Languages: English. Guide Index. Acquiring a Deck. Regarding Playing Format and Ettiquette. Yu-Gi-Oh Tables. Getting Started. Basic Rules and Turn Play. Normal and Special Summons. Other Types of Special Summon. Link Summons - New Mechanic. If you are already familliar with the rules of Yu-Gi-Oh, this section should offer you some tips on how to get the best out of your experience on this particular platform.
By way of introduction, I have been playing Yu-Gi-Oh for over a decade, and have been playing competitively since July I enjoy playing in real life but I am constantly reminded of what a pay-to-play game it is, since keeping at the top of the game requires constant expenditure in order to get the cards you need to be competative.
There are a number of different places that you can do this, both officially sponsored and not so. TTS for me is a great platform for playing Yu-Gi-oh. Its more personal than other formats since you can talk to the other players, and there is a real community of Yu-Gi-Oh players on Table Top Simulator.
If you want to play Yugioh you need a deck. There are a wide number of mods available which contain decks which people have mass uploaded. However I have found the majority of these to be a poor quality and often poor build. Some workshop items such as yugioh tables have structure and starter decks included, but again many of them are low quality images and if you want to really get your game on you want a properly constructed deck.
One enduring thing I find about this game is that each person likes a slightly different build for a given deck archetype. So in other words the best thing to do is to build your own and upload it to TTS. This is pretty simple, but quite time intensive. There are plenty of videos on youtube which explain how to make custom decks for TTS so I won't go on about this too much. However there are some things which I would like to add which I think are relevant specifically for Yu-Gi-Oh deck making.
I am personally a bit of stickler for high quality cards so I like to make them myself from scratch. This is admittedly a very time consuming process and each deck might take me a few hours to go from start to uploading it to TTS, although I have gotten quite efficient at the process. I start with a really great software tool called TCG Editor which you can download here [www. I used to use Yugiohcardmaker.
Using TCG editor and copying effect and name text accross from the wiki to save time, downloading and if necessary cropping monster portaits, I create a batch of cards and they're always of the highest quality. I resize the cards to width and height before saving. Loading up TTS I go on single player and use the custom deck tool to upload the images. Then I pull out each card and name them individually most people don't but I like to go to every effort plus don't worry about the opponent knowing what they are when face down - it doesn't reveal the name when the card is face down.
Here is why we only added one instance of each card on TTS Deck Editor, since we can name one card and copy and paste it for how many copies we need for the deck. Finally place your main, extra and side deck if you have one into a deck box and save to chest and you're good to load it into the game. For a detailed tutorial on how to build a custom deck:. Yu-Gi-Oh has a few formats. This list contains all the cards which are either banned from use in the game, semi limited which means only 2 copies are allowed per deck, and limited which is 1.
All cards unlisted here may exist in a deck with up to 3 copies. In the traditional format no cards are forbidden, only limited or semi limited. If you want to practice the game at the proper up to date standard then use the advanced format.
There's no reason why you can't play from previous ban lists or without a ban list at all. The important thing is that both you and your opponent agree on the format that you will be dueling under, for the sake of fairness and fun. Additionally, in the interest of fairness, try to match the quality of your deck to your opponent - at the end of the day, we all just want to have a fun duel. In this section I wll introduce the play mat used in yugioh matches.
I will also link at the end some workshop items which provide yugioh tables to play on. The Play Area In yugioh the surface you play on has spaces for you main deck and extra deck and all the zones which you need in the game. Outside of the playing area you can keep things like dice, tokens, a side deck and the banished, or removed from play zone. Although the banish zone is not part of the playing area, since the cards are considered to have been removed from play, most yugiohtables on TTS have a dedicated area for banished cards for convenience.
The image above is an example of the table I normally use in TTS. I have identified the various features used in the game. Please see these links to workshop items with tables.
Yu-Gi-Oh is played in Games. Players can play single games or matches, where a match usually is a best of three games. To begin the players must use a system to decide who gets to choose the play order.
This is normally decided by rolling 2 D6 dice, but a coin flip can suffice. The winner of this may choose to play either first or second. To begin the main decks are shuffled and each player must draw 5 cards. Each player takes it in turns to play cards and effects. The first person to play does not draw 1 card in their draw phase and cannot enter their battle phase. Share this: Tweet. Tags: Breakers of Shadow , Counter Traps. Breakers of Shadow is available now! Breakers of Shadow: Blown Away.
Welcome to the Yu-Gi-Oh! Every face down monster is flipped face-up, and you inflict burn damage to your opponent for every effect monster on the field — so this can be up to a ridiculous LP hit!
This list features cards that can inflict incredible burn damage — but would you like to see a card that can do that every turn? There are some cards in Yu-Gi-Oh that you have to read twice, because at face value they seem completely useless. Bear in mind, some cards give your opponent life points. And some cards give you an advantage when you have lower life points than your opponent. If you can build a deck around this effect, Life Equalizer can inflict or more burn damage in one go — and although it can be awkward to setup, this card cannot be underestimated.
Mirror Force is an infamous Trap that punishes your opponent for attacking, without respecting your back row. Over time, a handful of Mirror Force cards have come into the game. When your opponent declares an attack, Blazing Mirror Force destroys every attack position monster your opponent controls — which is great by itself.
Both players take damage equal to half the combined ATK of every destroyed monster, which will usually add up into the thousands! Of course, you need to survive the blast too. But your opponent could lose all their monsters and the duel.
Even some of the most competitive decks rely on their back row to setup and bring out their best monsters. Curse Of Darkness is a Continuous Trap that burns either player for damage whenever they activate a spell card. A fairly straightforward method to having this trigger without having to worry about timing too much is to build a deck that triggers around Soul Absorption.
Once you get a card down like Macro Cosmos, any time you play a spell that eliminates something, or remove any cards from play, or trigger a NecroFace, you'll get a Chain trigger. And, if you have multiple Soul Absorptions in play, you get multiple chain triggers. As always, substitutions are necessary for many due to the painfully random acquisition of cards from packs, but a general frame: Your "These belong in every deck" cards: aka the truly unfair cards 3 x Pot of Greed 3 x Harpie's Feather Duster 3 x Raigeki 3 x Graceful Charity The Engine: 3 x Soul Absorption 3 x Necroface 3 x Gold Sarcophagus Grab a Necroface and trigger it then play it to replenish the engine 3 x Macro Cosmos 2 x Banisher Of The Light 3 x Gren Maju Da Eiza Not really part of the engine, but hulk smash, can easily get above 10k Golden Homunculus is a fair substitute although he requires a sacrifice to get in play.
Too many saturates the plan. Plus, Gren Maju is just smashy face fun.
0コメント