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@VICE-H3RO
@VICE-H3RO 3 күн бұрын
Great video. Thought provoking. 👍
@FajshaS
@FajshaS 4 күн бұрын
In minute 5:26 , iirc, spark makes dupe miss timing
@10footD
@10footD 3 күн бұрын
Ryko makes dupe miss timing because its actions are sequential, destroy and then mill. Gemini spark on its own does not make dupe miss because destroying and drawing happen simultaneously. If they were sequential then it would miss.
@daHmenz
@daHmenz 7 күн бұрын
in example why no attack then tribute mp2? Seems best on what we've seen, the only lose is judgement and can rule out alot yes?
@baranucer8233
@baranucer8233 7 күн бұрын
2H long replay from the GOAT ?
@10footD
@10footD 3 күн бұрын
😳
@DylanDarkWorld2
@DylanDarkWorld2 10 күн бұрын
Wait are you guy that won last week at knight and day?
@10footD
@10footD 10 күн бұрын
That's me yup 😃
@DylanDarkWorld2
@DylanDarkWorld2 10 күн бұрын
@@10footD oh nice you beat me top 4. Sorry if I seemed salty but I was at the fact I lost 6 of 7 die rolls that day. If I had just won die roll against you we definitely went to game 3 and I wouldn’t have been as salty. But that’s Yugioh. 🤷‍♂️
@10footD
@10footD 10 күн бұрын
​@@DylanDarkWorld2 I definitely did not get salty vibes from you don't worry LOL. You were pleasant to be around and it was a pleasure to play vs you. Everybody was exhausted from the long day and everybody was hungry, both negatively affect mood. The saltiest opponent was the other finalist who literally ragequit after losing a long g1. He was kind to me at the beginning but was running low on strength to stay composed with all factors being considered so even his situation was understandable and I don't hold anything against him. I remember the Starlight Road not summoning Stardust Dragon ruling coming up vs you. A common play you'll see is somebody using Heavy Storm, cl2 Starlight Road, and then CL3 Mystical Space Typhoon and target your own Heavy Storm to destroy it and stop a Stardust from coming out. As a Blackwing player you might even find yourself using Icarus Attack on your own heavy storm. I look forward to seeing you at the next tournament 😃
@purduebro
@purduebro 11 күн бұрын
You tributed prodigy for malicious edge and forgot to draw a card
@10footD
@10footD 10 күн бұрын
Great catch. Definitely not a 100% game from me. Game 3 the play is also to toad combo to clear trooper instead of just turn 2 vanitys especially since an orange herald just got milled. Good mistakes to make in a casual setting
@celtic1842
@celtic1842 11 күн бұрын
Bluffing only work in old Yu-Gi-Oh it doesn't matter in new Yu-Gi-Oh lol
@ShitpostingJoJo
@ShitpostingJoJo 27 күн бұрын
Bri is talking so much game with the most Boomer-ass, Trash-ass deck I've ever seen 💀 AND I PLAYED BLUE-EYES!!
@jmurray1110
@jmurray1110 Ай бұрын
Now try bluffing against yubel
@fridolin352
@fridolin352 Ай бұрын
banger
@jakethasnake3524
@jakethasnake3524 2 ай бұрын
Back in my day, if you got 1st or 2nd at locals, you couldn't play again the next weekend. Why haven't shops implemented this?
@Destrudo5359
@Destrudo5359 2 ай бұрын
You can't bluff in yugioh.
@Destrudo5359
@Destrudo5359 2 ай бұрын
So this doesn't and won't work...
@solh0029
@solh0029 2 ай бұрын
As someone who plays poker for a living, I'm impressed by how accurate the poker talk was. Good job!
@HiFox69
@HiFox69 2 ай бұрын
my new fav edison content creator
@Kintaku
@Kintaku 2 ай бұрын
I love that statement, “However bad you think variance can be, it’s worse.” There’s so many times where you can get dealt hands that feel like your being cheated, and people will go, “It’s not realistic” or “How is this possible,” but randomness/variance doesn’t care about being fair, otherwise it wouldn’t be random. Sometimes remembering that can help you stay calm and grounded. Super interesting video!
