Pokemon Champions has released Regulation M-B, but the update’s scope is already disappointing players. With only a small roster and limited item additions—and no further content planned for at least three months—fans are left waiting while the game’s competitive landscape stays largely unchanged.
What happened with Regulation M-B
Pokemon Champions rolled out its newest regulation update, Regulation M-B. The patch adds a relatively small number of new Pokémon and items, and it also introduces Mega Evolutions with ability changes for several entries.
On the Pokémon side, the update’s roster additions total 22 Pokémon, including names such as Vileplume, Qwilfish, Sceptile, Blaziken, Swampert, Mawile, Metagross, Staraptor, and several others. The item additions are also limited: 15 new items and 16 Mega Stones were added with this update.
The item list emphasizes standard competitive staples and support tools, including Wide Lens, Muscle Band, Wise Glasses, Expert Belt, Light Clay, Life Orb, Zoom Lens, Metronome, Iron Ball, and multiple weather-related rocks such as Icy Rock, Smooth Rock, Heat Rock, and Damp Rock. Mega Stones tied to the new Mega Evolutions are also part of the update set.
Mega Evolutions appear as a major component of the update, with multiple new Mega forms and listed abilities. Examples include Mega Raichu X (Electric Surge) and Mega Raichu Y (No Guard), Mega Staraptor (Contrary), Mega Scolipede (Shell Armor), and Mega Malamar (Contrary).
Why it matters to competitive players
The issue for many fans isn’t just what arrived—it’s what didn’t. The game launched in April after building hype for a more accessible, dedicated competitive battling experience, yet players have reportedly been unhappy with a smaller-than-expected roster and a shortage of items that are commonly used in VGC-style play.
This latest update doesn’t fully address those concerns. Even with Regulation M-B, the additions are described as few, and the Mega roster is not portrayed as complete. The source also notes that many remaining non-Legendary, non-Mythical Mega Evolutions from a prior title are still absent, and that several of the abilities tied to the added options are viewed as underwhelming by the community.
Beyond content volume, the game’s broader reception has also included criticism aimed at monetization and progression systems—specifically microtransactions, battle pass quality, and graphics.
What to watch next until September
Datamining information referenced in the source suggests that no new content is planned until September 2026 at the very least, with the expectation that the current roster and items won’t be updated for three months or more. While exact timing could shift, the direction is clear enough to change player planning.
For anyone tracking competitive viability, the next months likely hinge on how the new additions—22 Pokémon, 15 items, and the Mega-related additions—perform within existing team structures. If the game’s seasonal cadence remains slow, the competitive scene may also feel more static until the next scheduled content window.
Practical takeaways for players
- Regulation M-B expands the roster by 22 Pokémon, but it does not signal a major overall content surge.
- Expect a modest item pool update: 15 new items and 16 Mega Stones were added with this regulation.
- Mega Evolutions are a key part of the patch, including multiple new forms with specific ability changes.
- Plan for a longer wait: datamining suggests no further new content until September 2026 at the earliest.
| Update component | Amount added in Regulation M-B |
|---|---|
| New Pokémon | 22 |
| New items | 15 |
| Mega Stones | 16 |
| Mega Evolutions listed with abilities | 16 |
Expert View
Regulation M-B looks like a “check-in” update rather than a real course correction. When a competitive game launches with expectations for a robust, approachable battling ecosystem, players notice immediately if roster depth and item coverage lag behind VGC-style staples. The most damaging part isn’t just the small number of additions—it’s the apparent three-plus month runway before the next content drop, which risks leaving the competitive meta to churn on a limited set of tools.

