Reading Dora Dora was scummy. You know what it do Jesse.
@jessekottonygo17 күн бұрын
Congrats, you've won the pin of shame for stupid comments.
@Blckk.flipgh17 күн бұрын
This is why you have no tops.
@friendmaker921017 күн бұрын
He's right but for the wrong reasons Reading is scummy, you're not supposed to read yugioh!!!
@TheHoodMVP17 күн бұрын
He didn't even win in time lol how is reading a card that the deck didn't normally play scummy
@ultimatemeepo17 күн бұрын
I feel like this was meant to be taken as a joke but everyone is flaming the poor guy lmao
@MBTYuGiOh17 күн бұрын
its frustrating that spreadsheets have transformed from "here's the gameplay loop, now you're familiar with it" to tricking yourself into a chinese room experiment. great to see a little pedagogical critique!
@user-nl5re1th8p17 күн бұрын
Spreadsheets are indefensible. Meta gaming ruined gaming as a whole
@Ahamkeira17 күн бұрын
@user-nl5re1th8p nah I don't think a small amount of people being competitive ruins games in general. I don't think the mere existence of the NFL ruins football because some people are "meta gaming"
@traplover635717 күн бұрын
@@user-nl5re1th8pmeta gaming is inherent to human nature.
@Ragnarok54017 күн бұрын
@@user-nl5re1th8p so Konami ruined the game by promoting the game in big tournaments? They don't even give decent pricing.
@MadaraR617 күн бұрын
Oh shut up Joseph!!! You think you’re sooo Good with your great hair!!!!
@Ragnarok54017 күн бұрын
This is why I like decks that are less linear, and you can get to the goal of your turn in a variety of ways through interruption like Tearlaments, Paleozoic, Dragon Link, Adamancipator, Infernoble, Traptrix, Raidraptor, etc. Full power Snake Eyes is the extreme version of this, almost every card in the deck is a one card starter and/or extender so it was pretty much immune to one or two interactions, and even using Ash is just giving them fuel for the fire charmer.
@jonathanclark755617 күн бұрын
We win or we learn, we never lose.
@JediJess117 күн бұрын
I have heard from a family member that a FAIL can be a First Attempt In Learning. Naturally, I like to extend it beyond the first attempt. Failure allows iterative learning. Frequent attempts inspire lessons for all inquisitive learners intending neurological growth. Future achievements inspire lessons under realized experiences. Fortify and indescriminately level-up rapidly everything. I'll stop now. Some of those are better than others. The point there should be clear. It's why I like the movie "Meet the Robinsons" and why I refuse to surrender in Chess or Yu-Gi-Oh!
@JediJess117 күн бұрын
Alternatively, we can Learn Over Systematic Attempts. You'd become a luminary offering some eventual realisations.
@jonathanclark755617 күн бұрын
A bold last statement, just never let not surrendering rob you of future victory.
@e-tan391117 күн бұрын
@@JediJess1 Losa? What does aviation safety have to do with anything?
@SaltyMcTilt10 күн бұрын
Live and Learn, one could say
@nautilus164216 күн бұрын
My favorite games of yugioh are the ones where I deviated furthest from the beaten path and reached a completely undiscovered gamestate such as tribute summoning a monster to escape a lock
@epthopper17 күн бұрын
Goal-based teaching is way more effective than trying to memorize specific lines. Know what you’re aiming for and the basic sequence of how your combo will play out, and then just play. Eventually once you know the deck inside and out, spreadsheet combos can be useful for perfecting your lines, but that’s going to be a minor boost in winrate comparatively
@Sunsaparilla17 күн бұрын
I think understanding the basic combo lines is good for learning the deck, but not for learning Yugioh. As shown in the Jesse's video, it's important to understand that in the majority of your games, you are going to play into interactions. You should practice how to navigate around different interruptions at different points in your combo. Reading your opponent and improvising your gameplay are incredibly important skills to have in this game! Good video!
