This is probably the best and only tutorial which showcases OCG cards in the tutorial itself - kudos for that. As I often say, Duel Masters is probably the most well designed TCG of all time. Till date, all you need is your deck and an opponent with their deck to play the game - no tokens, counters, dice - no paraphernalia. A group of friends and I still play regularly, and I myself am also working on translating a lot of the cards to make English proxies to play with.
I really love the 'just deck, no accessories' aspect. It's like the Platonic ideal of how a tcg should be. It really says something that even now, there are tons of new tcgs being released using a DM-style engine, from One Piece to Lorcana. It's become THE standard of modern tcg design.
@@tcgacademia Agreed! It's a real pity that the game was discontinued in English, but I'm glad to see it thriving in Japan to this day with official distribution in select countries across SEA.
They already tried a revival with Kaijudo and a lot of the old cards came back, but unfortunately it was just as doomed as the original DM was. It didn't last more than a few years.
@@xshobuxAlmost everyone in Kaijudo’s community agreed that they completely mismanaged the release of that reboot. As Billy Brake said in one interview with House of Champs: « WOTC targeted the whole thing at younger children and they were very surprised when most people visiting their events were over 20 years old. » They just messed the reboot up fundamentally so it was destined to fail. What we would have needed was a proper Relaunch of Duel Masters. No need to remake the game as it has been solid ever since its release. Just relaunch it with bigger sets that have the original cards in them AND newer versions of the beloved cards with alternative artworks that they could also use in japan for promo events. That would be benefical to this game. Not a mismanaged reboot that failed to target the main audience for it.
@@lifequality looking back on this years later I strongly believe even a proper attempt at a DM revival would fail. It just doesn't hold the same type of popularity outside of Japan compared to other TCGs, so it likely would've suffered the same fate lasting for a few years and then fizzling out.
Man I miss Duel Masters soo much. Honestly thought this tcg was a fever dream since it kinda disappeared pretty fast but it made an impact on me as a kid and I really enjoyed the anime too. Wish it was popular in english as it was in japan
I agree with every word you just said right down to it feeling like a fever dream ... just recently for past 2 weeks I been in a hyper focus on trying to find a new tcg to play and I don't want to go back to starting from scratch with mtg I want something new that feels like magic .... and all I I keep coming up in my mind is I wish I could make then give duelmasters another shot in the US!
This seems a lot more straightforward but more elegant than Yugioh and Magic, no counting points, life system is meaningful, and your monsters double as your mana so you don't have to worry about drawing lead weights.
Elegant is a good way to put it. Combat is also an interesting twist on the usual formula - since creatures can't naturally block without a keyword, the game avoids most of mtg's problems with board stalls. And it's not just a pure aggro game, either - one interesting consequence of the shield system is that control-style decks will often avoid damaging the opponent at all until the very last turn, when they can clear all opposing shields in a single turn so the opponent isn't able to use the shields as they hit their hand.
@@rouviews1864 Because the defender decides where to assign blockers in MTG, you can often get into boards where neither player can attack - a simple example is one player has a 5/5 and the other has two 3/3s. They're stuck staring at each other until one player can pull ahead and break the stall.
Comments are good for the RUclips algorithm! Also, big fan of the theory series you've been making, they're a ton of help and interesting insight into mechanics that has been helpful in making my own.
The grand father of the life system (in some TCGs). There was various reasons people's eluded to it's discontinution in the states; didn't sell well, marketing via show or commercials didn't catch on, couldn't compete against the big 3, or even the same thing my friend told me when WOTC had Pokémon; they couldn't those players into MTG. Regardless glad there's an online community for it and it's still going to this day. Even if some of can't read Japanese cards. The only recent thing I've heard was a trademark renewal from some time ago, but not keeping my hopes up when it comes to WOTC. Regardless, I'm grateful for your video because learned new stuff.
What are u saying man , kids used to buy Duel master and pokemon cards like crazy here in Pakistan . I dont know why they stopped making those cards . They should hVe promoted it more becuze mostly people didnt know how to play they were just collecting cards here
I think DM's influence is greater than anyone could imagine, more so than any other game. I can say that my work couldn't be much further from Duel Masters than it is, but DM still had a major influence on me in terms of being a streamlined game. I think that is always a goal worth pursuing and you should always reflect on your work as to keep to that goal. Games shouldn't be frustrating or hard to get your head around, being easy to learn, pick up and play is desirable. Since day 1, I wanted to be just like DM in that regard as I hold DM itself to such a high esteem. One of my favorites and it's one of the few games from the past I get just as much enjoyment going back to.
I'm not the most knowledgeable historian of tcg history, particularly on the japanese side of things, which is why I hesitate to put too much on DM alone without full knowledge of what else was in the market at the time. That being said, every japanese tcg I've tried has at least one element I can trace back to DM, and as you point out, that's not even getting into the more abstract ideas it really pushed forward, like the polish of its gameplay rules, and its overall sense of pacing.
@@tcgacademia The other games with massive influence in the Japanese sphere are Monster Collector and Dimension Zero. I also have some suspicions the Bandai One Piece card game might be influential, but it's just speculation based on it's board layout and later games using very similar board layouts.
@@SGD_ToysDownUnder Moncolle is a game I've only recently started learning about, which has been really interesting, especially when you consider its clear influence on the early chapters of the yugioh manga. I've heard even less about Dimension Zero. I really love learning about the history of the tcg scene, but finding good content on the topic can be a bit of a hunt.
Yeah, but it's still essentially a copy of MTG with some different mechanics. So I don't think you can say this game has the greatest influence. Magic by far had the most influence on TCG's almost every single one is a copy of it.
Thank you! I'm glad this video especially came across well - the how-to-plays have been some of the trickier videos to format - I'm glad this one's worked out.
I love Duel Masters due to it fixing magic problem ( I tried but magic wasn't fun at all to me) so i went back to DM After that the closing of sale, i learn Japanese and up to the day still playing DM, recently start joining the big event like DMGP 1st 2023 it was a lot of fun with all kind of different deck The thing about DM standing out against the "big" 3 card game is that old cards like Faerie Life/Deadly Fighter Braid Claw is still valid and being use in deck.
Ever since duel masters died I lost interest in card games. It was always my favorite. I was hyped for kaijudo but I knew it would fail with the godawful cartoon tie in that made it a laughing stock. It was still very solid gameplay wise. I always maintain that the flow of this game was always amazing and the resource system is beautiful. Very good
It really sucks seeing a great game you're really invested in close down. It's great it's still chugging along in Japan, but it's really unfortunately it never stuck here. And yeah, Kaijudo felt somewhat like it was doomed from the start - the player confidence in it sticking around just wasn't there.
recently found my old DM cards and watched this to recall how to play. this is my favorite tcg of all time, bought some 20th anniversary jp packs too! I hope we can get a global release again soon 🙏 or even just an English translation of the mobile app!
Glad this was a useful refresher! Honestly, that's one of the reasons I'm making these - just so I can remember the rules of the various tcgs I have kicking around. It's all fun to pull out a random tcg to play, only the realize you forgot how the mulligan worked in that game specifically, or some other small detail. The decks I'm using here were also released for the 20th anniversary, and I was really impressed with how well they played. Not sure how competitive they are, but the gameplay between them is solid.
2 years ago people still had hope for an English Mobile Game, Nowadays people either play in one of the few surviving custom formats, Or simply play the mobile game without reading cards.
@@metroghost8428 well for a start there's obviously the standard legacy formats everyone immediately thinks of usually refered to as just TCG and OCG (which include DM-01 to DM-12 of the respective country) There's DM-13 which adds DM-13 to the mix, However DM-17 is widely accepted to be the intended legacy format as it seems this was originally intended to be the capstone set before the TCG would retire. Then there's the variants on the TCG format, Which were barrowed from MtG, called Pauper, Silverblack and Highlander, Which restrict you to Commons, common/uncommons and 1-of's respectively. There's also rules for Commander, However if you are a newer player this might be a bit overwhelming. There's Booster Count, Draft Masters, DM Progression (not to be confused with DMP) and Sealed, as the different draft formats. There's also Kajudo, Kajudo vs DM and Mix of the Duel Masters that make use of the reboot. Then finally there's DMP ND and DMP AD, which are the official Japanese mobile game format with and without set rotation respectively. And that's not even mentioning the 3+ player formats like Open Game and Two-headed Giant.
