Why You Can't Win in Yu-Gi-Oh...

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • ** FOLLOW ON TWITCH ** 👉 bit.ly/PakTCGTV
    Today, I explain every reason you're not winning in Yu-Gi-Oh!
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Комментарии • 297

  • @dreji
    @dreji 8 месяцев назад +194

    and this is why Pak is quickly becoming my favorite yugituber bc he honestly gives his all to giving out knowledge on the game to up everyone’s skill level and the game standards

    • @Ezj9727
      @Ezj9727 8 месяцев назад +8

      Doing tricks on it my guy

    • @lament22
      @lament22 8 месяцев назад +10

      people riding pak so hard are so cringe lol

    • @redoctober67
      @redoctober67 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@lament22for real some people are over the top. I’m all for good information, but let’s not kid ourselves that there isn’t information he’s keeping to himself until it’s not exclusively relevant at the highest levels. Which is understandable when you regularly compete at those levels. But y’know, if I’m wrong about it here, then I’ll admit that and power to him there

    • @Xx3SPAZxX
      @Xx3SPAZxX 8 месяцев назад +12

      To the first 3 commenters. All the OP did was make an observation and give his opinion. Why is is that nobody can give an Oz of praise without being called a rider?? Yall are bogus and toxic for the game. Do better. Also I agree that Pak has become a really reliable source of competitive information.

    • @Ezj9727
      @Ezj9727 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@Xx3SPAZxX bro made a video saying to think about why you lost and you treat it as gospel. It’s not a difficult proposition to critically think in order to improve at something. Yet people act like he made a profound statement.
      This video was just 14min of rent being due, lmao, so he strung together a bunch of repeating, lackluster points.

  • @TeamSamuraiX1
    @TeamSamuraiX1 8 месяцев назад +19

    Im not winning cause my deck aint max rarity

    • @Paktcg
      @Paktcg  8 месяцев назад +2

      Your Vegas deck finna be maxed out then 😂😂

    • @tomasjoke1875
      @tomasjoke1875 2 месяца назад

      use hacks

  • @phreshboi7017
    @phreshboi7017 8 месяцев назад +57

    I want to also point out that whether you’re on duelingbook or at an event, there’s expectations on how fast you need to play which can be harsh on newer players. In that example you gave on ashing phantazmay, Ive seen players (myself included) simply forget or otherwise hold the ash for something else either due to time constraints, pressure to play/think faster, nerve etc which is a mistake you need to learn from. Thinking ahead about okay I have this ash in my hand and when my opponent plays i need to remember that this is an interaction I have, rather than reacting to their plays without thinking ahead which can lead to you losing the game.

    • @rocapbg9518
      @rocapbg9518 8 месяцев назад +6

      Something that's also helped me not forgetting my interactions is actually checking them. Go through your gy, banished zone and your opponents and look over all the cards to be able to keep track of everything. That's also why a lot of players on feature are constantly checking their backrow because it's easy to just forget about an interaction you have if you're not constantly reminding yourself of it

    • @bigpablo673
      @bigpablo673 8 месяцев назад +2

      As for pressure from your opponents over time, just take the time you need to win. They're the opponent and unless I know them personally I don't care how they feel about me taking time to think. I think it flusters some people aswell when you're not playing at the speed they expect you to and that can lead to them messing up.

    • @christianmccall4126
      @christianmccall4126 8 месяцев назад +3

      DB is fucking intimidating lol. In an event "sorry thinking one sec" is usually perceived better than online where people have the propensity to be a lot less kind.
      I stopped playing the game in 2014, got back in 2021. It's been a struggle cus there's so many cards I just don't know and have to have explained.

