- The Legend Reborn is a very complete trading card game, with an enormous amount of cards (more than a thousand) added to a single-player mode against a competent computer, and of course all of the charisma of the Yu-Gi-Oh. Power of Chaos Trilogy PC Full Version Free Download – Sebuah game card battle ringan yang bisa kalian mainkan di PC dan Laptop Low Spec, game yugioh ini berisi 3 judul yaitu Yugi the Destiny, Kaiba the Revenge, dan Joey the Passion. Jadi kalian bisa memainkan ke 3 judul game tersebut, enak bukan download.
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Konami's second Yu-Gi-Oh! release for North American home computers follows the lead of the first, and is designed to present an accurate and detailed virtual version of the popular table-top trading card game. As fans of the series will realize from the title, this game prominently features Kaiba, and the many powerful and rare cards in his deck. In all, hundreds of new cards are added for play on the computer with this game. Kaiba the Revenge can be installed and played by itself, or in conjunction with the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Yugi the Destiny.
Having played a number of versions of Yu-Gi-Oh!; from the standard card game itself with friends to the Game Boy Advance versions, to even the Xbox version and now the PC releases; Power of Chaos looks to build an empire of games starting with Yugi the Destiny followed by Kaiba the Revenge with another release coming in the near future. What this all equates out to is money coming from your pocket for what is really a substandard entry in the YuGiOh universe that you're better off investing in almost any other version of the game. Save for The Sacred Cards, that game is just awful.
Essentially each of the Power of Chaos games is the same, just a few new cards and a new duelist to face with a shiny new interface. Both games suffer from simply a lack of things to do. There is a very limited number of cards to obtain; by the count in Kaiba the Revenge there are 466 cards total. That is less than half of what you get in one copy of any of the World Tournament games found on the GBA. Duelist selection is non-existent as each title spells it out on who you'll be dueling. Yugi the Destiny has you playing against Yugi and Kaiba the Revenge has you squaring off against Kaiba. Thankfully to break up the monotony of dueling they brought in the voice actors to have them speak during the duel, a little something to spice things up as you hear Yugi/Kaiba deny you of a game breaking move, or vice versa. Why player versus player/online play is not present is well beyond me. Although I would imagine they would have to dramatically increase the number of usable cards if they planned to do that. It's always something to hope for in the future though.
Playing against Yugi and Kaiba has its highs and lows. When they decide to bring their A game, you'll know it. I've had games where I can be under complete lockdown and can only surrender to stop the duel before it gets any uglier. But then there are times where I can do the exact same thing to them. There is never a consistent level of difficulty in the game and that is also due to the fact that the decks you start out with are garbage in comparison to your virtual opponent. I can understand giving me slightly weaker monsters, but what about magic and trap cards? Yugi gets a Swords of Revealing Light card, which prevents me from attacking for 3 turns, but I get nothing that can destroy it? Or Kaiba gets a Raigeki card that lets him destroy all my monsters but I have nothing to do the same to him? It's little things like that that make this game a chore to play sometimes.
Card acquisition is just a painfully slow process. When dueling you are given the option to playing a single duel or a match duel. Win the single duel and you get ONE card, win the match duel and you get THREE cards, but you may have to go through three matches to win. Once again it's slow and you're never guaranteed good cards. You can sometimes turn up trash cards or even two of the same card in one pull. Konami's decision to remove the ability to input your own in cards in the last couple of games has done a world of hurt to their appeal because you could be looking for just one single piece of Exodia and weeks could go by without any chance of picking it up. This doesn't encourage me in the slightest to go pick up and play the game any more.
Graphically I don't see how this game requires any sort of 3-D graphics card but it does. Thankfully the low-end requirements allow you to play this on any machine that would be at least 3-4 years old. The duels are on a nicely themed field. Yugi has the whole Egyptian Pharaoh thing going for him and Kaiba has the sleek and cold computer world behind him and each character is given art for various situations in the duel, which helps when they have something to announce, it's especially comical and dramatic when they summon the best monster they have and it's this great speech about how the card is their heart and soul and pride and honor as a duelist. Each card graphic is nice and clear and there is a sidebar that tells you all the information you would need to know about a card.