@@BramLastname Wow...that is wonderful..but i need some enlightenment since these seem to be a recent format..could you please tell me what exactly is the diffrence between DMP ND and DMB AD...? another one:are the 3+ formats a copycat form MTG or they have thier respective rules? where i can find trused resources on these great DM formats? many thanks to you man.
I loved the Duel Masters show as a kid but living in a farm town, nobody around me really cared much about card games. That said, Kaijudo came out after i graduated high school and is now my favorite card game. I still regularly upload Kaijudo content and have been considering doing a how to play Kaijudo video for a while but in all honesty, they could just watch this and it would be almost the exact same thing. I loved this video
Thanks, I'm glad you liked the video! And yeah, loving card games but not having anyone around to play with is rough. Glad you're still enjoying Kaijudo!
I love the game and I love the mechanics that has gotten from the other games like Digimon and Dragonball super and others that I want to try thank you for the video 👍👍
Can't do crazy combos like Yu-Gi-Oh or Magic. However, Duel Masters had the best core ruleset. I made some fake cards in an attempt to migrate such a play style to MTG. If anyone is interested I can send those cards in and explain. I also have some life defining anecdotes relating to Duel Masters. Aparently, a very similar ruleset as DM lives on through the new Digimon TCG
@@metroghost8428 Essentially, I kind of brought DUEL Masters into my school as a kid. Making it popular. One of the last memories with my grandfather is that one day he simply decided to buy me a kajillion cards from the newest set at the time. I had a ridiculous collection for a kid, and the strongest and coolest cards I knew of. As the craze continued, I realized one of my colleagues had a game I had lost, Golden Sun the Lost Age. It was my favorite game at the time, and I had lost it at school, and that guy had the exact same savefile as me! Essencially, he wouldn'y give it back just because I tolf him so. Because DM was popular at the time, kids saw them as really valuable. I didn't want to trade the unique cards my grandpa bought me, however, I had so many cards and the game was so popular at the time that I simply put together as many repeated commons and uncommons I had and he ended up agreeing to trade with me! Tadam I got my favorite game back, and I actually got to finish it this time. It fostered a huge love for JRPGs. I remember around middle school I was extremely depressed and the one thing keeping me going (stupid) was the release of the third Golden Sun game. At the time I had been wating 7 years, an eternity for a kid, and I was hoping it was going to provide the same sense of wonder The Lost Age did. It didn't. In fact it was extremely disapointing. It only depressed me more if anything. It is ridiculous to place such value in these things. However, around at the same time, the english version of Chrono Trigger came out in Europe. Knowing it was a JRPG classic, and being disapointed by Golden SUn Dark Dawn, I gave it a try. It became my favorite game of all time, still to this day. It filled me with hope and creativity I haven't had before. And in the game of determinism and fate, themes in the game itself, I link that to the spontaneous act of my grandfather, who had passed away shortly after. To give me all those Duel Masters cards. I dream to find a way to migrate the best of Duel Master's ruleset to Magic. I made 2 cards which attempt to do that, and inspire a new playstyle or mode. How many of us got pent up with genuine friends due to the frustration of its terrible RNG=Playing the Damn Game at All system of lands? How many tournaments need to be determined by a guy who drew too many or too few lands? Such a flawed core aspect... which Duel Masters fixed and made even the most basic of games fun. That is what I hope a live game like Magic to have, to inherit the best of a dead one. To learn from it and make it better. Both are WIzards games, designed by the same people, however it is likely a pipedream. Unless a bunch of people start playing in an imaginary ruleset out of the blue to the point Wizards cannot ignore its popularity,
duel masters is my childhood card game. never played yugioh or magic but every kid on the block would be playing duel masters. i really miss it so much and is sad to see how hard it is to get my hands on them again. if only i didnt lose them when i moved TT
Recently replayed the game on my PS2, it honestly feels kinda like a middle ground between Magic and Wixoss. Wish this tcg did better outside Japan....
Yeah - at least it's still doing well in Japan. Playing the game is really interesting because it really does feel like a 'missing link' between older tcgs and newer tcgs.
Apparently it did surprisingly well in Germany and Finland, The two countries who apparently still host events for Duel Masters players. But WotC lost too much money on promotions outside of Japan (mostly in the USA, because they kinda forgot people could easily paint the similarities between their products, MtG and DM, in a bad light.) To the point that they actually pulled the plug months before the full trial run was over. Which can also be seen in the set releases, Since the Japanese actually got more sets than other countries for the second half of the trial run, Despite all sets up to that point being identical in all countries.
Appreciate the video, love the fact that every year we get to see more and more videos on DM, hopefully one day we’ll get DM back or everyone learn Japanese and upload videos to English and Japanese audiences 😂 💀
i always liked duel masters here in the us i didn't know it only ran 2 years though. i never got into the pokemon tcg but i played yugioh primarily and some mtg. i still have all the cards i believe
I actually just dug out my old cards. I had a small box full of them and I found when I was a kid I'd made a deck for each color. I checked them out and played them against each other and I think my biggest takeaway was that I had such a fundamentally incorrect understanding of how decks were made but it was fun rebuilding them now.
the thing i like about it is they are really simple and idont have to do a lot of maths, and over complicated effect. i really wish one day they make english version of it again.
It's a really good system! I like the general base rules more than Magic, but it keeps Magic's good sense of streamlining card effects with keywords. With how long the game's gone on in Japan I'm not sure how they could release it here at this point, but who knows? I though there was no way Wixoss made its way here, so maybe we'll get lucky and DM will get another shot?
This is my first ever TCG lol. Nowadays i mainly plays Magic but DM was the one introduce me to Magic. Back then the most bonker card in our playgroup was Deathliger , Lion of Chaos and Explosive Fighter Ucarn!
Oh man I used to watch the anime and bought a ton of cards only for it to disappear almost instantly. Made me wonder if it was all just a fever dream for quite a few years later. Underrated TCG.
Really love the shield mechanic as life and the spells themselves being the mana resource. It allows for more decisionmaking compared to magic where you're dependent on your land count or where games just give you the mana hearthstone/shadowverse/runeterra just so the game is slowed. I think if they brought this game back with an online client, it would definitely do well. The only card games left that have an anime aesthetic are shadowverse/yugioh/digimon and it could definitely find a core audience since shadowverse is waning, modern yugioh mechanics are too crazy, and digimon for some reason doesn't want to make an online client.
It's a really good resource system! There's actually a surprising number of weeb tcgs alive at the moment in english - One Piece, Weiss Schwarz and Vanguard, Wixoss, Battle Spirits Saga, Dragonball Super. Although you're definitely right about the lack of online clients - it woud be really nice to have some more options there, and I think bringing over DM that way could really work!
Is it just me or does anyone else think Duel Masters is getting so much love and people are begging for it when at the moment it is at a bad spot with the Gatcha system?
DM has been a game I've wanted to try for ages now. I have heard bad things about gatcha, and it is kind of funny this particular timing is when I finally get around to trying it.
Gacharange block ended ages ago (even when taking into account the age of this comment), and they pretty much recognise its issues (ahem mizzail and other easy ways of spamming it) and nuked the mechanic with means of floodgates like USA brella. It's a lot more tolerable of a mechanic now
@@Artster900 I hope so since the idea of intense summoning is a dangerous thing when it comes at nearly no pressure. Yu-Gi-Oh comes to mind with this...a lot.
