Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s World Championship 2010 Reverse of Arcadia
- Duel with more than 3,500 playable cards, more than any other Yu-Gi-Oh! World Championship title to date
- Unique tale torn from the highly flourishing Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D¿s animated series on The CW Kids Block and Cartoon Network
- Introducing 20 new characters to duel and cooperate with throughout tale mode including Crow, Carly, Lazer, Sayer and Kilan
- Turbo dueling has been enhanced to include puzzles while racing, increased pool points and hidden pathways to make racing more exciting
- All new Wi-Fi rankings system tracks your win percentage against other duelists and either elevates your status by winning against strong opponents or decreasing your status by losing to weaker opponents
Product Description
The Dark Signers return in quest of eternal supremacy over New Domino City and the citizens of Satellite. Based on the immensely well loved Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s animated series and building off the success of Yu-Gi-Oh! World Championship 2009, duelists pick up the action after the Fortune Cup and start deep within the secret society Arcadia Movement. 5D’s Tale Mode offers new stages torn from the animated series with all new characters to cooperate with or jump into Free Duel mode to get right into one-on one-action. Added and upgraded features include turbo duel racing, puzzle solving maps, and race challenges never before seen in previous World Championship titles.
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Another year another Yu-Gi-Oh game. This one has over 3,500 cards.
STORY: This game takes place after the events of the 2009 version. It follows the 5D’s show with the Dark Signers. That’s as far as I’m going for this.
GAMEPLAY: Normal Yu-Gi-Oh play, with a top down view of the penetrate, instead of the player’s perspective, which was found in the 2009 version. There is more in terms of alacrity duels and racing, which, to me, isn’t a terrible thing. Variety is excellent. You still gain DP (Cash) to spend on packs, which cost 150 DP each. Now that I’ve really gotten into the game, I’m earning 300-400 DP on average from each duel that I win. The game also seems to be quicker. But, I turned OFF card animations in the options menu, since the game questions you after every phase if you wish to activate something…gets irritating and slows down the game, but it can be turned off from the options menu. The racing is still A = gas and B = Brake. Alacrity Duels still revolve around Alacrity Spells.
SOUND: Standard, not anything spectacular, but not terrible.
DIFFICULTY: This is where some agree/disagree. At times this can be a hard game. But, for the most part, it is a standard difficulty. The AI does make better moves, such as waiting to activate Mirror Force until you have some strength on your field, instead of using it as soon as they can on a monster you didn’t really need. In that sense, it has become more realistic. Yeah, the AI does have its quirks from time to time, but it has to process over 3,500 card combinations, which is impressive.
WI-FI: Still there and has been changed slightly. You now get special coins for winning/losing a duel, which you can use to buy cards on Wi-Fi. You can also duel and you will be ranked on your performance. Downloads are still there as well, like a different free card each day, new duel puzzles, and new opponents.
UNLOCKABLES: You can unlock packs and CPU opponents for World Championship by defeating different people 3 times each in tale mode, which is better then 5 times like in the 2009 version. Konami has also made it much simpler to tell if you have won/loss/tied someone any numberof times by walking up to them and clicking Information, which is a very nice add-on. You can also take star chips by winning in CPU Duels in World Championship mode and finding them in random places in Tale Mode. These Star Chips can be used to buy new clothes, duel disks, and different art styles for certain cards.
PROS:
3,500 + cards
Improved AI
Can now track wins/losses/ties against individuals in Tale Mode, instead of trying to remember
Wi-Fi duels earn you special coins to buy more cards, as well as DP
Quicker to unlock things with 3 wins, instead of 5
Cheaper to buy this game than to buy a bunch of real packs and decks
CONS:
Packs still cost 150 DP, which gets hard to come by when mesh around 300-400 DP each duel
POSSIBLE PRO/CON: (Depends on the person)
Racing and Alacrity Duels are still in the game, with more than the 2009 version
OVERALL: This is an upgrade to the 2009 version, which is a excellent thing. There is still CPU Duels, Tag Duels, Tournaments, etc. that Yu-Gi-Oh sports meeting are known for. This is a excellent game for people who don’t necessarily have the cash to buy real decks and packs. 4/5.
Rating: 4 / 5