Musically the game falls flat on its face, some really weak techno beats on both games that changes according to the flow of the duel. If you're taking a beating the music will get a bit more urgent and if you're winning it'll become a bit more pumped up as you deliver the final blow that wins you that oh so wonderful one card that will make such a drastic difference to your deck.
If you need something to eat up your hard drive space and you enjoy YuGiOh then look no further.
People who downloaded Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Kaiba the Revenge have also downloaded:
Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Joey the Passion, Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Yugi the Destiny, Zeus: Master of Olympus, Worms 3D, Worms 4: Mayhem, Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War, Worms Armageddon, Star Trek: Armada 2
This direct adaptation of the explosively popular trading card game is designed to introduce new players to Yu-Gi-Oh and challenge dueling veterans with intelligent, realistic competition. A tutorial teaches rookies about all the basic plays, rules, and strategies of the card game, including turn progression, spells, summoning, tributes, and more. Once they've mastered the fundamentals, players can duel against Yugi himself, in hopes of winning new cards and improving their virtual decks. Card artwork in the game is re-created directly from the actual trading cards, to enhance the authenticity of the PC simulation.
I consider myself to be pretty smart when it comes to games .. be it tabletop RPG's, card games, board games, or of course video games. Throughout the years of playing finely tuned strategies in Warhammer 40k, Magic: The Gathering, and even the Pokemon card game, I really haven't seen too much that gets me stumped anymore. That's where Yu-Gi-Oh comes in. I have a 9 year old who loves it and has played it for years, and throughout all of the video game versions and attempts he has made to show me how everything works, I still didn't understand it. Well, Konami has released Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: YUGI THE DESTINY for PC, and thanks to it, I now can not only play Yu-Gi-Oh, but beat him a time or two as well.
First off, I still don't fully understand the reasoning behind the huge title of the game since I can sum it all up in one word .. tutorial. Basically, Yu-Gi-Oh (Let's have an understanding that from this point forward I'm referring to the video game so I don't have to type all 500 characters of the title, OK?) offers up an in depth tutorial to help learn everything you need to know how to play. You'll learn about hit points, attack and defend numbers, all four phases of the turn (draw, battle, secondary, end), spell and trap cards, and even all about constructing your own deck by yourself and what it takes to do that.
Once you do a tutorial (or skip it if you already know how to play), you can play either a single match or tournament style match play (best two out of three with sideboard changes allowed) against Yu-Gi himself to begin learning the game and trying your own abilities in a full on match up with no relaxing of difficulty or any kind of difficulty settings to make it easier. While this may seem like a bad thing, it actually turned out to be a big plus. Yu-Gi wound up playing with almost identical cards to what I had, and while I was getting the you know what stomped out of me, it actually worked great to teach me some good strategies to use and how to play one possible card with another to start wearing down my opponent. After about 4 times of getting a good thrashing, I finally started turning the tables on Yu-Gi and starting beating him with his own strategies.
Now while this works well, and the game is a great learning tool, there are a couple of things that I felt really kind of hurt the game overall. For starters, you get to learn all about constructing your deck and how many of what cards you can use, but you can't use any of this helpful info for quite some time. Up front, you are given only a 40 card deck with one fusion card, and you have to earn new cards (one per victory) by beating Yu Gi over and over and over again .. which leads me to my second issue with the game.
While it was great to be able to sit down and play against (and beat) one of the most popular TV cartoon heroes going with the young crowd nowadays, it also tended to get really repetitive seeing my spiky haired rival jumping up constantly using the same cards and tactics over and over again. There is absolutely no multiplayer (online, LAN, or hotseat) or ability to change up opponents and deck styles that you are playing against, so things can get kind of dull after the first few hours of playing. Part of the fun of the Magic card game is that you can interchange cards and play a variety of opponents and their decks, but not here. Be prepared for long, lonely one player only matches against Yu-Gi until you just don't play it anymore.
Graphically, the game has a good thing going for it in the cards and the great job that was done on making sure that they not only looked like the actual cards, but also contained all of the information or wording on them as well so you felt like you were really playing the card game. The field will also change colors to reflect certain universal spell cards that are played to grass or a dark vortex to help you know what group of monsters will be benefiting from the effect of the card played. On the other hand, Yu Gi tends to show up way, way too frequently in my opinion, and he will usually shows his face after every move that you make which tends to get a little annoying after a while.