I got into duel masters as a kid, unfortunately nobody played it and I was not sociable. However it did get me into MtG later on as it did in fact have a player base and much more complex rules. Sad it didn't take off outside Japan. Ironically, I did not think the way MtG handles mana is at all good, there was a great balance between simplicity of duelmasters, the rules made it very easy to learn.
Just hoping for its comeback with original set with proper Starter Decks for newbie along with this era of a lot of new TCG imports like Battle Spirits, Digimon, One Piece
That would be really great! Not sure of the odds of it happening since the card pool is so deep at this point, but with all the TCGs crossing over lately, who knows?
Chronologically it's about half-way, too. It's a weird feeling, half the time it feels like you're playing mtg, and the other half it feels like you're playing a much more recent tcg - it really feels like discovering a missing link in the evolution of tcg design.
So for those who don't know, this game was intended by WotC to be a "stepping stone" from games likes Pokémon tcg and Wixoss to MTG, and due to the poor animation that was released to help promote the game (and the constant rumours of being a rip off and overlooking of similar games at the time); the game never really took off outside of Japan
I honestly think the name of the game itself did some damage. The yugioh tcg is called 'Duel Monsters' in the anime, and calling your weeb game that's trying to tap the same audience 'Duel Masters' feels a little too obvious. The games themselves are worlds apart, but that doesn't really change the first impressions of someone who's just window shopping and not delving too deeply into the gameplay.
@@tcgacademia I agree. Its a shame it was presented in such a lazy fashion as near everyone I know who knows about the game remembers it fondly and enjoyed playing it... Who knows, maybe one day it might make a comeback, but that's just wishful thinking on my part haha
Nice video, really helpful. Why would the last creature break 3 shields if it was a double breaker? when you get certain amount of attack power you break more shields?
The last creature had 'Powered Breaker', which is like double breaker except it specifically scales based on unit power (breaks 1 extra shield per 6000 power). Glad you found the video helpful!
And no need to worry, the tempo of playing this game is not slow as it was, as almost all each Civilizations capable of spamming cards for now. Even a player can literally win only in Turn 3 (since this game need resource to use cards, and it's very few powerful cards can be used with 1 mana card), either by totally rushing to opponent or by doing some combos
I played Duel Masters as a kid when it first came out and I liked the cards and battle system. (Beat down Yugioh was really slow at the time, so it felt faster) I remember seeing Kaijudo as I got older, but didn't realize it was a rebrand. Does that mean the cards are compatible with each other? I was thinking about picking this game up since it's big in Japan and I need a fun way to practice Japanese
I haven't tried it, but Kaijudo very subtly changes a few rules, just enough to make it so the two systems aren't really cross-compatible. Duel Masters is a good way to get comfortable with Japanese, though! Since it's aimed at a younger audience, it has furigana to help you figure out what any tricky kanji say - by the time I was recording this video, I didn't need translation sheets since the written Japanese was so straightforward and painless.
How can i look for these type of cards, when i look for japanese duel masters i still get the old template card just with japanese text. These new cards look amazing
I vaguely remember seeing Duel Masters cards as a child and watching the anime so I thought I'd revisit some existing Japanese TCGs today. Duel Masters sticks out as being the most refined. What we knew Yugioh as is completely destroyed with its modern-day powercreep, Pokemon is annoyingly slow and requires micromanagement with counters and tokens, and MTG bricks half the time at the start or down-the-line due to not being able to draw and play the right mana. None of these problems exist in Duel Masters so its such a shame to see it disappear in the west.
It's a really well-designed game. It was really interesting playing it years after hearing about it - even the weird stuff like not being able to block without a keyword ends up working really well in gameplay.
Nice guide. Would you do more about different type of cards and keywords? I remember seeing some cards that can be put together like Maximum cards in Rush Duel.
I'm definitely interested in exploring Duel Masters more, but I've also got a pretty big list of other video ideas, so it might be a while before I can get to it. It's definitely a game I want to explore more, though!
I'm looking to make my own card game similar to this but something more simple for the wife who's never played these kinds of games. In your opinion and experience what's more important? Focusing on killing monsters or ignoring them and taking out shields? Or is the strategy to win finding the balance of both?
There's some balancing, but it mostly depends on your deck. Some decks just want to rush damage and target shields as much as possible. But damaging shields early in the game adds more cards to your opponent's hand. Other decks try and avoid dealing damage - they try to destroy all shields in one turn, to stop the opponent from being able to use their shield cards. These strategies tend to attack the opponent's creatures much more aggressively. Have fun making your game - DM is a really solid place to look for inspiration!
Unless I've made a mistake somewhere else, the reason Moel Mohitch didn't tap was because its ability was causing the battle. Attacking an opponent's creature during the battle phase still causes your creature to tap.
I want to get into this game, but it's so unfortunate that the Japanese GBA games and the Japanese PS2 game haven't beem translated. I wish passionate Japanese-speaking gamer(s) would help us appreciate Duel Masters by translating the games!
I used to love this game as a kid. I still have some of my cards. These new cards though are extremely anime. Not that i dont like anime but the artwork for the cards doesnt hold a candle to the original release. It was a mix between MTG with some japanese influence. Its not weird that the art shifted for a japanese market. But even if i wanted to get my hands on cards it'd be hard for me to get into a game with angry glover as a card.
I don't mind the new art, but the early art did a really good job of designing just the right level of detail for the size of the card - it wasn't too simplistic or too busy.
Ooh, this actually looks like something I would want to play (not a fan of the high power numbers though). Reminds me of TES Legends, except it is offline an possibly even more refined? Let's see if I can give it a go somewhere online...
Yeah - if it only failed once I could see them trying again, but since it's failed twice, I think there's really no chance of it making its way back over to english at this point. Unfortunately.
I definitely prefer it. I think it's fine to lose a game to bad draws - that's just part of shuffled card games. But not being able to play at all because of bad draws feels like a significant design miss.
Does a creatures health reduce when I attack it or does it reset every round? For instance I attack a 3000 health blocker with a 1000 health attack does the blocker become 2000?
Pretty sure I made an error in this video mentioning damage - you just compare who has the higher number, no damage is exchanged. A few games do mark damage with only power numbers, so I think I got a bit confused here. But yeah, no damage, it's closer to yugioh's combat where you just compare numbers.
Where can I play DM digitally? I tried looking for it so hard and unfortunately only got the older games from the consoles.. Any platform that supports modern DM is appreciated! Preferably English but it's okay if it's Japanese too
No idea, unfortunately. I know there's some kind of DM Discord out there, which theoretically plays games? My experience with DM has been fully paper based, except for printing translation sheets based on the wiki.
There's a handful of simulators that allow you to play Duel Masters manually, Octgn and Tabletop Simulator come to mind, But Duel Masters Plays has AI battles, online ladder, online events and set releases and rotation (though everything under All Division doesn't use set rotation, so you can ignore set rotation if you want to.) The main downsides are that you have to build your collection and everything is in Japanse. (Tho you get a bunch of free packs when you make an account and the starter decks, while pretty bad, are strong enough to beat all 15 fights in episode 1, you just need to get the hang of the game.) Currently the Quintessential Quintuplets event just ended, the ladder reset and draft event is back.
DM has a fairly active wiki - I just copy-paste the translations into a single-page table, print it, and use that for reference. It works well enough as long as there aren't too many unique cards in the deck.
Vampire the Eternal Struggle did away with resource (land) cards in favour of something better and Battletech had “cards as life” too, both in the 90’s. I wonder if the Japanese were looking back at the US innovations?
Definitely is interesting - on the one hand, it would make sense for TCG fans to look into a ton of different TCGs to see what they do differently, but on the other, the language barrier and product access were much more difficult to overcome before online ordering and fan wikis were common.
they really need to bring this game back its like all the rst its getting to the point trying to complet the pass i remember a yugioh link site was amazing and free can use all cards till a 3ed party got it shut down and magic got boaring to like need something new
I like the game,but I think it’s has core design problem,where game marketed as “play cool big creatures” and cuz of that we have a lot spells which cheat them out,creatures themselves being easy to cheat out or people just running green in almost every deck,but overall fun game due to its simplicity and some insane mechanics(like Dormageddon). I wonder,can you make video about Dimension 0 TCG?
