A monster must be promoted at least once in order to act as a deck leader. Some deck leaders have special abilities based on their type and rank, which include raising the strength of nearby monsters, increasing life points by a small number each turn, or being able to move two spaces each turn instead of just one.
A deck of exactly 40 cards is required to duel. Each card in the game has a "deck cost", which is a value given to a card based on its strength. The game adds difficulty by forcing the player to have a lower overall deck cost than their opponent in order to duel that opponent, essentially forcing the player to have a weaker deck. Cards are obtained mainly through the "graveyard slots", which is a slot machine that appears after each win allowing the player to obtain cards from an opponent's deck that were sent to the graveyard during the duel.
Cards can also be obtained using codes in the deck builder menu or through "reincarnation", which is where owned cards can be sacrificed to give three different cards of a slightly lower deck cost.
Reincarnation becomes available once after every 5 completed duels, win or loss. Each space on the 7x7 duel board has a certain terrain. Each type of monster has at least one favored terrain that gives that monster an extra ATK and DEF bonus when engaged in battle on that terrain. Each type of monster also has at least one disfavored terrain that reduces the ATK and DEF of that monster by points. There are also three special terrains: Labyrinth, which no cards are able to move onto except for a few monsters with special effects; crush, which instantly destroys any monster with or more ATK; and toon, which weakens every monster in the game except for toon monsters.
The Duelists of the Roses is a decent game that takes card games into a unique place - history itself. The strategy aspect is fairly easy and serves best young gamers, children, or those just looking for some fun without challenge.
Get the latest Yu-Gi-Oh! Duelists of the Roses cheats, codes, unlockables, hints, Easter eggs, glitches, tips, tricks, hacks, downloads, hints, guides, FAQs, walkthroughs, and more for PlayStation 2 PS2. Use the above links or scroll down see all to the PlayStation 2 cheats we have available for Yu-Gi-Oh! Duelists of the Roses. This feature allows you to create your own duelfield for custom duels.
When you can't beat someone just go back and face all the people that you already beet and keep beeting them over and over again until you have a lot of good cards from them. After you do that your deck should be a lot better. Battle someone with dark piercing light. Get three of them in a row in the slots and you get swords of revealing light. First you use any field cards you have and if youhave, the crush card then you use Earthshaker toget faster use codes to switch all the spacesaround and turn all Labyrinth spaces into normalspaces and then start winning!
Defeat Pegasus in battle to earn a Dragon Ritualcard at the slots. Battle him again with lots ofmagic cards at least 1 gift of the fairy lp 1 red potion and three monster reborns and amimic cat. You will need lots of lp to stayaround long enough for him to summon all threeof his B.
Eyes White Dragons and defeat them. After defeating them summon them back all 3 with either monster reborn or mimic cat thenflip over the ultimate dragon ritual card toform ultimate dragon he is bad. Don't know howto get him in my deck yet. To view the abilities of each deck leader played by your opponent, place the cursor over the leader and push 'triangle'. It will list the different abilities for the leader, most of which are only good in the leader's sphere of influence the area you can summon cards in.
The following are a few abilities of cards not selected as deck leaders by computer opponents If you surrender five times, you will be able to reincarnate a card in your chestwhich will allow you to build your deck. Depending on the name used at the start of the game, you will get a differenttype of starter deck.
Try names such as Konami, Rod, or Puzzle. Mirror Wall 80dc is a powerful card. Use it against a Blue Eyes. Blue Eyes can now be killed by the weakest monsters in thegame. The Duelists of the Roses takes a very bold move and retells - in a surprisingly unique fashion the English War of the Roses. This war took place in between the houses of Lancaster and York, and their representatives Henry Tudor and Christian Rosenkrauz are substituted by the protagonist Yami Yugi and his rival Seto Kaiba respectively.
Of course, there are creative liberties taken, but aside from the character swapping, and the battles being waged through the card games this is a fun historical adaptation. The gameplay here is similar to what fans of the series will remember. Each player has a deck of cards composed of monsters, spells, and traps. Players are then tasked with assembling a deck and playing opponents in a turn-based, strategy, and set-up manner.
Finally, cards are unveiled and the resolution of effects, attacks, and defenses are done. The game is different from the series, and other Yu-Gi-Oh! The Duelists of the Roses is an older title and the visuals clearly display it. Combat itself is confusing at first, but once rules and victory or defeat conditions become clear, the game becomes very easy. Sound-wise the game is great, even if the soundtrack feels bland at times, relying on one or two memorable tracks. The Duelists of the Roses is a decent game that takes card games into a unique place - history itself.
The strategy aspect is fairly easy and serves best young gamers, children, or those just looking for some fun without challenge. The game that everyone's calling "the next Pokemon" has finally arrived on PS2, and it's sure to divide players into two distinct camps: fans of the TV show who will love it and everybody else who will likely be confused by it. The Duelists of the Roses is complicated, difficult, and demanding, which won't be a problem for vets of Forbidden Memories the PS1 game , but if you're new to the franchise, expect a frustrating initiation.
The computer A. And the new Fusion system is confusing as all heck. But to be fair, when compared to Yugi's PS1 debut, Duelists definitely offers the better experience; the new board layout adds a lot, making the game feel a bit like chess. There's plenty of strategy involved, and once you get to the point where you understand the defense and attack principles, it's definitely addictive.
The big question is whether you'll play long enough to understand all the rules.
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