  • @grumpster6425
    @grumpster6425 8 месяцев назад +62

    I really like the deckbuilding portion of this video. At YCS london I lost out in day 2 to a mikanko player (pre new support) because they full combod and krystia locked me twice. At the time I thought to myself "I only made 1 misplay that entire match and it wouldn't have mattered, plus idk what his cards do because its mikanko libromancer whos prepared for that deck".
    Looking back after watching this video it's so clear how improvements could have been made. My deckbuilding was not prepared for any sort of rogue combo deck. I was on swordsoul, played 2 playsets of handtraps total (3 ash 3 imperm) and all of my board breakers were geared towards kashtira, nat runick, and melffy spright. My deck was not prepared for any sort of resilient combo strategy, even something like a branded or a labrynth I was relying on drawing a single 3-of when going 2nd. My deck was very much relying on playing vs only tier 1 decks, and hoping my technical play would outmatch anything I wasn't prepared for. Lo and behold, that wasn't a viable strategy
    I also realise that I wouldn't have been in the situation to lose out there had I not misplayed technically in my round 3, as I would have had an extra chance to win games.
    This video, and the channel as a whole, really helps me set my mindset to be "I am acquiring a new skill with each match that I play, whether it be noticing a new line, a new interaction with X rogue deck, or just remembering to think about a certain tech card in future". So, thanks Pak. It's really great to watch content like this and learn not how to play the game physically, but how to play the game mentally. It's the best YGO content out there for that, keep it up.

  • @valuabletips560
    @valuabletips560 7 месяцев назад +2

    I would say Patrick hoban's book is a good read, especially the deck building part, I think the ratios are really important. Also, understanding baselines of a game is really important to gauge whether a card is bad, average, good,like the average value for drawing a card is about 1000 lifepoints from heatsoul, or spell cards that adds 1000 stats by using that card, so if you see an in archetype card that gives better value than the baseline, it could be worthwhile to run that card

  • @TheStreetScientist
    @TheStreetScientist 8 месяцев назад +2

    One thing really important is to know every single deck in a format. I remember in HAT format(years ago) I played infernity. But I became really good at playing HAT, FAT, Mermail, Geargia, Madolche etc.. when you learn each deck, you know what’s common. It helps you prepare for matchups and see what space you have left for Rogue.

  • @solobugg5087
    @solobugg5087 8 месяцев назад +1

    I really look up to Pak as a player because I started playing around the end of 2021. What he's mentioning about learning the fundamentals is what I had to go through, too, and it goes to show that even if you're relatively new compared to everyone else, you can still perform well by putting in work rather than complaining about power creep and the meta all the time.

  • @depressedkermit5337
    @depressedkermit5337 8 месяцев назад +18

    Are you telling me that me that styling my hair like Yugi and wearing a BDSM collar was all for nothing 😭?

    • @mrbubbles6468
      @mrbubbles6468 7 месяцев назад +2

      I assume you did not do the bit where Yugi spent hours playing the game and crafting his deck?

  • @davidsantana6844
    @davidsantana6844 8 месяцев назад +2

    As a returning player the hardest thing for me was relearning the fundamentals all over again.

  • @AGwaspisboss
    @AGwaspisboss 8 месяцев назад +2

    I really appreciate this video because its what ive been trying to explain to my friends!

  • @Silas0808
    @Silas0808 8 месяцев назад

    This was a great video. I was playtesting Voiceless Voice and I reminded myself to your Video. I won and 2:0 my opponent and I could clearly say, that I had more knowledge about this deck. But after rewatching the replay I saw 2 mistakes I made, that would made a grindy game 2 a lot easier for me. To see the mistakes, be honest and learn from them is just an underrated skill. Thank you

  • @ProYugidad
    @ProYugidad 8 месяцев назад +2

    Easily the best Yugioh video I've seen in years. Thanks, Pak!

  • @Mooinator3000
    @Mooinator3000 8 месяцев назад +12

    I feel like I'm the opposite off of the first point, I just always assume that my wins are because my opponent misplayed and that it's impossible to be from my own performance, and my losses are only because I fucked up

    • @yunogasai5479
      @yunogasai5479 8 месяцев назад

      Same here man.. 😢

    • @liquidmetaldefender
      @liquidmetaldefender 8 месяцев назад

      It's important to identify your opponents mistakes too, though. It's a bit more difficult because it's a matter of perspective.

    • @jamesbrowne421
      @jamesbrowne421 8 месяцев назад +6

      If you win because your opponent misplayed, it means you were the better player in that game and deserved the win! Making less mistakes than your opponent is a perfectly valid way to win, just as much as making 200 IQ outplays, you should take pride in those wins as well.