The 'big ace monster' vs 'army' divide of card game flavour is interesting, possibly worth an entire video later. Definitely not surprised to hear DM leans more the to the 'big monster' side. And Dimension 0 is definitely a game I'm interested in, but is realistically quite a ways away from me getting around to playing. It's on my list, though!
@@tcgacademia to me “big ace monsters” is a bit problematic design,because it’s makes one color(green) superior than others and it’s also can make game snowballish(thx to cards which can cheat stuff out),like for 5 mana you can destroy a creature,but also for 5 mana you can make big board or summon big creature which locks down opponent or just cards which instantly kills opp even before you get 5 mana.
I've heard that from a surprising number of people. The number of folks still holding onto their cards decades later really speaks to just how good this game was/is.
I used to play this when I was really young. Looking back this really is a very streamlined and dumbed down Magic the Gathering. If I want to get my card game fix I'll stick to Yugioh and Magic. Still love the art of the cards themselves though.
I think dumbed down is a bit harsh - it's a common mistake I see a lot of mtg and yugioh players that assume simplified rules means simplified decision-making. Personally I prefer more streamlined games, but I definitely understand why some prefer Magic and yugioh's more open interaction.
Can someone with connections or with multi million dollar company bring this game back into TCG so people can play this game again globally to have fun and earn money like what yugioh doin nowadays
@@tcgacademia to explain my analogy, Tekken surpasses Virtua Fighter about almost everything(Marketing, Presentation, Story, Characters, easy to understand gameplay) but when it comes to the depth of the game, Virtua Fighter's technicality surpasses Tekken, it is just, the marketing of that game did not go well, that's why only few people knows how awesome the game is. Additionaly, Virtua Fighter is more popular in Japan than Tekken, but Tekken is more popular outside Japan
Not sure where I'd rank them relative to each other, but I do really like Vanguard as well, for a lot of the same reason I like DM - it's just very well designed on a mechanical level.
Wonder how playable the game is just with the original English card pool (base release and 10 boosters sets)? I assume the more modern Japanese cards are more creative and intricate, but not sure if the game's elegant design still shines through with the more basic original cards. Also, not sure if Kaijudo is literally the same gameplay or not... But something about the aesthetic is far inferior. Finally, not sure if Duel Masters still has a place or have its successors (like that Build Divide game you highlighted as adapting much of DM's design) just surpassed it...
I know there's still a pretty active fan community out there using just the english cards, so it sounds like they offer plenty of depth. And I've not seen the most recent sales figures, but DM is absolutely still huge in Japan. In some ways its a lot like mtg - there have been plenty of games released inspired by it, with rules that are very similar, but the original just has so much momentum behind it, it still holds the top spot.
@Maldito Mur I always really love seeing how fans can keep games alive long after they've stopped receiving support. It's awesome the english DM fanbase is still going!
Wizards of the coast is a death knell to any game they touch and magic is only alive due to nostalgia lets be honest, theyve made nothing but bad decisions for the past decade but for some reason nostalgia keeps people playing. If another conpany got ahold of Duel Masters properly in the west i know itd do way better now considering its main competition (Yu-Gi-Oh) is in a horrible state right now and players are desperately looking for anything similar or adjacent, but vanguard the only other similar game is also near death.
i agree duel masters is definitely the easiest to learn yugioh has the problem of it's 100% did you draw enough starters can you play around the opponents it all becomes very stressful. pokemon is literally 100% luck based it's did you draw the right trainer
Thanks, I appreciate when viewers correct my misses. I definitely let a few more mistakes than usual slip into this one (like the notes on damage that show up in the video - I somehow confused DM's power comparison with Z/X's turn-limited damage).
Both games are dead (in English, which is the only language Kaijudo is really a thing), so realistically I don't think anyone will stop you. That being said, it was never intended for the two games to be mixed. I didn't dive super-deep into Kaijudo, but the gameplay has a few tweaks (you can only have 3 of the same card in your deck, as opposed to 4 in DM, and mana works slightly differently), and several cards were rebalanced with the benefit of hindsight. So even ignoring the different card backs, mixing the two might be a bit awkward.
This is probably the best and only tutorial which showcases OCG cards in the tutorial itself - kudos for that.
As I often say, Duel Masters is probably the most well designed TCG of all time. Till date, all you need is your deck and an opponent with their deck to play the game - no tokens, counters, dice - no paraphernalia.
A group of friends and I still play regularly, and I myself am also working on translating a lot of the cards to make English proxies to play with.
I really love the 'just deck, no accessories' aspect. It's like the Platonic ideal of how a tcg should be. It really says something that even now, there are tons of new tcgs being released using a DM-style engine, from One Piece to Lorcana. It's become THE standard of modern tcg design.
@@tcgacademia Agreed! It's a real pity that the game was discontinued in English, but I'm glad to see it thriving in Japan to this day with official distribution in select countries across SEA.
I would love to see revival of this game with all the old cards . This game was one hell of strategic game among our friends .
I want to this game to come back to TCG so we all can play it globally this is such a good game and nostalgic for me
They already tried a revival with Kaijudo and a lot of the old cards came back, but unfortunately it was just as doomed as the original DM was. It didn't last more than a few years.
@@xshobuxAlmost everyone in Kaijudo’s community agreed that they completely mismanaged the release of that reboot. As Billy Brake said in one interview with House of Champs: « WOTC targeted the whole thing at younger children and they were very surprised when most people visiting their events were over 20 years old. »
They just messed the reboot up fundamentally so it was destined to fail.
What we would have needed was a proper Relaunch of Duel Masters. No need to remake the game as it has been solid ever since its release. Just relaunch it with bigger sets that have the original cards in them AND newer versions of the beloved cards with alternative artworks that they could also use in japan for promo events.
That would be benefical to this game. Not a mismanaged reboot that failed to target the main audience for it.
@@lifequality looking back on this years later I strongly believe even a proper attempt at a DM revival would fail. It just doesn't hold the same type of popularity outside of Japan compared to other TCGs, so it likely would've suffered the same fate lasting for a few years and then fizzling out.
Man I miss Duel Masters soo much. Honestly thought this tcg was a fever dream since it kinda disappeared pretty fast but it made an impact on me as a kid and I really enjoyed the anime too. Wish it was popular in english as it was in japan
There's definitely some alternate reality out there where DM thrives and takes over the EN market. Not this timeline, though :(
I agree with every word you just said right down to it feeling like a fever dream ... just recently for past 2 weeks I been in a hyper focus on trying to find a new tcg to play and I don't want to go back to starting from scratch with mtg I want something new that feels like magic .... and all I I keep coming up in my mind is I wish I could make then give duelmasters another shot in the US!
the ps2 game is still the best card game based game i've ever played
I loved Duel Masters so much and still do. Wish it was easier to get my hands on more sealed product.
A game that deserved so much better, fun to play.
This seems a lot more straightforward but more elegant than Yugioh and Magic, no counting points, life system is meaningful, and your monsters double as your mana so you don't have to worry about drawing lead weights.
Elegant is a good way to put it. Combat is also an interesting twist on the usual formula - since creatures can't naturally block without a keyword, the game avoids most of mtg's problems with board stalls. And it's not just a pure aggro game, either - one interesting consequence of the shield system is that control-style decks will often avoid damaging the opponent at all until the very last turn, when they can clear all opposing shields in a single turn so the opponent isn't able to use the shields as they hit their hand.
@@tcgacademia What do you mean by Magic's board stalls?
@@rouviews1864 Because the defender decides where to assign blockers in MTG, you can often get into boards where neither player can attack - a simple example is one player has a 5/5 and the other has two 3/3s. They're stuck staring at each other until one player can pull ahead and break the stall.
its way better than magic
Comments are good for the RUclips algorithm!
