Yugioh virus




















This meant Return from the Different Dimension was no longer a last-ditch effort, and it could be used in a variety of ways to create an unfair advantage. Ring of Destruction was another card that, like Crush Card Virus, needed to be re-written to balance it. For its original effect, Ring of Destruction was must less situational and restrictive and allowed for many aggressive tactics to obtain quick victories.

It could also serve as a failsafe against losing a game by forcing a tie. The new version of the card makes the effect a more balanced and situational tool.

With the player only being allowed to activate it the opponent's turn, and by only being allowed to destroy monsters the opponent controls, Ring of Destruction now serves as a surprise tool to interrupt an opponent's strategy while also inflicting some effect damage. It is limited to one copy per deck now, but Imperial Order was banned for an extended period of time. It is one card that can, for the meager cost of life points per turn, render a large portion of an opponent's deck useless.

Spell cards are essential for almost every deck, so the chance to leave one card on the field to block the activation of all Spell cards is a valuable asset. The main reason Imperial Order is no longer banned is that it is simply outdated.

Compared to when this card first released, there are now many methods and options for destroying troublesome cards. It is still strong enough to make it necessary to restrict it, but many other cards would need to be banned before Imperial Order ever returned to the forbidden list. Royal Oppression is a card that needed to be banned for the newest cards and strategies in Yu-gi-oh! It is a continuous Trap Card with a small cost of activation that allows both players to cripple each other's ability to special summon monsters.

This card was a staple in many control-oriented and anti-meta decks. But as the game advanced with cards and decks focused entirely on special summoning swarms of monsters, there was little chance that this card would be allowed to continue interfering with the new meta standards. Time Seal, though not being a complex or actively destructive card, was far too powerful to remain in competitive play.

Its effect can be devastating for an opponent, but what makes it truly oppressive is its versatility. It can be used at any time for no cost, which allows the card to easily integrate into many strong strategies. Many decks can make good use of Time Seal: It can be used with other cards to empty an opponent's hand, stall until a game-winning effect such as Exodia's is completed, restrict access to the resources needed to overcome a full field of monsters, and much more.

Archetypes Support. Card Image. Card Number. Card Passcode. Card Type. Chinese Name. Class 1. Class 2. Class 4. Croatian Name. DOR Deck Cost. DOR number. English Name. French Name. Fusion Material. German Name. Greek Name. Italian Name. Japanese Kana Name.

Japanese Name. Life Points. NTR Status. OCG Status. Phonetic Name. Portuguese Name. Ruby Text. SDD Status. Spanish Name. Synchro Material. TSC Deck Cost. TSC Status. TSC number. Translated Name. Turkish Name. Dragon fetching over that amount in January , so rest assured the extremely rare Yu-Gi-Oh! After seeing the rapid rise of the Yu-Gi-Oh! The SJCs were a series of North American tournaments held between and with prize cards being distributed to worthy winners across the region.

A total of seven different card types were handed out at 75 different tournaments. As only two or three cards were handed out at most tournaments, these particular Yu-Gi-Oh! We can only imagine what higher grades of this highly valuable Yu-Gi-Oh!

Cyber-Stein was the first ever SJC prize card, handed out at the first batch of championships between December and July There were nine tournaments in total in this batch, the first being at GenCon SoCal held at Anaheim, California on December 4th , a short-lived regional version of the huge North American tabletop game convention Gen Con.

There were 18 copies released in total, with only two being given away per tournament; however an extra two copies were given out at the Costa Mesa SJC, as it was the 50th edition of the SJCs. One was embedded in a material called lucite presumably for display and approximately copies were released at a February promotional event called Upper Deck Day. This means that there are only around copies of this Cyber-Stein ever to be made, making it one of the rarest Yu-Gi-Oh! Another copy sold the following month for a similar amount , indicating that the rare Yu-Gi-Oh!

Crush Card Virus was the fourth SJC prize card handed out, with only 40 copies distributed at the ten championships between January and July A minimum of three were also accidentally released at a sneak preview event, so there are only around 46 copies of this particular form of Crush Card Virus. The valuable Yu-Gi-Oh! By looking through their hand, you also get the added bonus of planning for what their future strategy may be. Listings for this extremely rare Yu-Gi-Oh!

Boasting an impressive attack and defence points, the level 7 Spellcaster was one of the Yu-Gi-Oh! This overpowers a Dark Magician Arkana has on the field he actually has three copies in his deck and proves to be the key to Yugi winning the duel.

Accompanying the international release was a set of six promotional cards - of which Dark Magician is one - with them all being very rare and very valuable Yu-Gi-Oh!

The six cards were all released as Prismatic Secret Rares, a unique rarity typically reserved for promo cards. Pricey indeed. The LOB card art is not the one shown in the anime. Cards sold in recent years. In , a year-old Yu-Gi-Oh!



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