  • @Leavememalone
    @Leavememalone 8 месяцев назад

    I’m a long time player that is now getting back into the game. We need more content like this because it sparks conversation.

  • @NikoAmii
    @NikoAmii 8 месяцев назад

    Love love loved this style of video&them. Would like to see more!

  • @kaorikind2
    @kaorikind2 8 месяцев назад +1

    So are we bringing back the inside the mind of PAK series to showcase some of that technical play?

  • @YGO_Crow
    @YGO_Crow 8 месяцев назад

    This feels like old pak content in the best way. Thanks for this🙏

  • @mosesnyper
    @mosesnyper 8 месяцев назад

    Glad to see the recent discussions on being a better player result in fresh content 🔥🔥🔥

  • @one.punchsmash1754
    @one.punchsmash1754 8 месяцев назад

    This year in summer I’ll have returned to the game for 2 years. I believe I have come a long way since I started with my Albaz structure decks lol. Slowly over time picking up good cards and learning more interactions. It does take time to become a good player. Also to me my hats off to those who don’t play Meta and win lol. It’s a time thing to make a player better. Regardless if it’s your control or not I think every player just needs time

  • @jeanpitre5789
    @jeanpitre5789 5 месяцев назад

    Accept that fact that no matter how good you are, there are always gonna be games where you draw all bricks and your one possible play was negated.

  • @pepegasleftnip
    @pepegasleftnip 8 месяцев назад +13

    Ill be sure to remember this while im getting ftk’d by shs after they played through 2 handtraps and a nibiru o7

    • @joseprojo975
      @joseprojo975 8 месяцев назад +5

      It’s not focusing on unwinnable games, it’s about finding the lines to win the winnable ones. And it took a lot of time for me to understand it btw

    • @DarkAuraLord
      @DarkAuraLord 8 месяцев назад

      @@joseprojo975 this is the very basics of playing aggro in MtG - Always play to your outs. It transfers well into pretty much any TCG or Archetype though. TCGs are variance and luck based by nature, there will always be those games where you'll essentially lose with no recourse, even if you play 100% optimally, but as you said, it's about understanding what you can control and making the best possible plays in that situation. It's a state of mind and a way of thinking about the game, and it takes time to fortify that skill because it can only be taught through experience. In other words, play the game with intention of becoming better, understand when you misplay and when you don't, and when in doubt ALWAYS assume you could have played better, because the chances are, you could have. I think just about anyone can improve at the game by looking at it through the lens of "what could I have done differently here that might have changed how the game went?"

  • @Abov3Avg
    @Abov3Avg 8 месяцев назад

    Love these types of videos. We need them

  • @Testosjerome
    @Testosjerome 7 месяцев назад +1

    5:07 does anyone have tips where I can learn all that? Chain Links, Turn Player Priority, and so on? Thank you!!

    • @jacobberke2965
      @jacobberke2965 16 дней назад

      Did you find out where?

    • @Testosjerome
      @Testosjerome 16 дней назад

      @@jacobberke2965 not really, couldn't find comprehensive high-quality tutorials on these topics

  • @metalmariomega
    @metalmariomega 8 месяцев назад +1

    The basics of what I think he's trying to point out in order to do better(and my takes on explaining them):
    1. UNDERSTAND HOW CARDS WORK. Not just yours, but everything you expect to see. This is how you learn where to disrupt and how to play around disruption.
    2. Build to BEAT the best deck, not to BE the best deck. Copying is okay to get started, but you need to know if there are better options for a given event considering what you expect to be played there.
    3. Find other people who are either good at the game, willing to let you borrow expensive cards, or both to hang out with. This is how you get practice with cards you otherwise won't have easy access to(that, and sims).
    4. Save the jank for casuals, in big events especially you need to prepare for what you expect to see/bring out consistently and build accordingly. And keep in mind that even local events can have strong competitive players, even if they're not using the best cards possible they might still have good plays for what they DO run so don't be afraid to take those events seriously as a learning experience.

  • @Brographa
    @Brographa 8 месяцев назад +1

    I buy Budget Decks,Play fair and don't Stuck on the Meta medness to buy Card for the price of a car.