@nimbus6694
@nimbus6694 2 ай бұрын
As a magic player who didn't understand 80% of this video, I'm subbing, this was great. I'm too bad of a player to effectively generalise from this, but I'll try to atleast balance my actual/bluff thinking when playing combo decks.
@TuckNeal
@TuckNeal 2 ай бұрын
Will you be doing one on the more modern era of yugioh?
@10footD
@10footD 2 ай бұрын
Probably not LOL. I havent played modern since 2013 so I barely recognize the game now
@TuckNeal
@TuckNeal 2 ай бұрын
@@10footD Damn, i was looking forward to it
@TuckNeal
@TuckNeal 2 ай бұрын
@@10footD Do you think the "Everytime you play a hand differently than how you would have played it if the cards were face up you lose" applies no matter what?
@philovermyer6166
@philovermyer6166 2 ай бұрын
This would all be fine and well, if YuGiOh wasn't a game of taking turns playing solitaire.
@lurrielee2755
@lurrielee2755 2 ай бұрын
Why am i being yelled at?
@vincentstriqe
@vincentstriqe 2 ай бұрын
This is how i used to play yugioh in elementary, except my deck was shit. But bluffing and all that was mad
@coolbrotherf127
@coolbrotherf127 2 ай бұрын
This lesson about learning to deal with randomness and not "deserving" to win should be learned by video game players as well. In team games there's always people who say "I would have won of it wasn't for my bad teammates," while performing not any better on average than those same teammates. It's the same kinds of people in TCGs who always complain about their bad draws instead of learning to use the cards more effectively. A good player can make games way closer than it should be and sometimes pull off a win with seemingly useless cards.
@10footD
@10footD 2 ай бұрын
I've definitely used not tilting concepts to help climb in team games like League of Legends. It should be an expectation that you will sometimes get bad teammates and it should be an expectation you will lose sometimes. The best players however will have a much higher winrate than the average player with the same teammates. You are the common denominator; in a 5v5 game there's 5 chances for the opposing team to get a bad teammate while there's only 4 on your team so the odds are in your favor if you're as good as you think you are 😉
@sambrown7691
@sambrown7691 2 ай бұрын
I have literally zero experience playing yugioh since i bought a yugi starter deck probably 20 years ago now, but you did a great job articulating some concepts that ive heard regs struggle with. Literally i had zero idea what you were saying when talking about in game yugioh plays but i still enjoyed the hell out of it
@RebellSpike
@RebellSpike 2 ай бұрын
I saved this video like a week ago because I was genuinely really interested to apply whatever I'll learn to Magic the Gathering. I really liked the first 2-ish minutes of this when you were going over bluffing in Poker and gaining value or losing value depending on your opponent's decision making around whatever you have or don't have. That was interesting. Then as soon as you cut into playing Yugioh I stopped watching about a minute in, not because I wasn't interested in Yugioh but I found your tone and attitude to your opponents really disrespectful. It was very hard to focus on the concept when you came off really cocky and mocked your opponent's plays. It immediately made me question how good you actually were in the game, and question what you were trying to show through the plays and decision making because it was so centered on your opponents mistakes in such a condescending way. Just something to consider, I'm sure a lot of viewers enjoy the tone to make it exciting or fun but I personally couldn't watch past 3 minutes. Best of luck to your future videos and games!
@UNFRIENDLYEMO
@UNFRIENDLYEMO 2 ай бұрын
i miss yugioh
@Gatitasecsii
@Gatitasecsii 2 ай бұрын
What a lovely video. A piece of art in a sea of garbage...
@Gatitasecsii
@Gatitasecsii 2 ай бұрын
It seems like such a lost art in yugioh. I don't think bluffing has mattered as much since the introduction of synchros.
@justi600
@justi600 2 ай бұрын
Cool vid
@1besticanbe1
@1besticanbe1 2 ай бұрын
Never expected something this good to come out of 10 Foot. No offense. It was so analytical and well thought out. Made me subscribe. Keep up the good work!
