends to watch. While Iron Treads and Pecharunt have great amounts of usage, and others like Clefable and Hatterene are inconsistently used but overall strong, there are some B+ rankers that clearly don't stack up. Melmetal continues to be unpopular thanks to its deficiencies when compared to the other meta Steel-types, as it lacks a secondary typing and simply cannot hit everything it needs to in order to be consistent thanks to a pronounced case of 4MSS, and it lacks the utility that makes other Steels useful even in games where they don't contribute much offensively. Iron Valiant is suffering from the unpopularity of Tapu Koko, while it too suffers from the blight of not being able to consistently threaten everything it needs to if it doesn't have the right moveset, which is problematic for such an all-or-nothing offensive Pokemon.
Victini and Blaziken remain unused. Will anyone try them before the tournament ends?
The UR Pokemon
No UR Pokémon was used more than once this week. Cresselia, Alolan Ninetales, Mega Gallade, and Terrakion returned this week, while Glastrier, Tyranitar, and Ninetales made their first appearances for of the tournament.
Speaking of…
Some Cool Sets that I wanted to Highlight
Stories’s SubSD Glastrier 
I’m very sad this didn’t win, because the idea behind this is quite cool. Stories put the ice horse behind Aurora Veil with Snow beefing it up further to create a very bulky trade machine. With Ice/Ground coverage, this has the beef to trade well into most offenses while finding Substitutes on passive Pokemon like Alomomola, Toxapex, and the many Grounds that it forces out. Stories got very unlucky this game (I will not hear otherwise Molly) but the concept behind the set is very cool nonetheless!
Suuicuneee's Choice Band Tyranitar and Ryuji's Rest IDPress Zamazenta

Alright, remember how I said I wasn't gonna watch the 200 turn marathon? (I wrote the first bit about 6 hours before this) Well, the way I usually check sets is by skipping to the end of the replays to see what was used, and then I will rewatch replays I didn't catch live if I need a further understanding of something. Unfortunately, both of these sets caught my eye, and both were used in this slugfest that was by far the longest game of the tournament so far. So you get a double feature, since there's no way I'm just choosing one after going through that. Suuicuneee decided to party like it was Gen 3 with a classic Choice Band Tyranitar. This set jacks up Tyranitar's power way past even its Mega Form and gives it an ultra powerful Pursuit to chip most neutral Pokemon trying to flee from it. While much less consistent than even its Mega Form thanks to the Choice restriction and significantly worse speed tier and bulk, Choice Band Tyranitar can make up for it by being very hard for some teams to switch into. Sadly, Ryuji did not bring one of those teams. In fact, Ryuji brought possibly the worst matchup possible in the form of a Toxapex and Excadrill backed up by the ultimate coup, a ChestoRest IDPress Zama. This set shrugs off status and can potentially snowball versus both bulky teams and offense teams by fully healing after they have attempted to chip it down. In the end, this ended up resting
six times, as Suuicuneee's offensive core was incapable of breaking Toxapex, Zamazenta, Excadrill, and Celesteela pivoting around the CB TTar and a burned Gholdengo. Eventually Suuicuneee's Gholdengo ran out of Recovers, the CB Tar also got burned, and Ryuji stalled out Suuicuneee to take a well earned victory.
See you all in week seven! Good luck to all teams!