  • @roltrat522
    @roltrat522 8 месяцев назад

    the cimo vids helped me, that comment on the link vid was real

  • @TheHopelesssDwarf
    @TheHopelesssDwarf 8 месяцев назад

    Great video, more like this please!

  • @mattsadventures206
    @mattsadventures206 8 месяцев назад

    Me drawing 5 bricks game 3 going first doesn't help

  • @MrGshinobi
    @MrGshinobi 8 месяцев назад

    This was great please do more

  • @aaronfromlv1552
    @aaronfromlv1552 8 месяцев назад +2

    Wrong. It's because im god's drunkest duelist... no respect for your skill unless you to slam beers between ycs matches... smh yall dueling on easy mode

  • @GurenBlanc
    @GurenBlanc 8 месяцев назад

    The best advice ever given by a pro player: “the difference from putting a card in your deck because of emotional attachment verse it being objectively good”

  • @torakandwolf6786
    @torakandwolf6786 6 месяцев назад

    It's because I always play Rogue, isn't it Pak? I should have known...

  • @DemisedDill
    @DemisedDill 8 месяцев назад

    PAK: Accountability.
    YGO Players: But he had ash every game for my glass cannon combo. Unlucky.

  • @nealoneal2147
    @nealoneal2147 8 месяцев назад

    Hey pak will you ever make Edison content?

  • @mosca6982
    @mosca6982 7 месяцев назад

    Grande ídolo 🐐🐐🐐

  • @TheDonJuan
    @TheDonJuan 8 месяцев назад

    Top tier video

  • @ilynatto
    @ilynatto 7 месяцев назад

    I fucking suck at Yu-Gi-Oh man i just want to win im so tired of fucking losing for years

  • @furobituro5582
    @furobituro5582 8 месяцев назад

    still 90% of the games i lose them because i get sacked

  • @NinjaXFiles
    @NinjaXFiles 8 месяцев назад +2

    Because Konami benefits metas on purpose and hate you for having creativity. They don't want you to have fun no matter what you try. It's the uncomfortable truth.

    • @e-tan3911
      @e-tan3911 7 месяцев назад

      Ummm... yeah this was a word salad that made 0 actual points. If you aren't having fun, don't play the game.

  • @varis2374
    @varis2374 8 месяцев назад +17

    He who does nothing makes no mistakes, he who makes no mistakes learns nothing…

    • @latiosexing362
      @latiosexing362 5 месяцев назад +1

      Top tier quote honestly as someone who has overcome the fear of loss.

  • @simplyjoshin3350
    @simplyjoshin3350 8 месяцев назад +8

    PART of why I became a Judge was to imrpove my technical play. To master the game itself not just a deck. Judging improved my play to the point where I got 3 premier event tops before switching to mono judge.

    • @chelseafcfanisy
      @chelseafcfanisy 8 месяцев назад

      How much did you get paid as a judge?

  • @raykirushiroyshi2752
    @raykirushiroyshi2752 8 месяцев назад +7

    6:17 regarding combos. I memorise them by creating mental checklists,"to get to that endboard piece i first need to get this,to get this i need that " so if i get interrupted i just look for the next best way to check the next checkmark,or pivot to another line. Idk if this makes any sense but i hope that it helped you if you read this,random person on the internet😊.

  • @loreandre
    @loreandre 8 месяцев назад +2

    Man, I'm supposed to learn things about Yu-Gi-Oh but I learned a couple of things I can apply to life in general
    Learn the fundamentals
    Get as much experience as possible
    Admit your mistakes and learn from it
    Be honest with yourself
    This should be titled "Why you're not winning in life"

  • @YamaDolll
    @YamaDolll 8 месяцев назад +11

    analyzing yourself is very important advice, i recommend it to everyone! for example during my 1st regional at the start of the month I performed decently well for deck i was forced to used ( my cards didn't arrived in time so i went with traptrix) and the 2nd round against floo was probably the best match I ever had, i felt like both me and my opponent played as well as we could and getting that draw in time felt really satisfying
    my opponent even said I was the best traptrix player he played against at the end which felt very satisfying!

