One of my friends who can partially see the hand of the Saka player said that when Enel played out the first Yamato, that he should of Hina and Borso in that he had both in hand as well rather than not cause now he starts to fall behind.
Hey! Awesome match! Had a question, however. How often does the scenario at 7:12 happen? Do people do this intentionally as a cheating mechanism or is it a simple misplay? I've played the One Piece TCG on a sim but not at the local level yet, so I'm unsure how common this actually is. I will say it's going to make me more vigilant when it comes to checking on shields my opponents use to block from now on.
From my personal experience in many local and regional tournaments it is not very common at all. Most people that play this game are honest and do not cheat very often, however that isn’t to say it never happens. I would still do your best to watch your opponents every move closely especially if they are already playing a bit suspiciously. In this specific instance it was most definitely an accident as he had been playing an entire weekend of Sakazuki and sometimes you’re just going to have brain farts like that. Clyde is an amazing player and there is absolutely no reason for him to try to cheat especially live on stream.
You always want to be watching and checking your opponent, not necessarily cuz you suspect cheating but because mistakes happen. And this was almost 100% an honest mistake. Some people are just dishonest and awful, but I don't believe for a second this Sakazuki player was. This was just a very mentally exhausting event and mistakes happen. Hell, I've even made this exact mistake on the sim before! The only difference is, I still lose a life after not counting as much as I should've and then I'm left wondering WTF just happened lol. In IRL, you don't have the programming to protect you, so you have to play attention. But again, doesn't mean it was malicious.
Idk this Saka's deck profile, he either got really unlucky or he just doesn't play the deck to it's fullest, either way, he shouldn't have lost, he should have had at least one ice age in hand...
@@ace_sweethell292 Dude, you're talking about op06 meta that is 2 months away from us, and a deck that benefits from taking life faster against a deck that takes life like there's no tomorrow, I am fully aware of that, but we ain't there yet, so....what are YOU smoking?
the sakazuki player played this MD3 poorly, many questionable decisions and he does not give the correct value to the cards on the opponent's board, he does not feel the urgency to clear the field and remove the big threats and only then can Enel put pressure efficiently on sakazuki
Love how yellow requires close to no skill to be played. You expect an incredible match at the finals and dude went yamato, into yamato, into yamato. Purely luck based no skill color. All you do it play on curve and hope
I honestly don't mind the triggers cause you can KIND of play around them but when you have yamato putting enel essentially back to 3 life every turn its literally feels unwinnable @@ace_sweethell292
Ah yes the best removal in the game with a thunderbolt that takes a life, a gedatsu for 5 don that only ko based on opponent's life and the 9 cost yamato. Amazing removal, almost at the same level of black, blue and red.
Did you mean, second WORST removal in the game??? Yes, they have the best healing (only healing really), and by FAR the best triggers, but they have one of the worst options for removal dude.