Also, big fan of the theory series you've been making, they're a ton of help and interesting insight into mechanics that has been helpful in making my own.
That's awesome to hear! I'm always glad to hear when these videos are interesting to people as they work on designing their own games,
The grand father of the life system (in some TCGs).
There was various reasons people's eluded to it's discontinution in the states; didn't sell well, marketing via show or commercials didn't catch on, couldn't compete against the big 3, or even the same thing my friend told me when WOTC had Pokémon; they couldn't those players into MTG.
Regardless glad there's an online community for it and it's still going to this day. Even if some of can't read Japanese cards.
The only recent thing I've heard was a trademark renewal from some time ago, but not keeping my hopes up when it comes to WOTC.
Regardless, I'm grateful for your video because learned new stuff.
This was one of my favorites next to Yugioh back in the day. I still have all of my cards too, shame it went nowhere outside of Japan.
What are u saying man , kids used to buy Duel master and pokemon cards like crazy here in Pakistan . I dont know why they stopped making those cards . They should hVe promoted it more becuze mostly people didnt know how to play they were just collecting cards here
I think DM's influence is greater than anyone could imagine, more so than any other game. I can say that my work couldn't be much further from Duel Masters than it is, but DM still had a major influence on me in terms of being a streamlined game. I think that is always a goal worth pursuing and you should always reflect on your work as to keep to that goal. Games shouldn't be frustrating or hard to get your head around, being easy to learn, pick up and play is desirable. Since day 1, I wanted to be just like DM in that regard as I hold DM itself to such a high esteem. One of my favorites and it's one of the few games from the past I get just as much enjoyment going back to.
I'm not the most knowledgeable historian of tcg history, particularly on the japanese side of things, which is why I hesitate to put too much on DM alone without full knowledge of what else was in the market at the time. That being said, every japanese tcg I've tried has at least one element I can trace back to DM, and as you point out, that's not even getting into the more abstract ideas it really pushed forward, like the polish of its gameplay rules, and its overall sense of pacing.
@@tcgacademia The other games with massive influence in the Japanese sphere are Monster Collector and Dimension Zero. I also have some suspicions the Bandai One Piece card game might be influential, but it's just speculation based on it's board layout and later games using very similar board layouts.
@@SGD_ToysDownUnder Moncolle is a game I've only recently started learning about, which has been really interesting, especially when you consider its clear influence on the early chapters of the yugioh manga. I've heard even less about Dimension Zero. I really love learning about the history of the tcg scene, but finding good content on the topic can be a bit of a hunt.
Yeah, but it's still essentially a copy of MTG with some different mechanics. So I don't think you can say this game has the greatest influence. Magic by far had the most influence on TCG's almost every single one is a copy of it.
Thank you, it's really cool to hear the history of these mechanics and the impact they've had on other cars games
Thank you! It was really cool playing this game and realizing just how much of its DNA is still in modern tcgs!
Man I remember Duel Masters. I remember I had the starter deck and used to watch the show too. I never played the game but I did love the show.
Great vid, very informative. Tcg design is one of my favorite topics, you cover it very very well thank you.
Thank you! I'm glad this video especially came across well - the how-to-plays have been some of the trickier videos to format - I'm glad this one's worked out.
I love Duel Masters due to it fixing magic problem ( I tried but magic wasn't fun at all to me) so i went back to DM
After that the closing of sale, i learn Japanese and up to the day still playing DM, recently start joining the big event like DMGP 1st 2023 it was a lot of fun with all kind of different deck
The thing about DM standing out against the "big" 3 card game is that old cards like Faerie Life/Deadly Fighter Braid Claw is still valid and being use in deck.
It's awesome you're still playing! Duel Masters is definitely a special game, I can understand why it's so popular.
Ever since duel masters died I lost interest in card games. It was always my favorite. I was hyped for kaijudo but I knew it would fail with the godawful cartoon tie in that made it a laughing stock. It was still very solid gameplay wise. I always maintain that the flow of this game was always amazing and the resource system is beautiful. Very good
It really sucks seeing a great game you're really invested in close down. It's great it's still chugging along in Japan, but it's really unfortunately it never stuck here. And yeah, Kaijudo felt somewhat like it was doomed from the start - the player confidence in it sticking around just wasn't there.
@@tcgacademia I am in Japan. And here DM is probably the 3rd or maybe 4th most played game behind Pokémon, Vanguard, and Magic
There is more out there than just TCGs / CCGs (Magic, Pokemon, Duel Masters, Yugioh). Modern board games and boxed card games have gotten much better.
recently found my old DM cards and watched this to recall how to play. this is my favorite tcg of all time, bought some 20th anniversary jp packs too!
I hope we can get a global release again soon 🙏 or even just an English translation of the mobile app!
Glad this was a useful refresher! Honestly, that's one of the reasons I'm making these - just so I can remember the rules of the various tcgs I have kicking around. It's all fun to pull out a random tcg to play, only the realize you forgot how the mulligan worked in that game specifically, or some other small detail. The decks I'm using here were also released for the 20th anniversary, and I was really impressed with how well they played. Not sure how competitive they are, but the gameplay between them is solid.
2 years ago people still had hope for an English Mobile Game,
Nowadays people either play in one of the few surviving custom formats,
Or simply play the mobile game without reading cards.
@@BramLastname hey there... can you te me what exactly are the "custom surviving formats"?
please explain.
@@metroghost8428 well for a start there's obviously the standard legacy formats everyone immediately thinks of usually refered to as just TCG and OCG (which include DM-01 to DM-12 of the respective country)
There's DM-13 which adds DM-13 to the mix,
However DM-17 is widely accepted to be the intended legacy format as it seems this was originally intended to be the capstone set before the TCG would retire.
Then there's the variants on the TCG format,
Which were barrowed from MtG, called Pauper, Silverblack and Highlander,
Which restrict you to Commons, common/uncommons and 1-of's respectively.
There's also rules for Commander,
However if you are a newer player this might be a bit overwhelming.
There's Booster Count, Draft Masters, DM Progression (not to be confused with DMP) and Sealed, as the different draft formats.
There's also Kajudo, Kajudo vs DM and Mix of the Duel Masters that make use of the reboot.
Then finally there's DMP ND and DMP AD, which are the official Japanese mobile game format with and without set rotation respectively.
And that's not even mentioning the 3+ player formats like Open Game and Two-headed Giant.
@@BramLastname Wow...that is wonderful..but i need some enlightenment
since these seem to be a recent format..could you please tell me what exactly is the diffrence between DMP ND and DMB AD...?
another one:are the 3+ formats a copycat form MTG or they have thier respective rules?
where i can find trused resources on these great DM formats?
many thanks to you man.
I loved the Duel Masters show as a kid but living in a farm town, nobody around me really cared much about card games. That said, Kaijudo came out after i graduated high school and is now my favorite card game. I still regularly upload Kaijudo content and have been considering doing a how to play Kaijudo video for a while but in all honesty, they could just watch this and it would be almost the exact same thing. I loved this video
Thanks, I'm glad you liked the video! And yeah, loving card games but not having anyone around to play with is rough. Glad you're still enjoying Kaijudo!
I love the game and I love the mechanics that has gotten from the other games like Digimon and Dragonball super and others that I want to try thank you for the video 👍👍
Can't do crazy combos like Yu-Gi-Oh or Magic. However, Duel Masters had the best core ruleset. I made some fake cards in an attempt to migrate such a play style to MTG. If anyone is interested I can send those cards in and explain. I also have some life defining anecdotes relating to Duel Masters.
Aparently, a very similar ruleset as DM lives on through the new Digimon TCG
It's honestly amazing how many tcgs out there borrow from DM - it's just most of them are JP only. It's nice we're getting a few in english now.
I am interested...