    • @YamaDolll
      @YamaDolll 8 месяцев назад +2

      and yeah i'm still super disapointed that I didn't top the event but as unfortunate as the situation was in game 2 of round 8 (i was 4/2/1 at the time, my opponent got top 32 and his invite) (I opened all my copies of parallel exceed) that was on me for siding out the 3rd one and it's a mistake that'll stick with me going forward and I feel legit ALOT more confident towards the next one in march

  • @W_Sir_Morpheus
    @W_Sir_Morpheus 7 месяцев назад +1

    Feel like this is a mix of good info for a new player trying to get good, and also forgetting this game should just that a game, not boxing, sports, a degree lmao, its yugioh.....throw that favorite catd in that high in deck thats YOUR build thats suppose to be fun lol

  • @DebeliYuGiOh
    @DebeliYuGiOh 8 месяцев назад +2

    Bro how do i "learn to be good at the game and not just at the decks"? Only resource is videos about combos and deck lists there is no guide on how to get better at the game?
    How do i get better by playing more when i get smoked by better competition? How do i analyse and learn when i dont know if i could do something different and what should I have done?

    • @ginjusmingo
      @ginjusmingo 5 месяцев назад +1

      im surprised no one responded to your comment. just play the decks you are losing to and you will start to understand the advantage states and where to handtrap. dont get distressed because modern yugioh theory is only getting more complicated. but in time you will start to understand when and why you are losing

  • @ShewWoW
    @ShewWoW 8 месяцев назад +2

    In my friend group i’m known as the guy who loses to himself - always sequencing suboptimally or just doing a derpy play. This is hella inspo ty, would love more about this

  • @walterjule2110
    @walterjule2110 8 месяцев назад +1

    15 minutes of pak pretending yugioh isnt about how much money you put into it... smh my head

  • @RunRickyRun1991
    @RunRickyRun1991 8 месяцев назад +1

    This might be the most useless video of advice I've listened to lmao
    Like this was a whole lot of nothing

  • @versutus2699
    @versutus2699 8 месяцев назад +2

    Do you have any video discussing using the calculator for deckbuilding? I always hear pros disussing exact percentages but im confused how they determine what percentages they are looking for or satisfied with even if I know how to plug numbers into the program

  • @Ragoodtama
    @Ragoodtama 8 месяцев назад +3

    tbh there always room for improvement, whether in ygo aspects or in general. Thatt's why i watched you,josh, jesse, trif (not jockingly because he good with managing a good board), and anyone that could give me good insight. After playing this card game for 11+years i'm still feeling like a bozo, but listening to you improved me a lot and made a top at locals (ya ik not 1st place but i'll try it harder). so ty sooo much

  • @dpacula63
    @dpacula63 8 месяцев назад +9

    Why you’re not winning: you’re not rich.

    • @_egghead
      @_egghead 8 месяцев назад +1

      Even in db?

  • @chestnutmouse6823
    @chestnutmouse6823 8 месяцев назад +3

    I like Team Sam’s videos I just don’t like when he has videos saying TIER ZERO META DESTROYING BLUE EYES DECK! I fell for this when I first got into the game and saw other people at my locals think the same thing only for me and those players to play decks and think that because a RUclipsr said a deck is good then it’ll carry me to victory, lesson learned

  • @neusyns
    @neusyns 8 месяцев назад +3

    I returned after 15 years with MD and I can't tell you how many notebooks I filled learning combos and theorizing my lines based on certain opening hands and etc with adventure tenyi and pranks.
    And most people won't put in the hours of work doing that and I completely understand why. You have to be almost obsessed to commit to that level

  • @exxe2454
    @exxe2454 8 месяцев назад +1

    ? I'm confused I guess if your totally new you'd ask how to play link monsters but it's should just be clear it's a summoning method, no different than fusion or ritual if you've played the base game. Swarm Summoning ending with strong effect monsters turn one has been default for a while, it's literally just tribute summoning.

  • @gateguardian44
    @gateguardian44 8 месяцев назад +3

    Just reading the title, I needed to come here. I had a terrible year in 2023 of finishing out events (PAK helped in that, lol) and I feel like I'm past my prime in 21 years of this game so I need a reprisal.

  • @xeno1124
    @xeno1124 8 месяцев назад +24

    the video is like a free version of coaching
    it has everything u need to know, grind, get better at, to be better. He really is the goat

    • @Nelex5000
      @Nelex5000 8 месяцев назад +1

      It's free gaslighting.

