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==Yu-Gi-Oh== [[Yu-Gi-Oh]] has over 60 video games, which is slightly more than the number of RPGs based on D&D (though D&D still wins with non-RPGs included). This number is largely due to a lot of early games being tweaked versions of the previous release with the year's new cards. Many games eschew the real card game's rules and make up their own interpretation of how the duels in the anime/manga are supposed to work. *'''Stairway to the Destined Duel''': The last card game in the OG era that's actually following the rules of the real card game. The player wanders around Battle City beating randomly picked opponents in duels to improve their deck. Exemplified the early era where every deck was full of board wipes that were easy to pull off and only three types of deck existed, with heavy card overlap: Hand control abusing the broken cards that force your opponent to discard cards, beatdown decks that rushed to get a strong monster out (Either tributing for Summoned Skull, or using Cyber-Stein, since it wasn't a rare promo in this game, to bring out some big fusion monster like Blue-eyes Ultimate Dragon) and buff it to reduce the opponent's life points to zero, and Exodia decks which stalled till they drew Exodia. *'''Tag Force''': A series of 7 PSP games (with one rereleased on PS2) that focused primarily on tag duels, with the player able to build relations with the character they choose as their partner (with romantic tones for the females and a second cross released on Vita). The series, especially the early ones, are notorious for how blatantly the AI cheats. The cards an enemy has in their hand or facedown aren't actually locked to any card, but instead can become any legal(ish) option in their deck. This cheating is so bad that the earlier incarnations cards returned to the hand or flipped upsidedown could immediately become completely different cards. The first 3 games are based on the GX era, the next trilogy on the 5Ds era, and the final game including characters from all five eras of anime (six counting the one that wasn't about children's card games) then in existence. *'''World Championship 2009-2011 Trilogy''' (''Stardust Accelerator'', ''Reverse of Arcadia'', and ''Over the Nexus''): A trilogy of 5D based games on the DS. Notably the last one takes the time to make an original story instead of just copying the anime's (for the most part anyways, some events overlap very heavily with the anime's), taking a random filler arc and using it to form the main character's hometown and personal quest. All of this is presented on a full 3D map that's full of side-content, including an extensive post-game, especially in the later games. Also has a tiny racing minigame of acceptable quality, since it ''is'' Card Games on Motorcycles.
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