The allowed Beys for a Beyblade tournament depend on the specific rule set being used, because events often restrict by generation, brand, and even individual part lists. In current competitive Beyblade X events, one recent tournament format allowed only Beyblade X series Beys, original Takara Tomy or Hasbro products, and banned fakes or older generations like Plastic, Metal, and Burst.

What usually matters

  • Series: some tournaments allow only Beyblade X, while others may allow older generations too.
  • Brand/source: many events require official Takara Tomy or Hasbro releases only, with no replicas or third-party parts.
  • Local legality: some tournaments use a region-specific release list, so what is allowed can vary by country or event.

Current practical answer

If you mean a standard modern Beyblade X tournament , the safest assumption is:

  • Use only official Beyblade X Beys.
  • Avoid mixed-generation parts.
  • Check whether the event bans certain releases, parts, or custom combos.

Example

A special Beyblade X event in India required 3 unique Beyblade X combos , all parts unique across the deck, and only anime-appearing legal combos for that format.

Best next step

The exact allowed list changes by organizer, so the real answer is the tournament’s rule sheet, not a universal list.

Would you like a simple list of currently common legal Beyblade X products for competitive play?