    • @Cybertech134
      @Cybertech134 7 месяцев назад +1

      The "goat" doesn't complain about wide formats.

  • @pasqualelassandro7609
    @pasqualelassandro7609 8 месяцев назад +1

    Cause u need to know every deck, your deck, HAVE A META DECK and be prepared to spend over 1200 euros just to play competitive !!

  • @aerdna22
    @aerdna22 8 месяцев назад +4

    Very good point, I agree entirely, one of the most important aspects concerns the rulings, regarding this for a player in what way and where would you recommend training regarding rulings? Is there a document a video that follows a lineup and explains the various rulings in simple detail?

    • @mosesnyper
      @mosesnyper 8 месяцев назад +1

      No clue I only learn about them via discords or random YT videos 💀

  • @TheWitchBoi
    @TheWitchBoi 8 месяцев назад +4

    This video gained my sub. I've been playing again since 2016 and I agree, its a lot to take in these days! There is so much to learn. PAKs accomplishments show true dedication to learning and getting better, and he has great insight into the games competitive scene!

  • @jorblor6476
    @jorblor6476 8 месяцев назад +1

    because you didnt buy wanteds and bonfires

  • @taylernoise6942
    @taylernoise6942 8 месяцев назад +2

    Jesse Kotton has a great video on his channel, where he goes over the optimal ratios in deck building. He even shows you how to completely minimize the 'brickability' from a statistical point of view. It is worth checking out, and it changed the way I think about deck building a bit.

  • @ct1296
    @ct1296 8 месяцев назад +1

    A big thing I notice is people refusing to listen to math. People often base their ratios on best-case scenarios (“if I draw this one-of/mutli-card combo in this specific matchup it goes crazy”) or worst case scenarios (“if I play 3 of this card I might end up drawing them all together”), instead of running the numbers to see how likely they are to open a winning hand vs relevant matchups.
    So many lists are filled with one-ofs and two-ofs because they “don’t want to brick on multiples” - but people refuse to accept that if a format has 2-3 premiere non-engine options, you’re always better taking that 2% increased chance of drawing a dupe that is still good vs every deck for the 10% higher chance of seeing it at all. If you swap the third copy out for an inferior 1-of, you’re reducing the odds of an occurrence that statistically probably won’t even come up in a tournament, and you’re now drawing a card that is low-impact or matchup-dependant every 1/10ish games. Ask yourself why your tournament success hinges on not drawing that card in multiples - surely if you’ve evaluated the card/format correctly, the one live copy you’re able to activate should at least have a chance of compensating for the dead card in your hand?

  • @kuyagoldlink7563
    @kuyagoldlink7563 8 месяцев назад

    I'll answer this without watching 1 second of the video. You're not playing meta. Ex. I could not crack master 4 with ddd no matter what for MONTHS. I switched to shs and got master 1 without breaking a sweat in less than 1 week. Literally like 3 days.

  • @InstaDome
    @InstaDome 8 месяцев назад +3

    I will now win a ycs thank you Pak

  • @Ichigorojas13
    @Ichigorojas13 7 месяцев назад

    I know most of my YGO friends hate when I do this but for me I always compare my YGO experience with my FGC experience. I picked up YGO this year because my gf plays and so do my friends and I'm finding out all these things are so hard to learn but I remember back in 2010 learning SF4 and Tekken 6 and how it was rough for me. Now playing SF6 and T8, I have a better grasp of the game from that experience and that's what my friends and gf tell me it's like with YGO. You need experience to be able to react with situations and cards you're up against

  • @fjorddkcckkc3783
    @fjorddkcckkc3783 8 месяцев назад +1

    Pak you’re wrong, I’m literally him. He just like me fr. I am that guy.

