Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Yu-Gi-Oh! Online)

Yu-Gi-Oh!
Back of an English-language Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game card
PublishersJapan:
Konami
(1999−present)
US:
Upper Deck
(2002−08)
Konami
(2008−present)
Publication4 February 1999; 25 years ago (1999-02-04)
GenresCollectible card game
Players2 (1 vs. 1)[1]
Age range12 and up (OCG)
6 and up (TCG)

The Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game[a] is a collectible card game developed and published by Konami. It is based on the fictional game of Duel Monsters (also known as Magic & Wizards in the manga) created by manga artist Kazuki Takahashi, which appears in portions of the manga franchise Yu-Gi-Oh! and is the central plot device throughout its various anime adaptations and spinoff series.[2]

The trading card game was launched by Konami in 1999 in Japan and March 2002 in North America.[3] It was named the top selling trading card game in the world by Guinness World Records on July 7, 2009, having sold over 22 billion cards worldwide.[4] As of March 31, 2011, Konami Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd. Japan sold 25.2 billion cards globally since 1999.[5] As of January 2021, the game is estimated to have sold about 35 billion cards worldwide.[6][7] Yu-Gi-Oh! Speed Duel, a faster and simplified version of the game, was launched worldwide in January 2019. Another faster-paced variation, Yu-Gi-Oh! Rush Duel, launched in Japan in April 2020.

Gameplay[edit]

In the trading card game, players draw cards from their respective decks and take turns playing cards onto "the field". Each player uses a deck containing forty to sixty cards, and an optional "extra deck" of up to fifteen cards. There is also an optional fifteen-card side deck, which allows players to swap cards from their main deck and/or extra deck between games. Players are restricted to three of each card per deck and must follow the Forbidden/Limited card list, which restricts selected cards by Konami to be limited to two, one, or zero. Each player starts with 8,000 "life points" (LP) (Though the players can decide to start with more or less), with the main aim of the game to use monster attacks and spells to reduce the opponent's life points. The game ends upon reaching one of the following conditions:[8]

  • A player loses if their life points reaches zero. If both players reach zero life points at the same time, the game ends in a draw.
  • A player loses if they are required to draw a card, but has no more cards to draw in the main deck.
  • Certain cards have special conditions which trigger an automatic win or loss when its conditions are met (e.g. having all five cards of Exodia the Forbidden One in the hand, playing all five Spells of the Destiny Board on the field, or having Ghostrick Angel of Mischief on the field with ten XYZ materials).
  • A player can forfeit at any time.

Zones[edit]

Cards are laid out in the following manner:

  • Main deck: The player's main deck is placed here face-down, and can consist of 40 to 60 cards. Normal, Effect, Ritual, and Pendulum monsters can be stored here. Spell and trap cards are also stored here.
  • Extra deck: The player's extra deck is placed here face-down, if they have one, and may have 15 cards consisting of Fusion, Synchro, Xyz, and Link monster cards. Pendulum monsters are placed face-up here when they would otherwise be sent from the field to the Graveyard.
  • Graveyard (GY): A zone where cards are sent when they are discarded or destroyed, such as used spell/trap cards or monsters that have been tributed or destroyed in battle.
  • Main monster zones: A field of five spaces where monster cards are placed when successfully Summoned. Prior to the addition of Link monsters, any kind of monster could be placed there at any time. After Link monsters were introduced, monsters from the extra deck could only be Special Summoned from the extra deck to the extra monster zone, or a main monster zone a Link monster points to, up until the rule change for April 2020 onward, where only Link monsters and Pendulum monsters from the extra deck follow this restriction.
  • Extra monster zones: Introduced with Link monsters, this is a zone where monsters from the extra deck can be Summoned. An extra monster zone is not a part of either player's field until they Summon a monster to the extra monster zone.
  • Spell/trap zones: Five spaces in which either spell or trap cards can be placed. The leftmost and rightmost spell/trap zones can optionally be treated as "Pendulum zones" by placing Pendulum monsters there, allowing players to use Pendulum effects and perform Pendulum Summons.
    • The pendulum zones originally were at the left and right sides of the main monster and spell/trap zones when introduced with the Arc-V era, but were integrated into the leftmost and rightmost spell/trap zones during the VRAINS era.
  • Field zone: A zone where field spell cards are placed.
  • Cards that are "banished" by card effects are placed outside of the game in a pile.