Yu Gi Oh Pc Game
The sound in Yu-Gi-Oh was not anything to write home about by any means, and if you don't get tired of the same music tracks playing over and over and over again, you will almost surely get drained hearing Yu Gi not only pop up after every move you or he makes, but he also feels it necessary to provide some kind of comment each time he shows up. He also tends to repeat these comments over and over again as well, so be prepared to be taunted or told what a great attack you just made repeatedly until your ears bleed.
Overall, I'm not trying to be too overly critical of the game because for everything I've seen, it's designed to be geared towards the beginning Yu-Gi-Oh player to help learn how to play and how to stack strategies and play various card abilities .. and I can walk away saying that I have in fact done that after playing. Old school players will probably grow bored with it quickly, but as a hint for you kids out there .. this might be a great stocking stuffer for Mom or Dad if you're trying to get them to play with you but keep getting 'I would but I don't get it'.
Gameplay:
Thanks to a handy dandy tutorial, I can now say that I understand how to play the Yu-Gi-Oh card game, and I know how to build my own decks complete with sideboard and fusion decks, plus how the playing field works. On a downside, there are no extra cards to experiment with up front, and building your own deck or even sideboard won't come into play until after you have beaten Yu-Gi at least 10 - 15 times. In addition, the lack of opponents and decks or multiplayer ability tends to get a little dull after a few hours of playing.
Yu Gi Oh Games Download
Graphics:
Tbm avenger fsx. The cards were done perfectly, down to the most minor detail. The backgrounds also looked nice, but Yu-Gi felt the need to show up over and over again anytime he or I played a card. After a while, I kept hitting space bar, escape, or anything I could find just to try and get him off the screen.
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Sound:
If you don't get tired of hearing the repeated music which runs constantly, you'll probably quickly get weary hearing Yu-Gi-Oh popping up and tossing out some taunts or complaining about 'what am I going to do now', since he feels the need to accompany each of his appearances with a comment or two.
Difficulty:
Yu-gi-oh Power Of Chaos Free Download For Pc
For the first time, I can honestly say 'medium' to a Yu-Gi-Oh game. After learning how to play, winning or losing is of course determined 50% by your strategy, but 50% by draw of the cards. A great hand can prove a win even if strategy fails sometimes.
Concept:
Yu-Gi-Oh for beginners is a great idea. I really wish I could have taken my newfound skills up against an online opponent or been able to build my own deck up front though. I liked the baby steps while learning, but I don't like it when it seems to do baby steps for the next three days of playing.
Essentially each of the Power of Chaos games is the same, just a few new cards and a new duelist to face with a shiny new interface. Both games suffer from simply a lack of things to do. There is a very limited number of cards to obtain; by the count in Kaiba the Revenge there are 466 cards total. That is less than half of what you get in one copy of any of the World Tournament games found on the GBA. Duelist selection is non-existent as each title spells it out on who you'll be dueling. Yugi the Destiny has you playing against Yugi and Kaiba the Revenge has you squaring off against Kaiba. Thankfully to break up the monotony of dueling they brought in the voice actors to have them speak during the duel, a little something to spice things up as you hear Yugi/Kaiba deny you of a game breaking move, or vice versa. Why player versus player/online play is not present is well beyond me. Although I would imagine they would have to dramatically increase the number of usable cards if they planned to do that. It's always something to hope for in the future though.
Playing against Yugi and Kaiba has its highs and lows. When they decide to bring their A game, you'll know it. I've had games where I can be under complete lockdown and can only surrender to stop the duel before it gets any uglier. But then there are times where I can do the exact same thing to them. There is never a consistent level of difficulty in the game and that is also due to the fact that the decks you start out with are garbage in comparison to your virtual opponent. I can understand giving me slightly weaker monsters, but what about magic and trap cards? Yugi gets a Swords of Revealing Light card, which prevents me from attacking for 3 turns, but I get nothing that can destroy it? Or Kaiba gets a Raigeki card that lets him destroy all my monsters but I have nothing to do the same to him? It's little things like that that make this game a chore to play sometimes.
