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Space billiards
Space billiards





Cegorach's deck wasn't revealed due to Magnus destroying it before they could play.While Fyodperor's cards are completely unseen, it can be assumed that he was characteristically going easy on Vect as his face-down card was destroyed by a normal Skull Servant, which is notoriously weak (even by the standards of when it was first released) and only has 300 attack points and he had no other cards on the field in spite of Vect having been " sandbagging" himself up until that point.Though his initial strategy is to "sandbag" (a reference to a play style in the Super Smash Brothers series where players deliberately play badly, named after the inanimate but presumably living sandbag first seen in the Home Run mode) by pretending he doesn't know the rules to lower his opponent's guard. Asdrubael Vect played Skull Servant and King of Skull Servants alongside three copies of Foolish Burial during his game with the Fyodperor, suggesting he uses a Skull Servant/Wright deck and powers up his King of Skull Servants by sending other Skull Servant/Wright cards to the graveyard with Foolish Burial.He is defeated when Kitten is able to pull Morphing Jar #2 off the field long enough to send his Beast monsters to defeat Tzeentch. Tzeentch claims that he's able to plan for every possibility, but in reality, he can read his opponent's thoughts and simply counters whatever they have in their hand.

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His strategy is to use Morphing Jar #2 to dispose of most of his cards in the graveyard in order to power up Magical Explosion, killing the enemy player outright without needing to use monsters. Tzeentch's deck is almost entirely made of spell cards and trap cards, with only one monster - and virtually all of these are banned from real-world tournament lists.He is able to defeat both Tzeentch and The Emperor by reversing their overpowered spells and using his ace monster, Wind-Up Kitten to clear the board of his opponents' own sole ace monsters, then attacking them conventionally. Most, if not all, of his monsters, are cat-themed or beast-themed. Kitten uses a fairly mundane deck of cards with various defensive spells and average monsters.This deck build comes at the cost of most of his life points, which makes him easy to defeat if one can counter his various buffs and spell cards. He even possesses one of the Egyptian God cards, the Winged Dragon of Ra - or as he calls it, "Mega Ultra Chicken." However, he is able to use a card combo to mutate it into an even more powerful monster that highly resembles Sanguinius called "The Winged Warrior of Terra". The Emperor uses an overpowered and highly optimized deck that allows him to maximize buffs on his first turn.Other known players are Kitten, Cegorach, The Deceiver, and Creed.īecause of its overly long name, it is sometimes simply referred to as "a Children's Card Game." Both The Emperor and Tzeentch can pull opponents into the Warp and host an "Ultra-Game," where the loser is exiled to Ultramar - which according to the Deceiver "flippin' sucks". Paradox-Billiards-Vostroyan-Roulette-Fourth Dimensional-Hypercube-Chess-Strip Poker is the name given in the 41st millennium to Yu-Gi-Oh!, and is the card game of choice for both The Emperor and Tzeentch. Kitten deploying his trusty sidekick, Wind-Up Kitten.







Space billiards