Phases[edit]

Each player's turn contains six phases that take place in the following order:

  • Draw phase: The turn player draws one card from their deck.[9]
  • Standby phase: No specific action occurs, but it exists for card effects and maintenance costs that activate or resolve during this specific phase.[9]
  • Main phase 1: The turn player may Normal Summon or Set a monster, activate cards and effects that they control, change the battle position of a monster (provided it was not summoned this turn), and Set Spells or Traps face-down.[9]
  • Battle phase: The turn player may choose to attack their opponent using any monsters on their field in Attack Position. Depending on the position of opposing monster, the attacking monster's ATK points are taken into account against the opposing monster's ATK or DEF points. If both monsters are in Attack Position, the monster with fewer ATK points is destroyed and its owner takes life point damage equal the difference between both monster's ATK points (if both monsters have equal ATK points, they are both destroyed and no damage is taken, unless both of their ATK points are 0, in which case neither is destroyed). If the opposing monster is in Defense Position and has fewer DEF points than the attacking monster's ATK points, it is destroyed and the owner takes no damage. However, if its DEF point is higher, the attacker takes life point damage equal to the difference between the two values. If the defending player has no monsters defending them, a Direct Attack can be performed, with the defending player receiving life point damage equal to the attacking monster's ATK points. The turn player can choose to not enter the battle phase and instead go to the end phase.[9]
  • Main phase 2: The player may do all the same actions that are available during main phase 1, though they cannot repeat certain actions already taken in main phase 1 (such as Normal Summoning) or change the battle position of a monster that has already been summoned, attacked, or had their battle position changed during the same turn.[9]
  • End phase: The player declares the end of their turn. Certain card effects and maintenance costs may activate or resolve during this specific phase.[9]

At the start of a game, the starting player cannot enter the draw or battle phases during their first turn.[9]

Card types[edit]

Gameplay revolves around three types of cards: monster, spell, and trap cards. monster cards are monsters used to attack and defend against the opposing player, mainly for the purpose of damaging an opponent's life points. Spells, which can either be played from the hand or set for later use, provide various effects such as altering a monster's strength, drawing additional cards, or removing an opponent's cards from the field. Traps are cards that are set on the field in advance and activated in later turns when certain conditions are met, such as when an opponent targets a player's monster.

With some exceptions, a typical monster card possesses ATK and DEF points that determine its attack and defense power in battles, a level represented by stars, with more powerful monsters typically being of higher levels, an attribute that certain effects may react to, and a description listing the monster's types and any effects or summoning conditions they may have. Monsters are summoned to the field through three main categories of summoning: Normal, Tribute, and Special. Once during a player's main phase, they can choose to normal summon a level 4 or lower normal or effect monster from their hand, in face-up attack position or face-down defense position, or tribute summon a level 5 or higher monster by tributing one or more monsters already on the field. Special summons are performed by utilising card effects or fulfilling the conditions of other summoning methods, such as those used to summon cards from the extra deck, and may be performed as many times as desired if the conditions are met.

The game currently features the following types of monster.

  • Normal (yellow): A monster with no effects of its own, instead simply having a description of the monster. Stored in the main deck and can be normal, tribute, or special summoned.
  • Effect (orange): A monster that possesses at least one effect. Can be summoned in the same manner as normal monsters.
  • Ritual (blue): Stored in the main deck, these monsters can typically only be special summoned by using a ritual spell card and tributing required monsters listed in its instructions.
  • Fusion (purple): Stored in the extra deck, these monsters are summoned by utilising cards with a "fusion" effect, such as polymerization, and tributing monsters listed in the monster's description.
  • Synchro (white): Stored in the extra deck, these monsters are summoned by tributing from the field a tuner-type monster and one or more non-tuner-type monsters whose levels equal the level of the synchro monster being summoned.
  • Xyz (black): Stored in the extra deck, these monsters possess ranks as opposed to levels, and require two or more monsters whose level is the same as the xyz monster's rank. These monsters become the xyz monster's "overlay units", which can then be sent to the GY to activate effects.
  • Pendulum (green gradient): Variations of other monster types which, if sent from the field to the GY, are placed face up in the extra deck instead. Pendulum monsters can be placed in pendulum zones in the leftmost and rightmost spell/trap zones, where they can utilise pendulum effects. When both pendulum zones contain pendulum monsters with differently valued "pendulum scales", players can perform a pendulum summon during the main phase to summon multiple monsters from the hand and face-up pendulum monsters from the extra deck whose levels lie between the two pendulum scale values.
  • Link (dark blue): Stored in the extra deck, link monsters have link values instead of levels and can only be played in attack position. These are summoned by tributing one or more monsters on the field that meets the summon requirements, with link monsters able to be used as multiple tributes depending on its link value. Link monsters feature arrows which, when pointed towards other zones on the field, allows additional link monsters to be summoned outside of the extra monster zone. Link monsters may also possess effects that can be used when another card is a linked zone.
  • Token (grey): A low-level monster that can only be summoned through card effects. These cards do not exist outside of the field and are removed from play upon leaving. While official token monster cards do exist, players can use other objects such as coins to represent token monsters.