@@metroghost8428 Essentially, I kind of brought DUEL Masters into my school as a kid. Making it popular. One of the last memories with my grandfather is that one day he simply decided to buy me a kajillion cards from the newest set at the time. I had a ridiculous collection for a kid, and the strongest and coolest cards I knew of. As the craze continued, I realized one of my colleagues had a game I had lost, Golden Sun the Lost Age. It was my favorite game at the time, and I had lost it at school, and that guy had the exact same savefile as me! Essencially, he wouldn'y give it back just because I tolf him so. Because DM was popular at the time, kids saw them as really valuable. I didn't want to trade the unique cards my grandpa bought me, however, I had so many cards and the game was so popular at the time that I simply put together as many repeated commons and uncommons I had and he ended up agreeing to trade with me! Tadam I got my favorite game back, and I actually got to finish it this time. It fostered a huge love for JRPGs. I remember around middle school I was extremely depressed and the one thing keeping me going (stupid) was the release of the third Golden Sun game. At the time I had been wating 7 years, an eternity for a kid, and I was hoping it was going to provide the same sense of wonder The Lost Age did. It didn't. In fact it was extremely disapointing. It only depressed me more if anything. It is ridiculous to place such value in these things. However, around at the same time, the english version of Chrono Trigger came out in Europe. Knowing it was a JRPG classic, and being disapointed by Golden SUn Dark Dawn, I gave it a try. It became my favorite game of all time, still to this day. It filled me with hope and creativity I haven't had before. And in the game of determinism and fate, themes in the game itself, I link that to the spontaneous act of my grandfather, who had passed away shortly after. To give me all those Duel Masters cards.
I dream to find a way to migrate the best of Duel Master's ruleset to Magic. I made 2 cards which attempt to do that, and inspire a new playstyle or mode. How many of us got pent up with genuine friends due to the frustration of its terrible RNG=Playing the Damn Game at All system of lands? How many tournaments need to be determined by a guy who drew too many or too few lands? Such a flawed core aspect... which Duel Masters fixed and made even the most basic of games fun. That is what I hope a live game like Magic to have, to inherit the best of a dead one. To learn from it and make it better. Both are WIzards games, designed by the same people, however it is likely a pipedream. Unless a bunch of people start playing in an imaginary ruleset out of the blue to the point Wizards cannot ignore its popularity,
@@BinaryDood Wow.... Honestly i don't that will ever happen..each game is different beast itself.
There’s a 20th anniversary Duel masters promo card with the Japanese Corocoro magazine this month (Feb 2022) in case anyone was interested.
duel masters is my childhood card game. never played yugioh or magic but every kid on the block would be playing duel masters. i really miss it so much and is sad to see how hard it is to get my hands on them again. if only i didnt lose them when i moved TT
I used to play the OG DM back in the day but stopped after WOTC stopped printing English cards. What a shame for such a fun game
I really do wonder that the NA tcg scene would look like if DM stuck around. It's had a huge influence on the development of tcgs in Japan.
Recently replayed the game on my PS2, it honestly feels kinda like a middle ground between Magic and Wixoss. Wish this tcg did better outside Japan....
Yeah - at least it's still doing well in Japan. Playing the game is really interesting because it really does feel like a 'missing link' between older tcgs and newer tcgs.
Apparently it did surprisingly well in Germany and Finland,
The two countries who apparently still host events for Duel Masters players.
But WotC lost too much money on promotions outside of Japan (mostly in the USA, because they kinda forgot people could easily paint the similarities between their products, MtG and DM, in a bad light.)
To the point that they actually pulled the plug months before the full trial run was over.
Which can also be seen in the set releases,
Since the Japanese actually got more sets than other countries for the second half of the trial run,
Despite all sets up to that point being identical in all countries.
really glad to hear DueMa has expanded out to other Asian Regions, hopefully it's able to expand further
Bring back Duel Masters to the west! ❤️
Appreciate the video, love the fact that every year we get to see more and more videos on DM, hopefully one day we’ll get DM back or everyone learn Japanese and upload videos to English and Japanese audiences 😂 💀
i always liked duel masters here in the us i didn't know it only ran 2 years though. i never got into the pokemon tcg but i played yugioh primarily and some mtg. i still have all the cards i believe
I actually just dug out my old cards. I had a small box full of them and I found when I was a kid I'd made a deck for each color. I checked them out and played them against each other and I think my biggest takeaway was that I had such a fundamentally incorrect understanding of how decks were made but it was fun rebuilding them now.
the thing i like about it is they are really simple and idont have to do a lot of maths, and over complicated effect. i really wish one day they make english version of it again.
It's a really good system! I like the general base rules more than Magic, but it keeps Magic's good sense of streamlining card effects with keywords. With how long the game's gone on in Japan I'm not sure how they could release it here at this point, but who knows? I though there was no way Wixoss made its way here, so maybe we'll get lucky and DM will get another shot?
This is my first ever TCG lol. Nowadays i mainly plays Magic but DM was the one introduce me to Magic. Back then the most bonker card in our playgroup was Deathliger , Lion of Chaos and Explosive Fighter Ucarn!
I remember playing with a friend as a kid, loving it, then never playing it again
I wish this game did better. I have fond memories of it and I want to play it again really badly.
Great video! Thank you!
Oh man I used to watch the anime and bought a ton of cards only for it to disappear almost instantly. Made me wonder if it was all just a fever dream for quite a few years later. Underrated TCG.
I STILL have my old cards. I'm sentimental with them lol i really enjoyed playing it :)
Really love the shield mechanic as life and the spells themselves being the mana resource. It allows for more decisionmaking compared to magic where you're dependent on your land count or where games just give you the mana hearthstone/shadowverse/runeterra just so the game is slowed. I think if they brought this game back with an online client, it would definitely do well. The only card games left that have an anime aesthetic are shadowverse/yugioh/digimon and it could definitely find a core audience since shadowverse is waning, modern yugioh mechanics are too crazy, and digimon for some reason doesn't want to make an online client.
It's a really good resource system! There's actually a surprising number of weeb tcgs alive at the moment in english - One Piece, Weiss Schwarz and Vanguard, Wixoss, Battle Spirits Saga, Dragonball Super. Although you're definitely right about the lack of online clients - it woud be really nice to have some more options there, and I think bringing over DM that way could really work!
Is it just me or does anyone else think Duel Masters is getting so much love and people are begging for it when at the moment it is at a bad spot with the Gatcha system?
DM has been a game I've wanted to try for ages now. I have heard bad things about gatcha, and it is kind of funny this particular timing is when I finally get around to trying it.
Gacharange block ended ages ago (even when taking into account the age of this comment), and they pretty much recognise its issues (ahem mizzail and other easy ways of spamming it) and nuked the mechanic with means of floodgates like USA brella. It's a lot more tolerable of a mechanic now
@@Artster900 I hope so since the idea of intense summoning is a dangerous thing when it comes at nearly no pressure. Yu-Gi-Oh comes to mind with this...a lot.
Yeah I wish it came back to USA, I think if they do it right , it can last more than 2 years lol
@@monarch2500 With how many games are copying that formula? I would press X to doubt.
I got into duel masters as a kid, unfortunately nobody played it and I was not sociable. However it did get me into MtG later on as it did in fact have a player base and much more complex rules. Sad it didn't take off outside Japan. Ironically, I did not think the way MtG handles mana is at all good, there was a great balance between simplicity of duelmasters, the rules made it very easy to learn.
Very cool video! Please make more Duel Masters videos! 😁
I've definitely got a lot of video ideas ahead, but there's plenty more to say about DM, so I'd love to revisit it further down the road!
Cool my friend
Just hoping for its comeback with original set with proper Starter Decks for newbie along with this era of a lot of new TCG imports like Battle Spirits, Digimon, One Piece
That would be really great! Not sure of the odds of it happening since the card pool is so deep at this point, but with all the TCGs crossing over lately, who knows?
Duel Masters!!!!
Interesting. It's almost like a halfway point between MTG and Wixoss.