  • @asdion
    @asdion 5 месяцев назад

    The deckbuilding cope is always so funny because it ignores the fundamental issue yugioh has which is asymmetric support practices, no amount of deckbuilding is going to help you compete with {insert flavor of the month T1/0 deck) if komoney didn't bless your preferred archetype with support capable of competing.
    But i agree, you have to be honest with yourself, No amount of skill will help someone who uses an archetype that is bad by design

  • @buttonedupreader6522
    @buttonedupreader6522 8 месяцев назад +12

    Went to my First YCS, this year in Bologna, meeting people you there Pak made it really special got talking to you in line for Pizza about your Labyrnth plays and you were super chill. Spent a few hours trading and talking about Mannadium and Tearlaments with Patrick Hoban as well, he traded me an Ulti big welcome to complete my playset and helped me build my side deck for the mega regional, I have to say everyone I met there was amazing.
    Your videos are always great, straight talking and have great advise, keep up the great content.

  • @apsamplifier
    @apsamplifier 8 месяцев назад +1

    Absolutely loved this perspective.

  • @dantheman2222
    @dantheman2222 2 месяца назад

    Honestly getting back into it this year after 10 years off hasnt been too hard for me, but this is cause I was topping locals at 12 y/o running my playground tech against ebay meta 🤣

  • @jasonwatson2334
    @jasonwatson2334 8 месяцев назад

    You are a brilliant mind Mr. Pak. Everything you have said is correct. You have proven it by your growth in the game. You are one of the best in the game. I think a lot of people talk about yugioh in comparison to when it was first introduced. I don’t think you can relate to it because you did not play then. I myself started playing in early 2005. I left the game then because I was very young and no control over finances to play. I came back in 2020. I loved coming back. Pak was one of the reasons I came back. The game seem to be so fun and fantastic to play. I stop playing in 2022. In my experience the people I met at locals were not good for my mental health. The players were very toxic to losses and not productive in helping people as a community for the game. So I left the physical game. I have a 6 day job so I don’t have much time to travel outside my general area often so quitting the physical had to be a choice. I will always love the game but people around you will dictate a lot about the fun you have in the game. It is not a one player game therefore this will always be a truth. I hope one day I get to come back to the physical game. With the game not good at inviting new players I fear it may have to be soon before the game dies out.

  • @gonzalogarcia312
    @gonzalogarcia312 8 месяцев назад

    I play Master Duel, and 90% of the time, it's because I lost because of Maxx C. If not , it's getting droll or shifter'd into the ground.

  • @Hynotama
    @Hynotama 7 месяцев назад

    Those are a lot of words just to say that the game is horribly unbalanced, the power creep is out of control and we reached a point where negation and preventing your opponent from playing is how one wins.

  • @prosamis
    @prosamis 7 месяцев назад

    Reasons why I don't win at yugioh: I don't play yugioh much
    (I also almost refuse to play any deck other than traptrix)

  • @oshanot3474
    @oshanot3474 7 месяцев назад

    I play decks played by secondary Characters so like. You could say im an NPC player (Lunalight enjoyer)

  • @kirishatsu222
    @kirishatsu222 5 месяцев назад

    6:00 "This game is not Solitaire"
    It IS a Solitaire if you're bricked and does not have any handtraps.

  • @bigpablo673
    @bigpablo673 8 месяцев назад +1

    If you wanna win more drop more money it's actually pretty pay to win in 2024. Of course most people will hit a wall when they play pros with the same 1000 dollar deck but if you know how to summon and buy the best deck in a format you will win locals and top 8 regionals

  • @FreddyHuang-hk7iz
    @FreddyHuang-hk7iz 7 месяцев назад

    I agree with all your points, however the one issue is how expensive some of the staples, and engine starter can be in this game not everyone could afford it. However that probably the fun part is finding that sleeper move that nobody can see it coming.

  • @Ben2k109
    @Ben2k109 8 месяцев назад +1

    Not the hype beast telling us to not be followers

  • @jonathan-6958
    @jonathan-6958 8 месяцев назад

    Because my budget is 45 dollars for yugioh. Thank you for coming to my Ted Talk.

  • @dabarker.y7465
    @dabarker.y7465 8 месяцев назад +1

    You just motivated the crap out of me lol

  • @duduvec5971
    @duduvec5971 8 месяцев назад +1

    Pak i think i realised something and would very much apreciate to hear your and nesh's thoughts on it.
    Maybe yugioh works more like a fighting game (in the strategy sense) and i would like to point out the similarities.
    1_ highly based on hidden interactions: spell speeds are comparatives to frame data and dodging targeted effects can be seen as a dragon punch move. Both games rely heavy on background knowledge not written in cards/basic tutorials.
    2_ the way we learn is the same ( searching combos online and replicate them and learn interactions/frame data with the comunity )
    3_ Same new player complains on meta (literally word for word) like: i lost because this meta deck/character appeared and i could do nothing just watch me getting combo'd.
    4_ yugioh decks have a similar strategy to fighting game characters: floodgate/grapplers profit from trying to make the other player not play as much as they can, mid range/shoto are good on grind game and combo but not opressive in both, combo/glass canon are more focused on comboing you to death or dying trying and sky stryker, sometimes runick could zoner type decks since they have control but not through floodgates.
    Maybe it would work to have them see the game with fighting game eyes rather than a normal card game so they have a better grasp on how it works.

  • @ConservativeCompass
    @ConservativeCompass 8 месяцев назад

    These lessons apply to everything in life, kids.

  • @Ziennde
    @Ziennde 7 месяцев назад

    for those willing to truly get better at the game by investing time in it, please share resources regarding the games mechanics intricacies 👌

  • @Hart_traH
    @Hart_traH 7 месяцев назад

    Very good video but I hate the title and thumbnail and they prevented me from wanting to watch this until now

  • @mikaela5938
    @mikaela5938 8 месяцев назад

    im just bad at drawing feather duster against trap decks ngl, better players just draw the outs

  • @AIRmax123456
    @AIRmax123456 8 месяцев назад

    because i dont wqnt to invest 600 euros in yugioh cards that gers banner after few months

  • @jeffcoesk8935
    @jeffcoesk8935 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thats where youre wrong pak, i am the HIMULATION.

  • @Fabysmally
    @Fabysmally 8 месяцев назад +6

    My problem isn't skill based anymore, its just trying to keep up with the new cards and trying to afford them, i still don't own a SP little knight.

    • @PartyMarty321
      @PartyMarty321 8 месяцев назад

      You could try topping locals in hopes you’ll get packs to pull those high dollar cards. If your issue isn’t skill based then you should be able to perform well and be able to at least have a chance pull something. That’s how I was able to get Wanted and a few other cards I’m able to trade at a really good value.

    • @Fabysmally
      @Fabysmally 8 месяцев назад

      @@PartyMarty321 your right, but also thats like gambling, and ive been playing the game for a decade and Had up and downs, and im just tired now.

  • @jamesarcygo
    @jamesarcygo 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great vid can apply even to retro formats and any era of yugioh!

  • @soulful5284
    @soulful5284 8 месяцев назад +1

    As somebody that started the game a year ago and somebody who is not a budget player but not 200+ player either, i have yet to see success in big events. This video was really helpful because even tho i know my decks pretty well by now. Making the correct play cant still be a struggle. Thanks again!

  • @Mydogatemycomment
    @Mydogatemycomment 7 месяцев назад

    Anytime i hear anyone talk about Yugioh being skill dependent i laugh.
    This is a shitty draw dependent game that is decided on the first and second turn. The player who draws better will win.
    Skill? Skill in yugioh is mindlessly doing the same combo to set up the same board and hoping your opponent has no hand trap.
    The reason you're losing in yugioh is because youre not drawing well enough or youre going second

    • @ZX70Y
      @ZX70Y 6 месяцев назад

      🤓

  • @rred1023
    @rred1023 8 месяцев назад +1

    I am HIMothy

  • @UTgohan
    @UTgohan 7 месяцев назад

    Cuz I always lose the die roll 🤔

  • @MegaKingsingh1
    @MegaKingsingh1 8 месяцев назад +1

    Maine thing for me.... lol I don't have the funds 😂😂

  • @BudgetGamingYGO
    @BudgetGamingYGO 8 месяцев назад +1

    I needed to hear this. Improvement mindset is definitely the only way to improve.

  • @tom11619
    @tom11619 7 месяцев назад

    Net deck but make it your own things you like.

  • @ItzDaiz
    @ItzDaiz 8 месяцев назад +1

    Keep going with this style of video man. Much needed for the community ❤

  • @chimeratcg07
    @chimeratcg07 7 месяцев назад

    because most players aren't sponsored like you are