Spell cards, green, are magical spells with a variety of effects, such as reviving destroyed monsters. They can be played from the hand during a player's turn or placed faced down for activation on a later turn. There are six types of Spell Card:

  • Normal: A spell that can only be activated during the player's main phase.
  • Quick Play: A spell that can be activated from the hand at any time during the player's turn, or can be set and activated during an opponent's turn. However, they cannot be activated the turn they are set.
  • Continuous: A spell with a continuous effect that remains until conditions are met or it is destroyed.
  • Equip: A spell that is equipped to a monster, providing it with support effects. It is removed if the monsters leaves the field or is set face-down, or the card is destroyed.
  • Field: A spell that is placed in a player's field spell zone, which affects the entire field. Each player can only have one field spell in play at a time.
  • Ritual: A spell that is required to summon a ritual monster.

Trap cards, dark pink, have to be set on a player's field face-down and can only be activated after the turn they were set has passed, including the opponent's turn. (Quick play spells, when set, have the same rule.) They are generally used to stop or counter the opponent's moves, and come in three varieties.

  • Normal: A standard trap that is discarded once its effect resolves.
  • Continuous: A trap that remains on the field until destroyed or its conditions are met.
  • Counter: A trap that is activated in response to the activation of other cards.[9]

Rules[edit]

Chains[edit]

A chain is a stack of card effects activated one after the other. It exists for the management of multiple card effects.[9]

A chain is created when the effects of more than one card are activated at the same time, or when a player activates an effect after a card is played, but before the card impacts the game.

If the effect of a card is activated, the opponent always has the possibility to reply with an effect of their own cards, thus creating a chain.

  • If your opponent replied with an effect, you can choose to reply back and add another effect to the chain.
  • If your opponent chooses not to reply, you can add a second effect and create a chain off of the activation of your own card.

Each player can then continue to add effects to the chain. The chain ends when the players wish to not play any more cards. Should this happen, the chain is resolved: the resolution is performed in reverse order of play, starting with the effect of the most recently played card.[9]

It is advised to not resolve card effects before ensuring that a chain had not been created.

Example[edit]

You play Raigeki (a normal spell destroying all of the opponent's monsters). As a reply to your Raigeki, your opponent plays Destruction Jammer (a counter trap that negates the destruction of a monster by discarding a card) to negate the effects of Raigeki, thus placing Destruction Jammer in chain block 1. You then play Solemn Judgement (a counter trap that negates a monster summon and/or the activation of a spell or trap, but at the cost of half of the player's LP) as chain block 2 to negate Destruction Jammer's effect. Your opponent decides not to reply to Solemn Judgement, thus the chain is resolved starting with the highest chain block, which achieves this result:

  1. Solemn Judgement is activated: you pay half of your LP, and the effect of destruction jammer is negated.
  2. Destruction Jammer should have been resolved and negate the effect of Raigeki, but solemn Judgement prevents the effect from resolving.
  3. Raigeki is then activated, and all of the opponent's monsters are destroyed.

A chain can only be created by replying with the activation of a card effect. Summoning or tributing a monster, changing position or paying a cost do not represent valid effects. Thus, it is not possible to reply to a chain with these effects.[9]

Formats[edit]

Tournaments are often hosted either by players or by card shops. In addition, Konami, Upper Deck (now no longer part of Yu-Gi-Oh!'s organized play), and Shonen Jump have all organized numerous tournament systems in their respective areas. These tournaments attract hundreds of players to compete for prizes such as rare promotional cards.

