What kind of yugioh decks are there




















The limiting of Gateway Of The Six killed the viability in the metagame, becoming too inconsistent to rely on. While it hasn't reclaimed its metagame glory, with a new card Six Samurai has the potential to become one of the strongest Yu-Gi-Oh!

Decks in the meta once more. Burning Abyss was a Deck that was released in the incredibly popular Duelist Alliance set. The Deck had incredible lasting power through the metagame, thanks to its powerful Monsters that could Special Summon themselves.

Dante, Traveler Of The Burning Abyss is an incredibly strong card that dumped Burning Abyss cards into the Graveyard as a Cost, meaning it was guaranteed to do so even if it was negated. Many cards in the Burning Abyss Archetype were put on different parts on the banlist due to how powerful it was. Burning Abyss isn't at the top of the metagame like it was in its prime, however, it maintains a good Yu-Gi-Oh!

In recent banlists, all Burning Abyss Monsters except for Beatrice, Lady Of The Eternal have been unlimited, allowing it to be played at near full power. Spellbooks were so strong , they were the single thing that prevented Dragon Rulers from being a Tier Zero Deck. This was thanks to Spellbook Of Judgement which provided the Deck with an insane amount of card advantage, being able to add multiple Spellbook cards to the Hand. Spellbooks were incredible at building up resources that were then used to dismantle the opponent's Field.

The banning of Spellbook Of Judgement would kill the dedicated Deck, though a Spellbook engine still sees play today. Namely, a small engine featuring Magician of Prophecy and Crowley, the First Propheseer in order to thin out your deck and draw cards.

Monarchs were all about tribute summoning which would then allow them to use their powerful effects when they were summoned. Monarch Decks utilized cards that could special summon themselves, such as Treeborn Frog and Cyber Dragon to then use their normal summon for the tribute of a Monarch card.

It was one of the first Archetypes in all of Yu-Gi-Oh, and for good reason. It was the best Yu-Gi-Oh! Archetype at the time and remains one of the most powerful Decks for its meta. Monarchs dominated the early days of Yu-Gi-Oh! However, they've become far too slow to be a consistent threat, despite their banned cards becoming fully restricted.

Their effects are still solid, but tribute summoning is not something a Deck can handle as their main gimmick anymore. The Deck had access to two of the most powerful Fusion cards in the game in the way of Shaddoll Fusion and Super Polymerization. Shaddoll Fusion allows its user to use materials from the Deck if the opponent had a Monster special summoned from the Extra Deck which is very common.

Super Polymerization fuses from either side of the field, and no card in the game can react to it. Shaddoll still sees play even to this day, with recent support in the Shaddoll Showdown Structure Deck with the Invoked engine. Shaddoll cards had a history bouncing on and off the banlist, with all of them now unlimited. They offer a ton of consistency, and thanks to how splashable they are as an engine, they are one of the best Yu-Gi-Oh! They can handle their own in the current meta, and while currently Rouge, can just as easily become fully meta once again.

An FTK first turn kill is a Deck that defeats the opponent before they have a chance to play hence the name. Substitoad and Ronintoadin made it incredibly easy to loop Frog cards to get them onto the field. I harbor my own author-biased thoughts about the most powerful decks, but today we'll go exactly by the data gathered from yugiohtopdecks. True King Dino decks are often but not always packed with 60 cards rather than the card standard. Why would you increase your card pool and thus risk a more-unpredictable deck?

Well, extra cards allow for more search options, a better defense against mill decks, and allow you to play the card-drawing but deck-destroying Pot of Desires without fear.

Regardless of your deck's size, True King Dino builds use wyrm-type True King monsters alongside dinosaur-type supports and an excellent field spell Dragonic Diagram.

Dinosaurs also enjoy access to one of the best search spells in the game, Fossil Dig, which can pull any level 6 or lower dinosaur from your deck, and they easily summon several powerful Evolzar rank 4 xyz monsters. Often mixed with other archetypes like Mekk-Knight, Spellbook, and Windwitch, Invoked decks rely on an extraordinary fusion spell, Invocation, to summon impressive fusion monsters.

This includes Invoked Purgatrio, who gains ATK for every card of all types that your opponent controls, can attack all opposing monsters once each, and inflicts piercing damage to defense position units.

You'll also want several link monsters to let you access multiple extra deck zones at once. Pure Invoked decks operate fine, but some players opt to add in the swarming capabilities of the Mekks and Witches.

Either way, Aleister the Invoker plays a crucial role due to both being a fusion material on the Invoked fusion cards and for being able to search Invocation from your deck. Luckily, Aleister himself can be searched with the field spell Magical Meltdown, which also helpfully prevents the negation of your fusion spells.

A monster-heavy theme, the Burning Abyss series activate unique powers when sent to the graveyard, mass-swarming and overwhelming foes with their unique abilities. Fielded Burning Abyss monsters usually destroy non-Abyss monsters you control, so exercise caution with their self-mutilating structure. World Chalice decks use their archetype's powers to summon unique link monsters, whose effects will revive other World monsters from the graveyard or call them from the deck, and you'll be amassing bonus extra deck zones along the way.

Many of the low-level World monsters such as Chosen by the World Chalice are normal monsters, qualifying for support cards like Unexpected Dai. Lee, the World Chalice Fairy is a nice World-search, World Legacy's Heart can add defeated members from the graveyard to the hand, and Imduk the World Chalice Dragon is an interesting link monster that only takes a single material to summon.

For meatier boss monsters, your extensive searches pay off by fielding impressive beasts like Ib the World Chalice Priestess and Ningirsu the World Chalice Warrior to annihilate your foes once your preparations have been made.

Often infused with some Sky Striker flavor, the ABC series revolves around three union monsters A-Assault Core, B-Buster Drake, and C-Crush Wyvern who can make their equipped light-attribute machine-type monster immune to monster, spell, and trap effects respectively.

These union cards also defend their attached monster from a single destruction and activate bonus effects when sent to the graveyard. The series is a bit slow in terms of swarming; luckily, the field spell Union Hangar can special summon a union monster from your deck and the trap Evenly Matched will help you catch up ig you fall behind. The three main union staples can also combine into the powerful fusion monster ABC-Dragon Buster without the use of a fusion spell!

Another build that usually opts for the uncommon card deck, Zombie themes are often mixed with dinosaur and plant supports. With 60 cards, there's a lot going on here, but usually, the Shiranui zombies and Predaplant plants make the largest showing.

Sadly, with the banning of the mass-graveyard-fill "That Grass Looks Greener" spell, the deck has lost access to one of its best utilities. That said, