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For starters, you get to learn all about constructing your deck and how many of what cards you can use, but you can't use any of this helpful info for quite some time. Now while this works well, and the game is a great learning tool, there are a couple of things that I felt really kind of hurt the game overall. After about 4 times of getting a good thrashing, I finally started turning the tables on Yu-Gi and starting beating him with his own strategies. Yu-Gi wound up playing with almost identical cards to what I had, and while I was getting the you know what stomped out of me, it actually worked great to teach me some good strategies to use and how to play one possible card with another to start wearing down my opponent. ![]() While this may seem like a bad thing, it actually turned out to be a big plus. Once you do a tutorial (or skip it if you already know how to play), you can play either a single match or tournament style match play (best two out of three with sideboard changes allowed) against Yu-Gi himself to begin learning the game and trying your own abilities in a full on match up with no relaxing of difficulty or any kind of difficulty settings to make it easier. You'll learn about hit points, attack and defend numbers, all four phases of the turn (draw, battle, secondary, end), spell and trap cards, and even all about constructing your own deck by yourself and what it takes to do that. Basically, Yu-Gi-Oh (Let's have an understanding that from this point forward I'm referring to the video game so I don't have to type all 500 characters of the title, OK?) offers up an in depth tutorial to help learn everything you need to know how to play. Concept: Yu-Gi-Oh for beginners is a great idea.įirst off, I still don't fully understand the reasoning behind the huge title of the game since I can sum it all up in one word. A great hand can prove a win even if strategy fails sometimes. After learning how to play, winning or losing is of course determined 50% by your strategy, but 50% by draw of the cards. ![]() Well, Konami has released Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: YUGI THE DESTINY for PC, and thanks to it, I now can not only play Yu-Gi-Oh, but beat him a time or two as well.įor the first time, I can honestly say 'medium' to a Yu-Gi-Oh game. I have a 9 year old who loves it and has played it for years, and throughout all of the video game versions and attempts he has made to show me how everything works, I still didn't understand it. Throughout the years of playing finely tuned strategies in Warhammer 40k, Magic: The Gathering, and even the Pokemon card game, I really haven't seen too much that gets me stumped anymore. be it tabletop RPG's, card games, board games, or of course video games. I consider myself to be pretty smart when it comes to games. Hint: - Submitted by: Ash If you have both Yugioh or all of the third and if you want that the cards that you win at one yugi to have at the other yugi, copy the 'deck'and the 'yugioh.exe' in the yugioh game that you want to win the cards in all yugioh games.
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