There are two styles of tournament play called "formats"; each format has its own rules and some restrictions on what cards are allowed to be used during events.

The advanced format is used in all sanctioned tournaments (with the exception of certain Pegasus League formats). This format follows all the normal rules of the game, but also places a complete ban on certain cards that are deemed too powerful or are unsuitable for tournament play. These cards are on a special list called the forbidden, or banned list. There are also certain cards that are limited or semi-limited to only being allowed 1 or 2 of those cards in a deck and side deck combined, respectively. This list is updated several times annually and is followed in all tournaments that use this format.[10]

Traditional format, created in October 2004, is a format where all cards in the advanced format's forbidden list are instead allowed at 1 copy per deck, while all other rules are identical. This format is rarely used in competitive play.[11]

The game formerly incorporated worldwide rankings, including a rating system called "COSSY" (Konami card game official tournament support system). COSSY was retired on March 23, 2017.[12]

With the introduction of the Battle Pack: Epic Dawn, Konami has announced the introduction of drafting tournaments. This continued with a second set for sealed play: Battle Pack: War Of The Giants in 2013. The third and final Battle Pack, Battle Pack 3: monster League, was released on July 25, 2014.

Product information[edit]

Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Cards are available in Starter decks, Structure decks, booster packs, collectible tins, and occasionally as promotional cards.

Booster packs[edit]

As in all other trading card games, booster packs are the primary avenue of card distribution. In Konami's distribution areas, five or nine random cards are found in each booster pack depending on the set and each set contains around one hundred different cards. However, in Upper Deck's areas, early booster packs contained a random assortment of nine cards (rarity and value varies), with the whole set ranging around one hundred and thirty cards. To catch up with the Japanese meta game, two or more original sets were combined into one. Now, more recent Upper Deck sets have simply duplicated the original set. Some booster sets are reprinted/reissued (e.g. Dark Beginnings Volume 1 and 2). This type of set usually contains a larger number of cards (around 200 to 250), and they contain twelve cards along with one tip card rather than the normal five or nine. Since the release of Tactical Evolution in 2007, all booster packs that have a Holographic/Ghost Rare card, will also contain a rare. Current sets have 100 different cards per set. There are also special booster packs that are given to those who attend a tournament. These sets change each time there is a different tournament and have fewer cards than a typical booster pack. There are eight Tournament Packs, eight Champion Packs, and 10 Turbo Packs.

Duelist packs[edit]

Duelist packs are similar to booster packs, albeit are focused around the types of cards used by characters in the various anime series. Cards in each pack are reduced from nine to five.

Promotional cards[edit]

Some cards in the TCG have been released by other means, such as inclusion in video games, movies, and Shonen Jump Magazine issues. These cards often are exclusive and have a special type of rarity or are never-before-seen to the public. Occasionally, cards like Elemental Hero Stratos and Chimeratech Fortress Dragon have been re-released as revisions.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Speed Duel[edit]

Yu-Gi-Oh! Speed Duel is a specialised version of the Yu-Gi-Oh! trading card game which launched worldwide in January 2019. Being based on the ruleset of Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Links, it features four basic card types: monster cards, spell cards, trap cards and an exclusive type of card called skill cards.[13]

Speed Duel games are known for its rapid duels, averaging on 10 minutes.

When compared to the advanced format:

  • The playing field has only three main monster zones and three spell/trap zones, as opposed to five.
  • Extra monster zones are not present.
  • Synchro, xyz, pendulum, and link monsters do not exist in Speed Duel.
  • There is no main phase 2, and the battle phase is immediately followed by the end phase.
  • The main deck must have between 20 and 30 cards, as opposed to between 40 and 60.
  • Players begin with 4000 life points, as opposed to 8000.
  • Players begin the game by drawing four cards each, as opposed to five.
  • Each player can only have one skill card.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Rush Duel[edit]

Yu-Gi-Oh! Rush Duel (遊戯王ラッシュデュエル, Yū-Gi-Ō Rasshu Dueru) is a variation of the Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game which launched in Japan in April 2020 alongside the release of the Yu-Gi-Oh! Sevens anime series.[14] This variation of the game, acting as a successor to the Speed Duel format, uses a different set of cards from the main OCG/TCG entirely, though certain cards appear in Rush Duel. Rush Duel features reworked rules similar to those introduced in Speed Duels and expanded upon with a more streamlined version of the original to make the game faster.[15]