@blackmanta6617 күн бұрын
Yeah, there's a lot of combos that you also wouldn't think of after using a spreadsheet, it's also notable that if you learn the 1/2 card combos of a deck you wouldn't make the most of your hand, I've been guilty of this with a lot of decks which I've tried out before where I use 1 card in my hand and end on 4 cards which I didn't use, if they're hand traps that's good but if I understood the game better and the deck better I could have played better and maybe strengthened my board, or even played around something like a nibiru or a droll
@raabgatti17 күн бұрын
I last played Competitively in Tengu Plant era, early 2010s. MAN the game sure has picked up. Really appreciate the insight, thanks!
@idkdontask714217 күн бұрын
I should just comment on the point of spreadsheets, he is absolutely right thay spreadsheets are counter productive but they are useful if youre just starting out with a deck and testing the deck online. But once you get familiar with what the cards do and why, you should be able to deviate from the "basic combo" spreadsheets
@GabrielRodriguez-xu6ko16 күн бұрын
They are like training wheels for how to use a deck
@nial139615 күн бұрын
this is what he said in the video
@JediJess117 күн бұрын
This is also why I enjoy Mirror Matches or watching others use the core/archetype of my deck. I get to learn other methods.
@JediJess117 күн бұрын
I'd love to see a follow-up for this video going over how to build the deck.
@DuncanHarbison16 күн бұрын
Buy the newest packs, pick out cards that have the same name, if you have more than 16 cards take out the worst ones, add 24 hand traps.
@metalmariomega17 күн бұрын
When I learn decks, the first thing I learn is the cards they can use to play into and through disruption. The real challenge is learning the most efficient ways to not die when the opponent's on a buttload of breakers. "Surviving efficiently" is key to closing out games on the crackback, whether you OTK or not.
@psc648317 күн бұрын
Thank you Jesse for the informative video! I started playing yugioh after 10 years and started with agents the most nerfed deck in yugioh history (check the Tcg banlist, you will believe me). I got utterly destroyed by full power tear and instead of throwing it away, I improved on the deck myself and could catch some wins with it. If you want to get good at the game, you really need to love an archetype and get so shit on that you learn from the mistakes and improve from it. thats how I learned to get better. Now after savage and baronne banned. it is really only a going 2nd option with the hope of nuking your enemy with kurikara. I switched to Ice Barrier and now I try to learn battle wasp/Insects
@uuh4yj4317 күн бұрын
loving a shit deck and being hell bent on improving it is great for learning deckbuilding. i know i aint going to make metaphys meta(even tho its in the name) but i am going to build something that has at least a chance of winning against most match ups.
@adamquenano856317 күн бұрын
Some people literally believe they have to be like a Yugioh protagonist when starting out. Where they assume they can’t lose ever whether they go to locals or not before entering events. Because of this they don’t know how to evaluate taking losses and what to gain from getting them. Another one is they assume the game is too expensive to even try and act like they need to use their money for what matters more as an excuse.
@mrpresreaganb17 күн бұрын
People don't know how to learn. It's not just Yugioh. It's every competitive game that requires evaluating your mistakes and learning from them.
@von25417 күн бұрын
Iron sharpens iron. You got to get your butt kicked sometimes and learn from it. My very first locals ever was in 2017, round one I sit down and I’m playing dinomist because I liked how the deck functioned. Round 1 I play against gouki gumblar handloop. I got handlooped for 5, and my draw for turn got looped. I was upset because I legit didn’t play the game that round. That’s about how every round went. I was legit not going to play the game again. But my buddy who had played the game for years at that point told me you have to learn from your losses and build on it. Kept me motivated to bounce back and I’ve been in the game ever since. My first regional top I legit had to thank him for keeping me in the game. That anime protagonist mentality is real and it gatekeeps a lot of people from getting good
@Bdawwwg17 күн бұрын
I’ve started to teach my coworker how to play ygo since he’s a ygo boomer, he’s interested in the new blue eyes support next year so I made proxies for him to learn. Besides that, he’s a sore loser. Every time he loses he complains and goes “why does it feel like my cards don’t do anything against you, but your cards do?”. He’s always wondering “what’s the choke point of x deck?”. He always asks and me how does he get better and he never listens. Genuinely I’m scared for him because he wants to go to locals, but he doesn’t know how to take a loss. If he gets pissed off when he loses against me, he’ll get pissed off against a stranger.