Chronologically it's about half-way, too. It's a weird feeling, half the time it feels like you're playing mtg, and the other half it feels like you're playing a much more recent tcg - it really feels like discovering a missing link in the evolution of tcg design.
So for those who don't know, this game was intended by WotC to be a "stepping stone" from games likes Pokémon tcg and Wixoss to MTG, and due to the poor animation that was released to help promote the game (and the constant rumours of being a rip off and overlooking of similar games at the time); the game never really took off outside of Japan
I honestly think the name of the game itself did some damage. The yugioh tcg is called 'Duel Monsters' in the anime, and calling your weeb game that's trying to tap the same audience 'Duel Masters' feels a little too obvious. The games themselves are worlds apart, but that doesn't really change the first impressions of someone who's just window shopping and not delving too deeply into the gameplay.
@@tcgacademia I agree. Its a shame it was presented in such a lazy fashion as near everyone I know who knows about the game remembers it fondly and enjoyed playing it... Who knows, maybe one day it might make a comeback, but that's just wishful thinking on my part haha
Hi there
Is there any more platforms streaming or anle to watch the Duel master series?
Thanks
私は海外デュエルマスターズが遊ばれていてとても嬉しいです
海外にもまだまだファンがいる!
If they release anything new in English, I'd go nuts
I will never forgive WOTC for abandoning this game. They knew it was becoming a competitor to Magic and they couldn’t accept it.
Nice video, really helpful. Why would the last creature break 3 shields if it was a double breaker? when you get certain amount of attack power you break more shields?
The last creature had 'Powered Breaker', which is like double breaker except it specifically scales based on unit power (breaks 1 extra shield per 6000 power). Glad you found the video helpful!
And no need to worry, the tempo of playing this game is not slow as it was, as almost all each Civilizations capable of spamming cards for now.
Even a player can literally win only in Turn 3 (since this game need resource to use cards, and it's very few powerful cards can be used with 1 mana card), either by totally rushing to opponent or by doing some combos
I played Duel Masters as a kid when it first came out and I liked the cards and battle system. (Beat down Yugioh was really slow at the time, so it felt faster) I remember seeing Kaijudo as I got older, but didn't realize it was a rebrand. Does that mean the cards are compatible with each other? I was thinking about picking this game up since it's big in Japan and I need a fun way to practice Japanese
I haven't tried it, but Kaijudo very subtly changes a few rules, just enough to make it so the two systems aren't really cross-compatible. Duel Masters is a good way to get comfortable with Japanese, though! Since it's aimed at a younger audience, it has furigana to help you figure out what any tricky kanji say - by the time I was recording this video, I didn't need translation sheets since the written Japanese was so straightforward and painless.
👏 on 857 subscribers
Oddly specific number to celebrate, but still feels like something worth celebrating. Thank you!
@@tcgacademia anytime tcgacademia and 🙏 for the videos
How can i look for these type of cards, when i look for japanese duel masters i still get the old template card just with japanese text. These new cards look amazing
I hope someday Takara would bring this back to the western market same way Bandai did with Digimon tcg
I vaguely remember seeing Duel Masters cards as a child and watching the anime so I thought I'd revisit some existing Japanese TCGs today. Duel Masters sticks out as being the most refined. What we knew Yugioh as is completely destroyed with its modern-day powercreep, Pokemon is annoyingly slow and requires micromanagement with counters and tokens, and MTG bricks half the time at the start or down-the-line due to not being able to draw and play the right mana. None of these problems exist in Duel Masters so its such a shame to see it disappear in the west.
It's a really well-designed game. It was really interesting playing it years after hearing about it - even the weird stuff like not being able to block without a keyword ends up working really well in gameplay.
Nice guide. Would you do more about different type of cards and keywords? I remember seeing some cards that can be put together like Maximum cards in Rush Duel.
I'm definitely interested in exploring Duel Masters more, but I've also got a pretty big list of other video ideas, so it might be a while before I can get to it. It's definitely a game I want to explore more, though!
Wait i thought the mana zone is below the shield zone? Also you can attack untapped monsters?
Might be, I didn't dig too deeply into the usual set up. Coming from Wixoss, I just put the shields where I normally set life cloth.
I'm looking to make my own card game similar to this but something more simple for the wife who's never played these kinds of games. In your opinion and experience what's more important? Focusing on killing monsters or ignoring them and taking out shields? Or is the strategy to win finding the balance of both?
There's some balancing, but it mostly depends on your deck. Some decks just want to rush damage and target shields as much as possible. But damaging shields early in the game adds more cards to your opponent's hand. Other decks try and avoid dealing damage - they try to destroy all shields in one turn, to stop the opponent from being able to use their shield cards. These strategies tend to attack the opponent's creatures much more aggressively. Have fun making your game - DM is a really solid place to look for inspiration!
Wait. So you don't need to tap your attacking creature if you're going to attack an opponent's creature?
Unless I've made a mistake somewhere else, the reason Moel Mohitch didn't tap was because its ability was causing the battle. Attacking an opponent's creature during the battle phase still causes your creature to tap.
I want to get into this game, but it's so unfortunate that the Japanese GBA games and the Japanese PS2 game haven't beem translated. I wish passionate Japanese-speaking gamer(s) would help us appreciate Duel Masters by translating the games!
1:41 i thought the mat was a picture to explain the video 😧
I used to love this game as a kid. I still have some of my cards. These new cards though are extremely anime. Not that i dont like anime but the artwork for the cards doesnt hold a candle to the original release. It was a mix between MTG with some japanese influence. Its not weird that the art shifted for a japanese market. But even if i wanted to get my hands on cards it'd be hard for me to get into a game with angry glover as a card.
I don't mind the new art, but the early art did a really good job of designing just the right level of detail for the size of the card - it wasn't too simplistic or too busy.
Ooh, this actually looks like something I would want to play (not a fan of the high power numbers though). Reminds me of TES Legends, except it is offline an possibly even more refined? Let's see if I can give it a go somewhere online...
If they would have just brought back this game duel masters instead of kijudo masters it would have made a come back
Indeed seems like a promising game and I love it. Too bad English release has failed twice
Yeah - if it only failed once I could see them trying again, but since it's failed twice, I think there's really no chance of it making its way back over to english at this point. Unfortunately.
Such a well-designed game. The resource system imho is far superior to Magic, where you can be locked out of the game with bad draws.
I definitely prefer it. I think it's fine to lose a game to bad draws - that's just part of shuffled card games. But not being able to play at all because of bad draws feels like a significant design miss.
Does a creatures health reduce when I attack it or does it reset every round? For instance I attack a 3000 health blocker with a 1000 health attack does the blocker become 2000?
Pretty sure I made an error in this video mentioning damage - you just compare who has the higher number, no damage is exchanged. A few games do mark damage with only power numbers, so I think I got a bit confused here. But yeah, no damage, it's closer to yugioh's combat where you just compare numbers.
@@tcgacademia cool thank you.
How would I know how to play individual cards if I dont know how to read japanese text. Do you have an app to know the text in english?
The wiki keeps a pretty up-to-date database of translations.
I won a 9 pound box of Japanese Duel Masters on Buyee. It is nice, but I fear a lot of the cards might have been confiscated.
A giant box of cards of always exciting, although it's unfortunate they can be a bit questionable sometimes.
Where can I play DM digitally? I tried looking for it so hard and unfortunately only got the older games from the consoles.. Any platform that supports modern DM is appreciated! Preferably English but it's okay if it's Japanese too
No idea, unfortunately. I know there's some kind of DM Discord out there, which theoretically plays games? My experience with DM has been fully paper based, except for printing translation sheets based on the wiki.
There’s duel masters plays The official Japanese simulator you can also get it on PC
Duel Masters Plays
It's a Japanese mobile game,
But it's a genuinely good simulator.
There's a handful of simulators that allow you to play Duel Masters manually,
Octgn and Tabletop Simulator come to mind,
But Duel Masters Plays has AI battles, online ladder, online events and set releases and rotation (though everything under All Division doesn't use set rotation, so you can ignore set rotation if you want to.)