  • The playing field now has only three monster zones and three spell/trap zones, and extra monster zones and pendulum zones are not featured.
  • The phase order for each turn is draw, main, battle, and end. Unlike the main game, there is no standby phase or main phase 2.
  • Players begin the game with four cards each, with the starting player able to draw on their first turn. During the draw phase of each player's turn, they must keep drawing until they have five cards in their hand. If the player already has five or more cards in their hand, they may only draw one card. There is no maximum limit to the number of cards players can have in their hand. However, if a player is unable to draw the required amount of cards when asked to (e.g. if the player's hand is empty and there are four or less cards remaining in their deck at the start of their draw phase), they will automatically lose the game.
  • Players can normal summon and tribute summon as many times as possible during a single turn.
  • Certain cards, such as Blue-Eyes White Dragon, are marked with a "legend" icon. Each player may only have one legend card in their deck.
  • In addition to normal and effect monsters, there are currently two other monster card types: maximum and fusion. Maximum monsters are sets of three corresponding monster cards that, when assembled in the hand, can be summoned to the field in "maximum mode", where they are treated as a single powerful monster with its attack power represented by the maximum ATK value on the central card.[16] Fusion monsters, similar to the main game's fusion monsters, are stored in the extra deck and summoned using cards with a fusion effect and sending the fusion material monsters from the field to the graveyard. Some fusion monsters possess types not found among main deck monsters based on a fusion of their fusion materials' types: for example a cyborg type fusion monster is created by fusing a machine type monster with a monster that has a different type. Some fusion monsters possess "selection effects", allowing players to activate one of multiple effects during their turn if the conditions are met.[17]

Comparison to other media[edit]

In its original incarnation in Kazuki Takahashi's Yu-Gi-Oh! manga series, Duel Monsters, originally known as Magic & Wizards, had a rather basic structure, not featuring many of the restricting rules introduced later on and often featuring peculiar exceptions to the rulings in the interest of providing a more engrossing story. Beginning with the Battle City arc of the manga and Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters anime series, more structured rules such as tribute requirements were introduced to the story, with the series falling more in line with the rules of the real life card-game by the time its spin-off series began. From the Duel Monsters anime onwards, characters use cards which resemble their real life counterparts, though some monsters or effects differ between that of the real life trading card game and the manga and anime's Duel Monsters, with some cards created exclusively for those mediums. Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's featured an anime-original card type known as Dark Synchro, which involved using "Dark Tuners" to summon Dark Synchro monsters with negative levels. Dark Synchro cards were featured in the PlayStation Portable video game, Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Tag Force 4, while Dark Synchro monsters featured in the anime were released as standard Synchro monsters in the real-life game. Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V features Action Cards, spell and trap cards that are picked up in the series' unique Action Duels, which are not possible to perform in the real life game. In the film Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Dark Side of Dimensions, an exclusive form of summoning known as Dimension Summoning is featured. This method allows players to freely summon a monster by deciding how many ATK or DEF points it has, but they receive damage equal to that amount when the monster is destroyed.[18] The Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS anime series features Speed Duels which use a smaller number of monster and Spell & Trap zones and remove main phase 2 for faster duels. In the anime, characters can activate unique Skills depending on the situation (for example, the protagonist Yusaku can draw a random monster when his life points are below 1000) once per duel. A similar ruleset is featured in the Duel Terminal arcade machine series and the Duel Links mobile game.

With the exception of the films Pyramid of Light and The Dark Side of Dimensions, which base the card's appearance on the English version of the real-life card game, all Western releases of the Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters anime and its subsequent spin-off series, produced by 4Kids Entertainment and later Konami Cross Media NY, edit the appearance of cards to differentiate them from their real-life counterparts in accordance with U.S. Federal Communications Commission regulations in concerning program-length commercials, as well as to make the show more marketable across non-English speaking countries.[19] These cards are edited to only display their background, illustration, level/rank, and ATK/DEF points.

