VTES GP Santiago 2025

Report by Daniel Bravo, VEKN National Coordinator of Chile:

On Saturday, August 23, the coldest day of the month, with snow in areas where it had never snowed before and heavy rain the day before, GP 2 took place at the Magic Sur store. The 12 players who were supposed to attend were reduced to 8, mainly due to work commitments and the weather itself.

The two GP tables were played very quickly, and after three clean rounds, the final table was set with Pemar, who qualified with 2 VPs using his Stanislava deck; Gino with Arishat princes and barons with 1 GW and 4 VPs; Maxwell with 1 GW and 5 VPs using his Malkavian G6 Bleed and Stealth deck; Benjamin with a Toreador G6 Political Bleed deck with 1 Gw  and 7 Vps; and Hernan with a Lasombra Purge deck, with 2 GW and 6 VPs.

VTES GP Santiago 2025 VTES GP Santiago 2025 VTES GP Santiago 2025

 VTES GP Santiago 2025

VTES GP Santiago 2025


Three vote decks and two decks with titled crypts. Everything suggested it would be a very close and serious final, but with the first comment being 'We all agree that we don’t want Hernan at this table,' the room burst into laughter, making it one of the funniest finals so far in 2025. Hernan made the wise decision to tone down his deck and not play Purges at the beginning, since during political turns all the extra damage was directed at him, regardless of the votes he had.
After almost 45 minutes, Benja ousted Maxwell and his Malkavian princes, which reshaped the vote table. After nearly 1 hour and 40 minutes, Pemar ousted Hernan, leaving only the three political decks in play. It was the only moment when the laughter stopped and the tension could be felt in the air. But Benja managed to make the Rose clan prevail and secured the remaining points, finishing with 4 VPs at the final table. A very good closing for GP 2025.

This is are the words from Benjamin himself:

About the tournament:
"I was a bit nervous going into it as I had not played the game on any competitive level since 2024. I only had a month of playtesting with my deck so I really only went there to play some rounds and see what would happen. Honestly, I'm a bit disappointed with the player count, although competitive level was fairly good in my opinion and I had a great time. Just wish more players would participate there's quite a lot of amazing deckbuilders in the community and getting the chance to see what everyone comes up with is the best part about playing this game."

About the final:
"I'd say last table was one of the most hilarious and yet frustrating matches I've ever played. It was quite a display at how table politics and vote distribution can shift the tide of a game or just drive it to a stalemate. I knew being the prey of Purge was a terrible position to start in so I really tried my best to drain my predator of resources, but in the end I went too hard on that point and should just let my Malkavian prey kill his prey (Arishat) so the vote lock would disappear, since killing Malkavian Bleed would be quite easy with the tools on my deck. Ultimately, I think I made a lot of mistakes that I could cover up with help crosstable and that proved to be a pain later."

About the deck:
"I had been testing V5 Camarilla Toreador decks since around 2022 (starting with Grand Ball), but I really always had an interest in playing around with Aching Beauty, since it's pretty common on the meta here to face at least 1 or 2 decks per table that have options to try and block actions with little to no stealth. Thanks to 30th Anniversary the clan got a lot of cards I really loved, like Loup which works wonders with Change of Target and Majesty. The deck aims to multiact with those cards if blocked, else you play Forced March and go again, which puts your prey in a position where no matter what they do they take pool damage anyways. I do find it funny that Aching Beauty was almost useless during the games, as there were only 2 decks dedicated to blocking and final seating had NONE. I do think that nowadays Toreador have decent enough stealth generation (who would've thought!) and you could run this deck without Beautys and just run stealth masters like Creepshow Casino and Monastery of Shadows and increase the amount of vote generation and bloating."

The tournament winning deck: “Question Mark Bleed” by Benjamín Rojas

Crypt (12 cards) 
3x Diana Iadanza 9 AUS CEL FOR PRE justicar Toreador:7 
2x Catalina Vega 8 AUS CEL PRE for prince Toreador:6 
2x Flávio Gonçalves 7 CEL PRE aus for prince Toreador:6 
2x Maila 6 AUS PRE cel primogen Toreador:6 
2x Mkhokheli 6 PRE aus cel for prince Toreador:6 
1x Carmelita Neillson 5 AUS cel pre Toreador:7 

Library (90 cards) 
Master (16; 4 trifle) 
5x Aching Beauty 
1x Art Museum 
1x Camarilla Conclave 
2x Dreams of the Sphinx 
1x Giant's Blood 
2x Perfectionist 
4x Villein

Action (7) 
6x Enchant Kindred 
1x Judgment: Camarilla Segregation 

Political Action (15) 
5x Camarilla's Iron Fist 
5x Kine Resources Contested 
5x Parity Shift 

Equipment (1) 
1x Heart of Nizchetus 

Action Modifier (30) 
3x Aire of Elation 
2x Awe 
5x Change of Target 
6x Forced March 
5x Loup 
4x Perfect Paragon 
5x Voter Captivation 

Action Modifier/Combat (4) 
4x Resist Earth's Grasp 

Combat (7)
7x Majesty

Reaction (10) 
3x On the Qui Vive 
7x Telepathic Misdirection

Big thanks to organisers, sponsors and players!