@MaliciousSymphony17 күн бұрын
😂@@Bdawwwg
@Bdawwwg17 күн бұрын
@@MaliciousSymphony fr tho , it’s irritating when you’re trying to teach someone and they act like a child. In one ear, out the other. Fr
@ecpsuper201017 күн бұрын
I've always found spreedsheets and combo videos to be a starting points when learning a deck. Just to give an idea what the deck is capable of and what the ideal endboard looks like. Unfortunatly most players dont try to learn past this point. Whether people like it or not interaction is a thing in this game and those variables can very easily put an end to a standard combo unless the player can adapt accordingly. I remember one time i was playing against a centurion player who had blazar backed with backrow and handtraps and I had to think and change up my plays depending on what disruptions they used up. After the duel i had a spectator say I should have had my combos memorized instead of thinking so much on what to do, i had to explain if I had done a standard combo I would have lost to certain disruptions hitting certain chokepoints of said combo.
@ren495116 күн бұрын
Honestly, spreadsheets helped me broaden my combo route thought process. Sometimes I just dont realize or think of how to keep going or move around things and knowing what and how different cards interact and extend off of each other helped me a lot.
@JAMbandful17 күн бұрын
Am I the only one who’s been learning combos the hard way like a cave man? I didn’t know people did this at all! Great info all around in the video.
@vidkarlic777017 күн бұрын
This was a really good video. Wouldn't mind seeng more videos like this one.
@Squiddys17 күн бұрын
im learning
@GutsmanLoL17 күн бұрын
Squid-E
@幽霊船-o4h16 күн бұрын
Lmaoooooo
@Afro.Steeziac17 күн бұрын
As a D/D/D stan, and new player i appreciate the spreadsheets. However great points and great video 👍🏽
@AccelBurner2 күн бұрын
To be honest I never knew about those spreadsheets when I am playing and building my deck, it's all about picturing most interactions in the current trends and what can be possibly brought, generally I often practice my own combos, my choke points, my points of adaptations and how to play around cases when the odds are not in my favor. I am more into the understanding of playing directly and experiment then understand how I can change the deck
@Gilgamesh-em6ru11 күн бұрын
I've never been a fan of spreadsheets. that's also why I got so good with Yubel with it's initial support. there were a lot of lines that could be done even if you did not have access to your yubel part of the deck. even now I can still pivot very easily based on what my opponent does.
@d.r.617717 күн бұрын
Learning high-engine count decks like branded teach you that really quickly. Nicely put video :)
@godsmithofchaos17 күн бұрын
More knowledge! Thanks Jesse 💪🏽🧙🏽♂️
@yazanabbadi424716 күн бұрын
Amazing video.. good structure, nice analysis and perfect conclusion.
@DRAKEN_1517 күн бұрын
badfa vs goodge
@haydenlee833217 күн бұрын
I know what spreadsheets would be great at though! Programming the PvE Yugioh AI (for single player purposes). Unlike the human brain that forms habits and works with simplifications, computer algorithms can work with iterating through every scenario possible, so it is more fit to better utilize extensive spreadsheets
@demon320317 күн бұрын
I'm not very fond of yugioh anymore, but i will say that this is a great video going in depth about the gameplay of yugioh and how it plays differently to other card games in the fact that yes your deck has over arching idea that it wants to do, but because of yugioh allowing you to play loads of cards and fetch/find more cards in one turn comparatively to other card games. The gameplay of yugioh is SUPPOSED to be more similar to a fighting game. Where you are adjusting how you're playing based on your opponents "character" (deck) and how they play said "character". While not every game will always feel like a back forth response to the response to the response. I do think its the intended gameplay feel of what they want yogioh to be. So spreadsheets telling you to play X line if you have Y and Z is in your hand will always having you playing more for your over arching idea/goal, but will typically have you playing worst because every deck plays interaction that could come up as well as the deck its self just might have a good match up to the "ideal board state" but and worst match up to your tech cards. Hence why people run tech cards like abyss dweller.