Konami-Upper Deck lawsuit[edit]

From March 2002[20] to December 2008, Konami's trading cards were distributed in territories outside of Asia by The Upper Deck Company. In December 2008, Konami filed a lawsuit against Upper Deck alleging that it had distributed inauthentic Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG cards made without Konami's authorization.[21] Upper Deck also sued Konami alleging breach of contract and slander. A few months later, a federal court in Los Angeles issued an injunction preventing Upper Deck from acting as the authorized distributor and requiring it to remove the Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG from Upper Deck's website.[22] In December 2009, the court decided that Upper Deck was liable for counterfeiting Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG cards, and it dismissed Upper Deck's countersuit against Konami.[23][24][25] Konami is now the manufacturer and distributor of the Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG. It runs regional and national tournaments and continues to release new Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG card products.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Yu-Gi-Oh! Official Card Game (遊☆戯☆王オフィシャルカードゲーム, Yū-Gi-Ō Ofisharu Kādo Gēmu) in Asia.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Yu-Gi-Oh! TRADING CARD GAME". yugioh-card.com. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  2. ^ Kaufeld, John; Smith, Jeremy (2006). Trading Card Games For Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 123–139. ISBN 0470044071.
  3. ^ Miller, John Jackson (2003), Scrye Collectible Card Game Checklist & Price Guide, Second Edition, pp. 667–671.
  4. ^ "Yu-Gi-Oh! Card Sales Set New World Record". Konami.jp. August 7, 2009. Archived from the original on August 10, 2009. Retrieved March 5, 2014.
  5. ^ "Best-selling trading card game". Guinness World Records. March 31, 2011. Archived from the original on December 27, 2014. Retrieved March 5, 2014.
  6. ^ "「ワンピース」でも「鬼滅」でもなく…史上最も稼いだ意外なジャンプ作品". Livedoor News (in Japanese). Livedoor. January 29, 2021. Retrieved January 30, 2021.
  7. ^ "『鬼滅の刃』は『ジャンプ』史上最も稼いだマンガではない! 売り上げ1兆円作品とは(週刊女性PRIME)". Yahoo! News (in Japanese). Yahoo! Japan. January 29, 2021. p. 2. Archived from the original on February 5, 2021. Retrieved January 30, 2021.
  8. ^ Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game Beginner's Guide. Konami. p. 3.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game Official Rulebook. Konami Digital Entertainment.
  10. ^ "Official YuGiOH U.S. Site – "Yugioh Forbidden/Limited Cards: Advanced Format – Limited and Forbidden Lists"". Yugioh-card.com. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  11. ^ "Official YuGiOH: Traditional Format – Limited Lists". Yugioh-card.com. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  12. ^ "YGO TCG News: Konami Unleashes Champion Pack 8 on Duelists Everywhere". Shriektcg.twoday.net. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  13. ^ "SPEED DUELING, A NEW WAY TO PLAY THE Yu-Gi-Oh! TRADING CARD GAME, NOW AVAILABLE".
  14. ^ "遊戯王ラッシュデュエル - 公式サイト".
  15. ^ "あそび方 - 遊戯王ラッシュデュエル".
  16. ^ "あそび方 - 遊戯王ラッシュデュエル".
  17. ^ "あそび方 - 遊戯王ラッシュデュエル".
  18. ^ InnovationYGO (January 10, 2017). "Yu-Gi-Oh! The Dark Side Of Dimensions - Sneak Peek Clip - Dimension Summoning". Archived from the original on December 21, 2021 – via YouTube.
  19. ^ "Kirk Up Your Ears". Anime News Network. July 22, 2010. Retrieved September 1, 2016.
  20. ^ "Upper Deck to Deliver Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game to the US market". Upper Deck Entertainment. February 11, 2002. Archived from the original on April 2, 2002. Retrieved March 25, 2014.
  21. ^ "Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game". El Segundo, California: Yugioh-card.com. January 13, 2010. Archived from the original on February 27, 2010. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
  22. ^ "Order Granting Preliminary Injunction Against The Upper Deck Company" (PDF). iptrademarkattorney.com. February 11, 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved September 1, 2016.
  23. ^ "court-order-konami-summary-judgment-counterfeit-trademark- copyright" (PDF). iptrademarkattorney.com. December 23, 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  24. ^ "Konami-court-order-granting-finding-no-dispute-unauthorized-sales" (PDF). iptrademarkattorney.com. December 23, 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  25. ^ "Konami-MSJ-court-order-grants-counterclaims" (PDF). iptrademarkattorney.com. December 29, 2009. Archived (PDF) from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved September 3, 2016.

External links[edit]