Yu-Gi-Oh! The Eternal Duelist Soul Retrospective

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Published 2020-07-05

All Comments (21)
  • @nintendokings
    I loved going Cyber Stein into Blue Eyes Ultimate in this game. Unless they had a Mirror Force or something, then RIP lol
  • @killwillv2610
    Eternal Duelist Soul was GOAT. I still play it every now and then. I love destroying the NPCs with Exodia. Its satisfying
  • @Mister_Eiffel
    7:19 I think the idea behind the password function was to allow you to use your physical cards so to speak, not necessarily for optimal deck building purposes. I mean, this was still the nascent years of yugioh as well as mainstream internet, so those codes weren't necessarily readily available unless you had the cards. It was probably an incentive for them to include the 3 promo cards in there so that you could also play them in-game via the password function.
  • @KingUnKaged
    I never truly appreciated just how mid-western Dzeef really was until I heard him say "kyal-en-der"
  • We did it boys. Our favorite pack opening channel has just transcended into becoming our favorite Yu-Gi-Oh! Video Game review channel.
  • @thrashyart4369
    Yugioh GX DA is the game that teach me how to play it has a lot of cards and pretty good story too
  • @MrCheeze
    When the focus group says they want the playing field to look more dynamic, but it's a GBA game...
  • @mrkilljr.8743
    I'm glad you're branching out to the videogame realm of Yugioh. I love many of these games for teaching me and my friends the ropes of the game. Duelists of the roses and Ultimate Masters 2006 are my favorites. I hope you get to play them eventually! 😊
  • @AkamexAris1023
    2010 5ds Reverse of Arcadia is the game I played the most growing up. I had another from the GBA with "stairway" somewhere in the name but forgot it.
  • @Subpar1224
    Yugioh GX DA taught me mst doesn't negate
  • @noobpaints6114
    This was my first yugioh game. I started playing again recently and made a thunder dragon deck! lol
  • @ML-cz8vm
    I played the hell out of this. It was great just cause it was a way to play "real" yugioh when I couldn't with friends.
  • @any13th
    This was very interesting and I'd love to hear you talk more on other yugioh games. (Aside from the recent ones like Duel Links and LotD)
  • @jaiko1535
    Yeah I had World wide edition: stairway to the destined Duel. Loved it growing up
  • @MrTAG-re5ym
    Worldwide Edition is so similar yet so different in many ways: - The AI has been improved (to a point. They can still be dumb AF occasionally. And some Duelists actually have different AI than their counterparts - Mokuba plays everything in attack position - Pegasus actually plays around cards in your hand as if he can “see” them. It’s great) - There is a story of sorts which you need to beat before you get the postgame tournaments and the feature to turn the banlist off. - The card pool is bigger (obvs) I put hundreds of hours into Worldwide as a kid.
  • @JJMomoida
    The one YGO game that's always stood out to me from back in the day was Yu-Gi-Oh! Worldwide Edition: Stairway to the Destined Duel. This was back when I was living in Ecuador and I cannot recall if the game released while we were right smack in the middle of Battle City arc or what... but I remember having a lot of fun with that game. I remember that, as far back as when I was a kid, I wanted a YGO RPG game where you'd walk around and battle opponents. Worldwide Edition... wasn't that, but you know what, it still kinda gave that feeling of being in the tournament. Opponents would show up here and there, and as I recall, there were even timed events. You could join special events or tournaments on certain days of the week, etc... This kind of thing made it a bit more immersive. Forbidden Memories was awesome. I confess I never really beat it, but I had a good time with it. I liked the story and that was pretty much the only thing that urged me to continue. Gameplay-wise, I... well, I didn't like it. By the time I picked up a pirated copy of it, my friends and I were already playing the game by its official rules, so this whole "throw cards together and fuse em" thing felt weird to me and though I understood how to play it eventually, it was never something I liked as much as the real deal.
  • @Millanno37
    Same, this was the game that taught me how to play yugioh.
  • @emosamus
    I still have it and play it whenever i feel like reliving the GOAT format 😍
  • @GRM42192
    2:26 boys were transformed to men at that moment with an icon theme song still remembered to this day.