@TheMismatcher17 күн бұрын
I see you have never really played fighting games then, because people do in fact practice setups and matchups similarly to spreadsheets/tech cards
@estebanloriaa.35614 күн бұрын
Im not gonna lie, this is the reason i love yugioh. People from other card games say theres no interaction, but thats because they havent seen a 5 chain link of an effect, ash that, ip into sp, negate, negate the negate, and then you're left with more things on the field. Maybe a Canopious to get Horus guy, or a promethean princess in grave. I've been playin RB, Horus Tear Kash and Generaider Runick, and they all have enough disruption, recovery and just awesome toolbox approach to solutions in the battlefield. I see it as a strategy game, a sort of chess, where moving parts are all around. Do they have a bystial? Do i get the monster negate for Nib, do i go into Protos or Thunder Colossus? What type do i call with protos, and how do i set up my board to get that type without commiting my whole deck to the banish zone. Its awesome... also no tramates cause i played league today and thats a fiesta
@notRowan6117 күн бұрын
I learned salamangreat through learning the main combo line and months of experience and experimenting
@benjystrauss25243 күн бұрын
Interesting. I never use spreadsheets. I do typically have a standard like of play: try and get to Rikka Petal, search Mudan, get the field, get a trap set, then set other traps and pass. But in practice it doesn't always go like that, depending on what other things are going on.
@mattcaston954617 күн бұрын
Jesse, do you write the content you produce as well? If so, thumbs up
@AnotherSyouz16 күн бұрын
I use to not like Jesse, i didn't hate him or anything like that, but after seeing his ghostrick video, and the video with Sam, Seereax and weevil, watching him have fun with his favorite card+ bodying Sam idk it feels like he is a cool dude, not just a egotistic pro player, ty Jesse, you have a new fan here :D i hope to see you pilot more potato decks in the future
@alexthiessen745412 күн бұрын
“Im choosing to go the less powerful route because i have a goal im working towards” The mentality of a true champion.
@wintergray122115 күн бұрын
I'm far from an expert (I spend more time deck building than actually playing lol), but I like cards that are versatile. Starters that can be extenders, vice-versa -- even something basic like equipping opponent's monster with Fairy Meteor Crush and walling. But gd I wish extra deck was at least 20 cards.
@imCrodie15 күн бұрын
the best example i think of is how peter tran came top 4 with wind up ycs toronto 2012 without knowing the shock lock combo
@DuncanHarbison16 күн бұрын
Challenge mode - make the spreadsheet account for variables. Yes all of them.
@kioshi47715 күн бұрын
Bro just motivated me to play more yugioh
@linkmax537416 күн бұрын
Spreadsheet in my opinion should be only the beginning of trying new Deck or an unfamiliar deck but the best way to improve is by learning what are the best deck and how they can win with it and how to counter them or stop them from doing the best combo or OTKing you Although this is a lot easier said then done
@the1celtictiger70716 күн бұрын
The main thing I liked about this video was just how sick that trophy looked, what was it from?
@foxythecelestial301517 күн бұрын
Hello, Jesse! I enjoyed your video and helped open my mind even more, so thank you very much for the help. Do you think you'd ever play, Dragonmaid? I'd love to see how you play them! Have a great day!
@BladeEdge8616 күн бұрын
Spreadsheets can be useful when you are first learning a new archetype, but shouldn't be the end goal. Yugioh is far too complicated a game for spreadsheets to account for every possible outcome. There are many situations where I have had to deviate from my usual strategies to win. I have also had opponents break strong combos I had through means I hadn't quite expected.
@Dragonmist19X17 күн бұрын
the video summed up: Yugioh is not some youtube replay, the opponent can/will have hand traps and you need to play around those (assuming your opponent has the thousands of dollars to have them).
@LowTier4Life5 күн бұрын
->play a good meta deck ->practice deck alot ->repeat when new deck comes out. there thats it.
@Musikrs217 күн бұрын
Crash out face as a thumbnail had me dead😂
@LacaYGO17 күн бұрын
I see Jesse, I smell quality content
@GurkenLpxD16 күн бұрын
Imo spreadsheets are good tools to get a feeling for a deck and how the cards interact with each others. The skill expression comes from the adaptability and reading the current game state. How can I transit from one combo line to another? What can I do if I get handtraped? What if I don’t draw the combo starter and so on.
@shayaanbaig24811 күн бұрын
Bruh I didn't even know about spreadsheets until now 💀I legit just watched youtube videos to get familiar with the combos and then test the deck I'm learning on duelingbook
@TheMikman9716 күн бұрын
The next step of Yu-Gi-Oh spreadsharting will also include every possible opponent's hand
@DOESITMATTER773417 күн бұрын
I didn’t even know about Yugioh spreadsheets… learns about it seconds later the idea is dismantled before I could even form an opinion on it.. 👏 👏 my dueling friends are maverick dueling drifters who don’t really follow the meta. They’re fun to duel but don’t really help me get better.
@chaosinfernoid900817 күн бұрын
Then go to your locals and try to win and learn
@DOESITMATTER773417 күн бұрын
@ definitely my next step. In New Jersey they’re aren’t too many places to duel. Been playing since the beginning amd have 49 decks built but never had a spot to visit that wasn’t ridiculously out the way. I been but not consistently. With full time job it’s hard to find the energy
@yugiMOWS17 күн бұрын
I prefer to learn decks through playing them because it gives me more of an ability to make fluid decisions rather than being stuck in thinking one way
@venturamack14 күн бұрын
I'm not a professional but I consider my self in the lower end of A higher side of B tier room to grow but high skill and knowledge . My advice would be build every deck play every deck till you know the combos and weaknesses then build the next one . When you know what every one is playing and where they want to end it makes the game predictable
@vivanmaurya17 күн бұрын
Uuuf the farfa burn is crazy 🤣
@3443-j5w8 күн бұрын
Depends on your style , some like hand traps some dont , i like to play without hand traps it works for me , i just have different methods of deck building i taught myself, RATIOS, and Comebacks, and consistency is what i look for
@DeityofDestiny14 күн бұрын
honestly, I've never liked spreadsheets for the reasons outlined here. plus my brain just largely shuts off on them I'd personally just rather wing it and learn through trail and error (plus a helping dosage of observing and taking notes from players that know how to pilot the deck)
@Citizen_Nappa2317 күн бұрын
In my 25 years playing Yu-Gi-Oh ive never used a spreadsheet all decks were self made(personal distaste for net decking in general) i built revised, saw the flaws in decks and worked the kinks in the decks strategy. Im just self taught. I chuckle when i see utubers saying you need a community to learn Yu-Gi-Oh. And its impossible to learn you need to be taught by a "pro". My response nah im good probably been playing at least a decade longer anyway😂. Bit off topic IK, but ya never relied on that im a trial and error or hands on learner.
@Ibeentravelling16 күн бұрын
Ur the goat of yugioh
@officialregirock402117 күн бұрын
Jesse is to YGO what Wolf is to PKMN
@EliDSage17 күн бұрын
Hyper geometric calculator is the key. I build decks like a pro and grind to masters easily thanks to that tip.
@AdemirZX10 күн бұрын
Step 1: be rich, so you can build your tier 0 deck. Step 2: memorize combos and negations. Step 3: profit, maybe… probably not.
@JurassicMajin17 күн бұрын
Ive noticed that my pitfall in yugioh is overextending almost using up my whole hand everytime.
@deepydulittle16 күн бұрын
I have marshmallon to slove my slumber. ❤
@joaocarloscarvalhopereira430015 күн бұрын
When I playtest I always try to combo thinking that my opponent has 1 ash and 1 imperm in their hand. And them I see if the combo stills holds.
@FlyBoyKhi8 күн бұрын
it preys on peoples' need for instant gratification.
@The_Fusionist0517 күн бұрын
The amount of burn in this video😂
@Exterminism16 күн бұрын
you can only get better to a certain extent and if you do plan to get better, might as well invest that time to something with more gains since yugioh prizes are awful
@RobTriBri-f2zКүн бұрын
If I wanted to look at Spreadsheets all day, I'd get a job!
@superpeludo173517 күн бұрын
Hey the earth machine and superheay samurai spreadsheet were free
@4evertyranitar17 күн бұрын
I don't fall for the mistakes you listed much at all, especially for decks that I used a lot, but I still can't get even close to reaching Master 1. I do misplay sometimes, yes, however I wonder how much I can blame my losses on bad luck. Way too many times I make a great board turn 1 only to be met by a Lava Golem. That or I brick like crazy on handtraps.
@Dylligraphy16 күн бұрын
Try falling for the mistakes then. What’s truly counterproductive to growth is shutting yourself off from resources you could potentially learn something from.
@4evertyranitar16 күн бұрын
@@Dylligraphy So you mean I should do the combos wrong on purpose? I could, whenever I start playing again. Losing a lot while using Tenpai made me realize I'll never reach Master.
@plabcentral63017 күн бұрын
I gotta draw better
@Weslicus17 күн бұрын
Really cool video
@tyangchizzle16 күн бұрын
Fu**. This was so fun to watch. 💪😄
@pcbangbros835017 күн бұрын
Watching someone play Tenpai in an actual match is wild. Like, how do Tenpai players even figure out who is the best Tenpai player when they all do the same exact damn thing?
@Virg0sen17 күн бұрын
Hey Jesse are you looking for an Editor? I have 3 years profesional experience.
@mkultrarare17 күн бұрын
spreadsheets actively make memento players worse
@cjloc19893 күн бұрын
You look like the pinguin from batman haha
@ExoStev17 күн бұрын
Merci pour ces informations 🔥🔥🔥🔥
@starboylfgm292317 күн бұрын
What's the BGM? It's a banger
@iatdtv499617 күн бұрын
Should i lose a duel, i like to analyze why and what cards caused it. Then you can then determine what cards in your deck prevent that or what cards you might add next time to prevent that same losing state.
@RawkHawkRockin16 күн бұрын
I've noticed that trying to create the spreadsheet yourself from scratch can be valuable. Enumerating different fundamental opening hands and trying to find the most optimal line for each, taking into account possible disruption from the opponent in addition to the end board. The point is not necessarily to learn lines by heart, but to identify the key moving pieces of your deck and choke points in an isolated environment, where you have time to consider different routes and options and assess various disruption. Awesome vid btw!
@aeugh899816 күн бұрын
Spreadsheets is a good way to condition your mind on "How the deck works", then you still need to delve to make your own variation of "This is how I make this deck works". This also the reason why I hate Stun or Turn Skip, cause I dont really learn anything from fighting it. Like what am I learning except "Just draw the out lmao"
@CaptainMarvel4Ever17 күн бұрын
Spreadsheets always mystified me, mainly because you’re assuming somebody knows better than you. If you take the combo somebody else made you’ve limited your deck as well as your own ability to play well. More over everyone functions and thinks differently and has different ways of playing so I feel like if I just use somebody else’s play pattern rather than develop my own through building and testing I’m inherently making myself weaker and less unique as a pose to coming up with the perfect deck for me in whatever format I’m playing.
@knmrt276017 күн бұрын
If you're new to a certain deck and trying to learn it then it's obvious that somebody knows better than you... That point makes no sense...
@CaptainMarvel4Ever17 күн бұрын
@ Why don’t you go back and read my comment again?