@The_Lovey_Informer
@The_Lovey_Informer 2 ай бұрын
"Damn, 3 hand traps. Fold"
@lsusul
@lsusul 2 ай бұрын
This was literally the best yugioh video I have ever seen. Keep up the good work champ
@hurnakedhillon9842
@hurnakedhillon9842 2 ай бұрын
About to start this video, I hope you talk about range theory.
@Justmatty1134
@Justmatty1134 3 ай бұрын
I always thought the counting cards rule was dumb bc in other card games its best to try to remember all information possible
@goodreason6462
@goodreason6462 3 ай бұрын
Love your frog content but could you do more vayu turbo videos/livestreams?!?!
@10footD
@10footD 2 ай бұрын
I can play some vayu in the next stream sure thing
@guymitchell9234
@guymitchell9234 3 ай бұрын
fire video
@ThenWeWokeUp23
@ThenWeWokeUp23 3 ай бұрын
Honestly one of the greatest yugioh videos ever made.
@adambob6913
@adambob6913 3 ай бұрын
Glad to see this video doing well. Really high quality content
@yuscilfer1429
@yuscilfer1429 3 ай бұрын
I know this is a different card game, but in MTG, for me to scale my opponents hand, I play discard. The type of discard that the opponent HAS to choose what is he/she gonna discard. For example; in the early rounds he discards land, that means he/she have more lands in his hands, but if he/she discards a key card, that means he/she is bricked on land cards. So in hindsight, I'm able to tell what's my opponents gonna do just by him discarding his cards. This is not the case for Yugioh since there is no resource cards in it. I'm saying that the discard in YGO is not the same with MTG since in YGO, the search effect is more prevalent than MTG, though the latter has tutor effect, it needed resource like land cards to begin with.
@goodreason6462
@goodreason6462 3 ай бұрын
0:44 is there a reason why you didn’t dump most of your frogs besides maybe keeping uni and another swap in the deck? As a new frog player I’ve heard and seen most people dump all their frogs so all thats left is bombs, so I was curious on your choice. Thanks!
@10footD
@10footD 3 ай бұрын
You will sometimes want to dump your frogs depending on what cards your opponent has set up. If your toad is likely to die next turn, you should dump your frogs. If toad can live through your opponent's turn, you can convert your treeborn frogs into other frogs with substitoad for +1s. On the next turn, since I didnt tribute my toad, i was able to convert the bodies on field into another dupe frog + unifrog which is way more threatening than just a dupe lock. I like to keep 1 swap, 1 dupe, and unifrog left in deck if I'm leaving toad on the field on the field. If they only set 1 monster on their turn and I draw into a monarch on my turn, you can tribute treeborn for the monarch then self tribute toad for swap frog, swing with both then bounce the monarch in m2 to apply way more pressure than just auto-piloting a dupe lock
@goodreason6462
@goodreason6462 3 ай бұрын
@@10footDhey thanks for the response. So in that instance I agree, but couldn’t you have dumped another swap and sub from your deck? Cause you have sub + dupe on the field and another swap in your hand. So by dumping 1 more swap and sub from your deck you would avoid drawing into it, unless you wanted to draw those?
@10footD
@10footD 3 ай бұрын
@@goodreason6462 I only play 2 swap 😉 0 swap left in deck
@Viaraze
@Viaraze 3 ай бұрын
this video is amazing Holy shit
@mrbubbles6468
@mrbubbles6468 3 ай бұрын
Thing is these strats still work in modern formats. Most people don’t keep mental notes of how many cards they’ve used and what and therefore how many are left in play and how they interact. It’s why I have honestly found solitairing my cards andmemorising to be very helpful. It’s also why you should keep energy up in tournaments.
@stuckmeister7750
@stuckmeister7750 3 ай бұрын
Great video, this advice is still relevant for modern yugioh imo. All these same kinds of interactions potential bluffs, etc. still happen just condensed into a few turns.
@babysinclairfan
@babysinclairfan 3 ай бұрын
While I enjoyed the entire video, tilt control was far and away the best part. Definitely watch to the end guys.