Card acquisition is just a painfully slow process. When dueling you are given the option to playing a single duel or a match duel. Win the single duel and you get ONE card, win the match duel and you get THREE cards, but you may have to go through three matches to win. Once again it's slow and you're never guaranteed good cards. You can sometimes turn up trash cards or even two of the same card in one pull. Konami's decision to remove the ability to input your own in cards in the last couple of games has done a world of hurt to their appeal because you could be looking for just one single piece of Exodia and weeks could go by without any chance of picking it up. This doesn't encourage me in the slightest to go pick up and play the game any more.
Graphically I don't see how this game requires any sort of 3-D graphics card but it does. Thankfully the low-end requirements allow you to play this on any machine that would be at least 3-4 years old. The duels are on a nicely themed field. Yugi has the whole Egyptian Pharaoh thing going for him and Kaiba has the sleek and cold computer world behind him and each character is given art for various situations in the duel, which helps when they have something to announce, it's especially comical and dramatic when they summon the best monster they have and it's this great speech about how the card is their heart and soul and pride and honor as a duelist. Each card graphic is nice and clear and there is a sidebar that tells you all the information you would need to know about a card.
Musically the game falls flat on its face, some really weak techno beats on both games that changes according to the flow of the duel. If you're taking a beating the music will get a bit more urgent and if you're winning it'll become a bit more pumped up as you deliver the final blow that wins you that oh so wonderful one card that will make such a drastic difference to your deck.
If you need something to eat up your hard drive space and you enjoy YuGiOh then look no further.
People who downloaded Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Kaiba the Revenge have also downloaded:
Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Joey the Passion, Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Yugi the Destiny, Zeus: Master of Olympus, Worms 3D, Worms 4: Mayhem, Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War, Worms Armageddon, Star Trek: Armada 2
This direct adaptation of the explosively popular trading card game is designed to introduce new players to Yu-Gi-Oh and challenge dueling veterans with intelligent, realistic competition. A tutorial teaches rookies about all the basic plays, rules, and strategies of the card game, including turn progression, spells, summoning, tributes, and more. Once they've mastered the fundamentals, players can duel against Yugi himself, in hopes of winning new cards and improving their virtual decks. Card artwork in the game is re-created directly from the actual trading cards, to enhance the authenticity of the PC simulation.
I consider myself to be pretty smart when it comes to games .. be it tabletop RPG's, card games, board games, or of course video games. Throughout the years of playing finely tuned strategies in Warhammer 40k, Magic: The Gathering, and even the Pokemon card game, I really haven't seen too much that gets me stumped anymore. That's where Yu-Gi-Oh comes in. I have a 9 year old who loves it and has played it for years, and throughout all of the video game versions and attempts he has made to show me how everything works, I still didn't understand it. Well, Konami has released Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: YUGI THE DESTINY for PC, and thanks to it, I now can not only play Yu-Gi-Oh, but beat him a time or two as well.
First off, I still don't fully understand the reasoning behind the huge title of the game since I can sum it all up in one word .. tutorial. Basically, Yu-Gi-Oh (Let's have an understanding that from this point forward I'm referring to the video game so I don't have to type all 500 characters of the title, OK?) offers up an in depth tutorial to help learn everything you need to know how to play. You'll learn about hit points, attack and defend numbers, all four phases of the turn (draw, battle, secondary, end), spell and trap cards, and even all about constructing your own deck by yourself and what it takes to do that.
Once you do a tutorial (or skip it if you already know how to play), you can play either a single match or tournament style match play (best two out of three with sideboard changes allowed) against Yu-Gi himself to begin learning the game and trying your own abilities in a full on match up with no relaxing of difficulty or any kind of difficulty settings to make it easier. While this may seem like a bad thing, it actually turned out to be a big plus. Yu-Gi wound up playing with almost identical cards to what I had, and while I was getting the you know what stomped out of me, it actually worked great to teach me some good strategies to use and how to play one possible card with another to start wearing down my opponent. After about 4 times of getting a good thrashing, I finally started turning the tables on Yu-Gi and starting beating him with his own strategies.
Now while this works well, and the game is a great learning tool, there are a couple of things that I felt really kind of hurt the game overall. For starters, you get to learn all about constructing your deck and how many of what cards you can use, but you can't use any of this helpful info for quite some time. Up front, you are given only a 40 card deck with one fusion card, and you have to earn new cards (one per victory) by beating Yu Gi over and over and over again .. which leads me to my second issue with the game.