@Harmonic1417 күн бұрын
@@CaptainMarvel4Everwhat he said is perfectly valid lol
@CaptainMarvel4Ever17 күн бұрын
@ No, because that’s assuming I said never look at any outside data or information ever. Even Jesse said at the end that spreadsheets and similar material can still be useful. Was that clear enough for you? “lol”
@Harmonic1417 күн бұрын
@@CaptainMarvel4Ever you opened your comment with "spreadsheets always mystified me". It's not a reach to assume that you are arguing to never use them. If you were more concerned about learning with the best tools for a given scenario instead of being a contrarian for the sake of starting an argument, we wouldn't be having this conversation, and you might actually get better at the game. "Lol"
@arturolopez709216 күн бұрын
Ai don't forget about Ai, and I know you use it too!
@mrbubbles646817 күн бұрын
Step 1: READ YOUR CARDS!
@e-tan391117 күн бұрын
Okay I'm sorry I think at least 2/3rds of the yugioh community already failed this step.
@rodrigoreyes675813 күн бұрын
You can only be good at this game as long as you buy the most expensive cards and be sure to just waste money and not make it back
@Mitchell55510017 күн бұрын
Spoken like a true economist
@connorpena37316 күн бұрын
I honestly don’t care too much about spreadsheets, I do find I prefer an end board I can use instead of may seem as “most optimal.” Furthermore people who CHARGE people for spreadsheets are scum tbh
@markogamingtv703017 күн бұрын
D/D/D 🗿
@mrstealcar470211 күн бұрын
Is net decking bad?
@e-tan39112 күн бұрын
No. Using the resources available to you is never a bad thing.
@JFCA_Solar16 күн бұрын
People still not pronouncing Dies Irae sends me every time
@Dylligraphy16 күн бұрын
You are aware it was localized as Fiendsmith’s Desirae, right?
@Venator23717 күн бұрын
What's the best card in Yu-Gi-Oh? The Credit Card.
@Citizen_Nappa2317 күн бұрын
Jokes on you im a Chad like Kiaba that writes checks instead.
@alexandergeorgiev7417 күн бұрын
Dude really master duel is free you know i don't spend money on ygo
@chaosinfernoid900817 күн бұрын
@@Citizen_Nappa23 Whos Kiaba? 💀
@longhappyfrog9 күн бұрын
I dont think spreadsheets are wrong just sucks that something people used to do them for fun and as a hobby and now its all just pay me 30$. Theres no like community aspect anymore with these content creators. The pay 300$ to be in my friend group will always make me laugh though
@fatdrasticog107717 күн бұрын
Include seereax in more content.
@noslende9 күн бұрын
wait, you're Canadian? I thought you were an American. lol
@e-tan39112 күн бұрын
Ehh Canadians are basically Americans that pretend they can speak French, have a history of extreme war crimes, and like hockey a bit too much. Basically just Minnesotans. Canadians that was a joke don't throw a grenade in with the rations please.
@dpacula6317 күн бұрын
Have lots of money lol
@majinkhaos819617 күн бұрын
Oh yea, spreadsheets are for bots lol
@allyourb4se41017 күн бұрын
First
@OnTh3Table717 күн бұрын
why you still using that thumbnail
@jordanartinial459317 күн бұрын
How to get good? Memorize youtube combos and buy the meta deck. Since thats essentially yugioh in a nut shell, ill never play IRL
@king_acceler875517 күн бұрын
Someone didn't watch the video
@uuh4yj4317 күн бұрын
i'm sure you are being deliberaly obtuse, but if it was this simple tier 0 formats would just have randos winning every event. somehow it is usually good players that win, i wonder why...
@yuseifudo607517 күн бұрын
You know that meta exists in literally every fricking competitive game ever right?
@TeamSprocket17 күн бұрын
You've never played IRL and you feel qualified to comment on it? Kinda delusional, dude.
@Citizen_Nappa2317 күн бұрын
I will make a custom anti meta deck just to humble meta sheep noobs for fun. Sure bring your $2k deck I stomp it with a deck I built with $40. 😉
@Insanlybad17 күн бұрын
Just buy a meta deck and learn the stupid combos, i love yugioh but nowdays its just bs