![]() ![]() It was essential viewing in our house, and for other kids I knew–at school we would play Yu-Gi-Oh! at lunchtimes, and there was enough interest to hold moderately sized competitions. ![]() Many people knew it from an eponymous TV show, following our protagonist Yugi dueling in tournaments (which, on a re-watch, were still over-exaggerated performance). You normally beat the other player by reducing their 8000 Life Points to zero, via a combination of attacking and burning them with effect damage (you can also win if their deck runs out of cards, but I don’t remember games ever lasting long enough to reach that stage). In the game, you assemble a deck of 40 cards, filled with Monsters, Spells and Traps. But now, as I tried to get back into the game, I’ve realised it’s better that some things stay in the past. I used to love Yu-Gi-Oh!, and I would play it with my friends all the time. I was always big into video games as a kid, but the thing that took up most of my free time was in fact a trading card game. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |