Learned a lot from this, thank you. Had a long day training at a new job, was able to listen to this on the drive to and from training as well as during my lunch break. I just picked up the deck so watching these combo guides really speeds up the process since I won’t be able to test at locals too much.
I'm happy to hear it helped. The things mildly change in SUDA format but for the most part this is still accurate. The deck plays before into nibiru after SUDA
Not talking about Druiswurm and its ability to break boards alone, was criminal. Also like, you didn’t speak on crypter+sp endboard setups, I’m a bit disappointed.
I feel the druiswurm statement can apply to any deck, not just Maliss, in the current format. Druis does nothing extra over Mag or Baldrake for Maliss specifically. All 3 are good extenders but also pseudo hand traps thanks to how the format is.
As for the crypter+sp statement. Yea that's an end board that can be accomplished. One of many. The idea of this video was to be an introduction to the deck for people trying to learn to play or play against the deck. This video would have been a lot longer if I went over ever possible end board Maliss can produce. Sorry to disappoint though
At 38:28 you can't go into Splash Mage with S:P and Dot, because the Splash needs 2 Cyberse monsters. If you sequence it a little bit differently, you still get to the same endboard or you can end on Terrahertz with GWC-06 set and White Binder in GY. Given the opponent has no interuptions ofc.
Crazy enough I made the exact same mistake in my first guide. I don't know why cause I don't do that in live play. I think with different sequencing I get to the same end board though. Sorry about that
@ to be fair splash is something you want to use as an extender and not as a main play and we play it hoping we never use him. So for him I’d say it’s fine to forget stuff 😂
Apologize? That's every profile they do not know what they are talking about, just net decking...I can tell when someone just got lucky or they actually know what they are talking about. Your just willing to admit it. Net decking had killed yugioh. People are way to scared to explore on thier own.
Its funny youre saying people dont know where to interruot maliss but youre making it seem like its very easy to interrupt but saying the endboards arent even great
The end board are very good. The boards I showed in this video is just where singular main engine cards can get you. I even repeat several times that it's heavily based on the other cards in your hand. Which is why interrupting this deck is hard cause a good chunk of the deck is extension of the Maliss player does get hit with a nib or other interaction
Learned a lot from this, thank you. Had a long day training at a new job, was able to listen to this on the drive to and from training as well as during my lunch break. I just picked up the deck so watching these combo guides really speeds up the process since I won’t be able to test at locals too much.
I'm happy to hear it helped. The things mildly change in SUDA format but for the most part this is still accurate. The deck plays before into nibiru after SUDA
Not talking about Druiswurm and its ability to break boards alone, was criminal. Also like, you didn’t speak on crypter+sp endboard setups, I’m a bit disappointed.
I feel the druiswurm statement can apply to any deck, not just Maliss, in the current format. Druis does nothing extra over Mag or Baldrake for Maliss specifically. All 3 are good extenders but also pseudo hand traps thanks to how the format is.
As for the crypter+sp statement. Yea that's an end board that can be accomplished. One of many. The idea of this video was to be an introduction to the deck for people trying to learn to play or play against the deck. This video would have been a lot longer if I went over ever possible end board Maliss can produce. Sorry to disappoint though
At 38:28 you can't go into Splash Mage with S:P and Dot, because the Splash needs 2 Cyberse monsters. If you sequence it a little bit differently, you still get to the same endboard or you can end on Terrahertz with GWC-06 set and White Binder in GY. Given the opponent has no interuptions ofc.
Dang I literally made the same mistake in the first guide. Which is crazy cause I don't do this in live play.
Splash mage requires 2 cyberse monsters. So you cannot make it with SP 38:32
Crazy enough I made the exact same mistake in my first guide. I don't know why cause I don't do that in live play. I think with different sequencing I get to the same end board though. Sorry about that
@ to be fair splash is something you want to use as an extender and not as a main play and we play it hoping we never use him. So for him I’d say it’s fine to forget stuff 😂
@therosetheghost5637 I hate running splash but he really is just that "what if" card
Ngl sometimes I do that bc sp just looks like a cyberse also ip is a cyberse and those 2 just seem the same to me
Apologize? That's every profile they do not know what they are talking about, just net decking...I can tell when someone just got lucky or they actually know what they are talking about. Your just willing to admit it. Net decking had killed yugioh. People are way to scared to explore on thier own.
Its funny youre saying people dont know where to interruot maliss but youre making it seem like its very easy to interrupt but saying the endboards arent even great
The end board are very good. The boards I showed in this video is just where singular main engine cards can get you. I even repeat several times that it's heavily based on the other cards in your hand. Which is why interrupting this deck is hard cause a good chunk of the deck is extension of the Maliss player does get hit with a nib or other interaction
First