While it was great to be able to sit down and play against (and beat) one of the most popular TV cartoon heroes going with the young crowd nowadays, it also tended to get really repetitive seeing my spiky haired rival jumping up constantly using the same cards and tactics over and over again. There is absolutely no multiplayer (online, LAN, or hotseat) or ability to change up opponents and deck styles that you are playing against, so things can get kind of dull after the first few hours of playing. Part of the fun of the Magic card game is that you can interchange cards and play a variety of opponents and their decks, but not here. Be prepared for long, lonely one player only matches against Yu-Gi until you just don't play it anymore.
Graphically, the game has a good thing going for it in the cards and the great job that was done on making sure that they not only looked like the actual cards, but also contained all of the information or wording on them as well so you felt like you were really playing the card game. The field will also change colors to reflect certain universal spell cards that are played to grass or a dark vortex to help you know what group of monsters will be benefiting from the effect of the card played. On the other hand, Yu Gi tends to show up way, way too frequently in my opinion, and he will usually shows his face after every move that you make which tends to get a little annoying after a while.
Yu Gi Oh Pc Game
The sound in Yu-Gi-Oh was not anything to write home about by any means, and if you don't get tired of the same music tracks playing over and over and over again, you will almost surely get drained hearing Yu Gi not only pop up after every move you or he makes, but he also feels it necessary to provide some kind of comment each time he shows up. He also tends to repeat these comments over and over again as well, so be prepared to be taunted or told what a great attack you just made repeatedly until your ears bleed.
Overall, I'm not trying to be too overly critical of the game because for everything I've seen, it's designed to be geared towards the beginning Yu-Gi-Oh player to help learn how to play and how to stack strategies and play various card abilities .. and I can walk away saying that I have in fact done that after playing. Old school players will probably grow bored with it quickly, but as a hint for you kids out there .. this might be a great stocking stuffer for Mom or Dad if you're trying to get them to play with you but keep getting 'I would but I don't get it'.
Gameplay:
Thanks to a handy dandy tutorial, I can now say that I understand how to play the Yu-Gi-Oh card game, and I know how to build my own decks complete with sideboard and fusion decks, plus how the playing field works. On a downside, there are no extra cards to experiment with up front, and building your own deck or even sideboard won't come into play until after you have beaten Yu-Gi at least 10 - 15 times. In addition, the lack of opponents and decks or multiplayer ability tends to get a little dull after a few hours of playing.
Yu Gi Oh Games Download
Graphics:
Tbm avenger fsx. The cards were done perfectly, down to the most minor detail. The backgrounds also looked nice, but Yu-Gi felt the need to show up over and over again anytime he or I played a card. After a while, I kept hitting space bar, escape, or anything I could find just to try and get him off the screen.
Yu Gi Oh Power Of Chaos Free Download
Sound:
If you don't get tired of hearing the repeated music which runs constantly, you'll probably quickly get weary hearing Yu-Gi-Oh popping up and tossing out some taunts or complaining about 'what am I going to do now', since he feels the need to accompany each of his appearances with a comment or two.
Difficulty:
Yu-gi-oh Power Of Chaos Free Download For Pc
For the first time, I can honestly say 'medium' to a Yu-Gi-Oh game. After learning how to play, winning or losing is of course determined 50% by your strategy, but 50% by draw of the cards. A great hand can prove a win even if strategy fails sometimes.
Concept:
Yu-Gi-Oh for beginners is a great idea. I really wish I could have taken my newfound skills up against an online opponent or been able to build my own deck up front though. I liked the baby steps while learning, but I don't like it when it seems to do baby steps for the next three days of playing.
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Overall:
Really, this game is the best way that I can recommend for someone to learn how to play. This is a good buy for anyone who wants to play the card game, but doesn't really know or understand how. Veteran players will probably tire of it after a couple of days since you can't really do anything with changing out cards or making decks until after a long period of winning, and playing against what seems like the same cards over and over again may get dull. This is a great idea and formula to use, but hopefully next time they will allow for up front deck building and opponent play to really make this a fully worthy experience.
People who downloaded Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Yugi the Destiny have also downloaded:
Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Kaiba the Revenge, Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Joey the Passion, Warcraft 3: Reign of Chaos, Age of Empires, Age of Empires 2: The Age of Kings, Zoo Tycoon, Worms 3D, Age of Mythology