The main downsides are that you have to build your collection and everything is in Japanse.
(Tho you get a bunch of free packs when you make an account and the starter decks, while pretty bad, are strong enough to beat all 15 fights in episode 1, you just need to get the hang of the game.)
Currently the Quintessential Quintuplets event just ended, the ladder reset and draft event is back.
We never knew the ywhole rule,part of the reason was coz dubbing was bad in Hindi,show was midiocare at best, but the actual game is good 👍😊
yea but where and with who r u goonna play with?
With friends, or even on your own just to see how it plays. There's also discord groups out there that still seem pretty active with the game.
is there a way to play this online with other people?
I think for now the only way possible is playing the Mobile version Duel Masters Play's.
How do you get the cards translated into English?
DM has a fairly active wiki - I just copy-paste the translations into a single-page table, print it, and use that for reference. It works well enough as long as there aren't too many unique cards in the deck.
from where to download? please inform. thanks
Duel Masters Play's can be downloaded from Japanese apps
You forgot the most important thing!
Every time a monster attacks you have to scream: IKE! 😂
Hello guys still playing this card game 2024❤❤❤ it so hard to find cards this days
Vampire the Eternal Struggle did away with resource (land) cards in favour of something better and Battletech had “cards as life” too, both in the 90’s. I wonder if the Japanese were looking back at the US innovations?
Definitely is interesting - on the one hand, it would make sense for TCG fans to look into a ton of different TCGs to see what they do differently, but on the other, the language barrier and product access were much more difficult to overcome before online ordering and fan wikis were common.
they really need to bring this game back its like all the rst its getting to the point trying to complet the pass i remember a yugioh link site was amazing and free can use all cards till a 3ed party got it shut down and magic got boaring to like need something new
I played duel masters on the PS2
I like the game,but I think it’s has core design problem,where game marketed as “play cool big creatures” and cuz of that we have a lot spells which cheat them out,creatures themselves being easy to cheat out or people just running green in almost every deck,but overall fun game due to its simplicity and some insane mechanics(like Dormageddon).
I wonder,can you make video about Dimension 0 TCG?
The 'big ace monster' vs 'army' divide of card game flavour is interesting, possibly worth an entire video later. Definitely not surprised to hear DM leans more the to the 'big monster' side. And Dimension 0 is definitely a game I'm interested in, but is realistically quite a ways away from me getting around to playing. It's on my list, though!
@@tcgacademia to me “big ace monsters” is a bit problematic design,because it’s makes one color(green) superior than others and it’s also can make game snowballish(thx to cards which can cheat stuff out),like for 5 mana you can destroy a creature,but also for 5 mana you can make big board or summon big creature which locks down opponent or just cards which instantly kills opp even before you get 5 mana.
Can someone point me to somewhere where i could have the Japanese DM translated?
Best source I've run into is the DM wiki - they seem to keep it pretty up-to-date.
banger
I still have my cards from the release of the game.
I've heard that from a surprising number of people. The number of folks still holding onto their cards decades later really speaks to just how good this game was/is.
I used to play this when I was really young.
Looking back this really is a very streamlined and dumbed down Magic the Gathering. If I want to get my card game fix I'll stick to Yugioh and Magic.
Still love the art of the cards themselves though.
I think dumbed down is a bit harsh - it's a common mistake I see a lot of mtg and yugioh players that assume simplified rules means simplified decision-making. Personally I prefer more streamlined games, but I definitely understand why some prefer Magic and yugioh's more open interaction.
@@tcgacademia yeah dumbed down does sound a bit harsh
@@sebastiancintron29 I get the point you're going for, though - and you're not wrong.
lol we played this game wrong "THE WHOLE TIME". Ofc I am talking about sth that we played 15 years ago. Wish Duel Masters had stayed famous.
8:47 you just summon the creature so it has summon sickness and cant use it on the blocker.
Moel Mohitch first effect allow you to force battle with another creature. And forced battle (not via regular attacking) can't be blocked.
@@muarekh4118 he couldn't have blocked it anyway
I have some cards growing up so I know I didn't just made it up or dreamt about it😂
hasn't anyone tried building a mobile game for DM lately?
Well they already have a mobile game for Duel Masters (region locked for Japan lol)
@@muarekh4118 Has anyone tried VPN with japan server to download and play it?
Really wanna try this game
Hopin this card game ( due master plays ) coul beat vanguar fight bro :(
Can someone with connections or with multi million dollar company bring this game back into TCG so people can play this game again globally to have fun and earn money like what yugioh doin nowadays
Yugioh is like Tekken
Dm is like Virtua Fighter
I don't know anywhere near enough about fighting games to know what that means, but sounds like a good analogy!
@@tcgacademia to explain my analogy, Tekken surpasses Virtua Fighter about almost everything(Marketing, Presentation, Story, Characters, easy to understand gameplay) but when it comes to the depth of the game, Virtua Fighter's technicality surpasses Tekken, it is just, the marketing of that game did not go well, that's why only few people knows how awesome the game is.
Additionaly, Virtua Fighter is more popular in Japan than Tekken, but Tekken is more popular outside Japan
@@jedsai Ah - that does make sense!
Duel masters is very cool game
Nut I think vanguard way better.
Next one is yu-hi-oh, mtg, pokemon, digimon
Not sure where I'd rank them relative to each other, but I do really like Vanguard as well, for a lot of the same reason I like DM - it's just very well designed on a mechanical level.
Wonder how playable the game is just with the original English card pool (base release and 10 boosters sets)? I assume the more modern Japanese cards are more creative and intricate, but not sure if the game's elegant design still shines through with the more basic original cards.
Also, not sure if Kaijudo is literally the same gameplay or not... But something about the aesthetic is far inferior.
Finally, not sure if Duel Masters still has a place or have its successors (like that Build Divide game you highlighted as adapting much of DM's design) just surpassed it...
Duel Masters and Build Divide were made for the same person.
I know there's still a pretty active fan community out there using just the english cards, so it sounds like they offer plenty of depth. And I've not seen the most recent sales figures, but DM is absolutely still huge in Japan. In some ways its a lot like mtg - there have been plenty of games released inspired by it, with rules that are very similar, but the original just has so much momentum behind it, it still holds the top spot.
@Maldito Mur I always really love seeing how fans can keep games alive long after they've stopped receiving support. It's awesome the english DM fanbase is still going!
Why not just go the YGO Master Duel route with translating Duel Masters for western fans.
Wizards of the coast is a death knell to any game they touch and magic is only alive due to nostalgia lets be honest, theyve made nothing but bad decisions for the past decade but for some reason nostalgia keeps people playing.
If another conpany got ahold of Duel Masters properly in the west i know itd do way better now considering its main competition (Yu-Gi-Oh) is in a horrible state right now and players are desperately looking for anything similar or adjacent, but vanguard the only other similar game is also near death.
i agree duel masters is definitely the easiest to learn yugioh has the problem of it's 100% did you draw enough starters can you play around the opponents it all becomes very stressful. pokemon is literally 100% luck based it's did you draw the right trainer
12 boosters in English
Thanks, I appreciate when viewers correct my misses. I definitely let a few more mistakes than usual slip into this one (like the notes on damage that show up in the video - I somehow confused DM's power comparison with Z/X's turn-limited damage).
Can you mix normal duel masters cards with Kaijudo: Rise of the Duel Masters cards?
Both games are dead (in English, which is the only language Kaijudo is really a thing), so realistically I don't think anyone will stop you. That being said, it was never intended for the two games to be mixed. I didn't dive super-deep into Kaijudo, but the gameplay has a few tweaks (you can only have 3 of the same card in your deck, as opposed to 4 in DM, and mana works slightly differently), and several cards were rebalanced with the benefit of hindsight. So even ignoring the different card backs, mixing the two might be a bit awkward.
I have a deck of cards that will blow the wig off anyone bro..