u/Additional-Print-845

OCD with Yu-Gi-Oh! cards

Don't mean to minimize the seriousness of a mental illness with this, but you guys get the point.

How do you feel about your YGO cards when it comes to rarities, arts, collection, sleeving, etc?

I've come to realize over months of playing the game that it causes profound distress to me not to have my cards on a certain way: playsets having different rarities or coming from different boosters. Different languages, having a certain art or Edition of printing...

I know I am not alone out here but I want to hear the story of other people. How they like their cards. How this affects them (or not). And what is your "ideal set of cards". This aint about collection only. I'm a person who plays competitively.

reddit.com
u/Additional-Print-845 — 4 days ago

Hi everyone, I've been testing out this deck online for the past two weeks or so and I'm planning to bring it to my locals tournament on Saturday.

Any specific YouTube videos or guides you would recommend to watch/read?

Any tips and tricks?

So far the deck feels absolutely solid and it's really fun to play but I've noticed you can ruin your endboard really easy if you make a mistake. Same with your interactions if you leave by mistake a body in the regular monster Zone.

Thank you!

reddit.com
u/Additional-Print-845 — 11 days ago

Hi! I've been playing the game for about 5 months now, and even though now I know how most mechanics of the game work, I would like to become if not a good, at least a better player.

I want to dedicate time to study and practice the game. If you could put together a step by step guide on how to git gud. What would you do? I'll set my example.

  1. Pick a deck (open to suggestions, I have a Primite Blue Eyes and a Sky Striker for now)

  2. Learning what the cards do

  3. Learning combos

  4. Practice on your own either with your cards or online

  5. Play games in locals or online

  6. Analyze your results and what you could have done better

  7. Watch videos of people playing the same deck against the decks you faced to understand the integrations

  8. Watch videos of how the decks you faced work and how to beat then

  9. Practice more

This is kind of what I have in mind to do starting soon. Open to suggestions of experienced players, or new players that have gone through the same as me and found a nice routine to git gud!

reddit.com
u/Additional-Print-845 — 18 days ago