Yugi is the type of duelist who attacks through defense. It was especially clear with his duel against Kaiba when he was kicking him with Magician Girls. He uses opponent's monsters power and effects against them even more than Atem did
halfspider98 (pokemon trainer y gamer) kinda, but that type of infinite loop combo gets nerfed really fast by banning some cards (thats what happened to firewall dragon, banned) from the tournaments
There was a scene where we got a flashback seeing Diva and his sister with there abusive guardian before Shadi saves them. The music in the background, the piano is so beautiful, please is anyone knows what I'm taking about and knows the music piece, please tell me
I really think Kazuki Takahashi might have some kind of bias with Zexal, all because of specific elements used in this movie and from the Zexal anime: One hint is Neo Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon, and other Zexal monsters such as Neo Galaxy Eyes Photon/Tachyon Dragon. Not to mention both Neo Galaxy Eyes & Neo Blue Eyes can attack multiple times There’s also Kaiba’s duel disk, specifically the headset. Definitely reminds me of the Duel Gazers in Zexal But another thing I find interesting was how the Cubic monsters worked. In real life, you send the Vijam’s to the Graveyard and summon the higher level Cubic monsters. Here, however, you stack your Cubic monster on top of the Vijam’s. Not unlike how Xyz Monsters work, with the exception that you don’t need to send any Vijam’s to the Graveyard to activate effects; Vijam’s are like Xyz materials except you use them to continually discard and summon more Cubic monsters I don’t know if there’s more Zexal similarities, but I just wanted to point it out. This all might be a reach, but I thought it was interesting
@@Signerdragon123 starting with Zexal going forward, Studio Gallop changed the back of the cards to look like the real-life cards and I believe this was also a Takahashi suggestion to sell more cards.
So basically, Dark Side of Dimensions (the manga sequel) is kinda like a prelude to Zexal while GX (the anime sequel) was a prelude to 5D's, thereby confirming 2 different timelines for the Yu-Gi-Oh franchise instead of it all being continuous. I came to that conclusion a while back.
@@World7589 Yugi does not play around, when he duels it is like a statement. He is a cold blooded assassin often times nice people are the ones with the toughest skin.
Hey just wondering, im new to cubics and im actually getting the fusion out really early, i just wanted to know if its effect immunity applies to traps, as dark lord is monsters, trinity is “cannot be targeted or destroyed by card effects” so does that apply to all types of cards?
@@showmenasta9935 yes all types except the ones that return him to the deck or that banishes him they are not counted as destruction effects but bringing trinity early means GG anyway
Bueno la violacion que le hizo Yugi a Aigami ( no me gusta su verdadero nombre ) quedó impecable ( aunque haya quedado con 150 puntos de vida xD ) y maravillosa a la vez algo digno de Yugi
Yugi was always stronger but, he was a nice guy. Yugi saw humanity in his opponents which is why he appeared timid and apprehensive when he duels. People who are often the nicest tend to come with the most surprises and are cold blooded assassins once they are fully in god mode. Atem was no doubt great but he relied on a lot of Yugi's defense strategies to win, it was Yugi directing most of the duels but Atem had the powers, determination and will to win. Atem relied a lot on magic but Yugi had the brains, savant ability and knew the game inside out. Yugi was a walking encyclopedia of knowing the game.
when he activates the three traps i found out he couldnt do it like he did. because the last trap card he activates has the effect that he needs to tribute a monster from his graveyard in order to use its effect and the first two have in their effect that it can only be used ONCE PER BATTLE. and thats why he couldnt have used that effect over and over
Movie/anime effect, they're usually different from how they would actually work in real life. Case in point, Cubics don't work in real life like they do here. If they did, they'd play very differently from how they are now. Admittedly, a lot of the cards translated over well when coming to real life, like a lot of the blue-eyes cards, but not all of them, and some of them, like one of the the cubic traps aigami uses in the final duel doesn't even have a real world counterpart, not any that I know of anyway. Another example is Magicians' defense, used later in yugi and kaiba's duel, in real life, it's a continuous trap, with an extra effect added on if it leaves the field, in the movie, after it's effect resolves, we don't see it again. In fact, in the version of the movie I saw, which was in Japanese, the trap is a normal trap, without the continuous trap symbol. I think in the english versions, they put the real world version in, rather than the original.
Some cards in the anime aren't the same as in real life, such as Firewall Dragon (which gets nerfed by reducing times activating its effect to "once per turn" instead of infinitely like in VRAINS). Yugi's triple trap here doesn't require banishing monsters to activate too.
Yugi had exactly enough fuel to win on Turn 4. The turn went like this: Diva brings out Indiora Doom Volt (ATK: 0 -> 2400) and burns Yugi for 800 (950 -> 150). This summon also causes Lord Gaia to gain 700 ATK (2300 -> 3000) by its own effect. However, Diva follows up with Cubic Wave (Indiora ATK: 2400 -> 4800; Lord Gaia ATK: 3000 -> 1500). Diva attacks, but on attack declaration, Yugi flips Dimension Sphinx, causing Diva to take damage equal to the difference in both battling monsters' ATK, which is 3300 (7900 -> 4600). Still in the Battle Step, Yugi also flips Dimension Guardian to prevent Lord Gaia from being destroyed by battle. And according to Dimension Duel rules, Yugi doesn't take battle damage in this battle since his monster was not destroyed. At the end of the Damage Step, Yugi completes the loop with Dimension Mirage, forcing Indiora to attack again by banishing 1 monster from Yugi's GY. The aforementioned loop works like this: Sphinx burns Diva for 3300 when Indiora Doom Volt attacks Lord Gaia, then Guardian keeps Lord Gaia from being destroyed, causing Mirage to activate. Now at the cost of banishing a monster from his GY, Yugi can force Indiora to attack again, restarting the loop. This loop iterates twice more, burning Diva for a further 6600 damage (4600 -> 0). Notice, Yugi didn't have to banish a monster from his GY until Mirage activated, thus proving he had exactly enough to win.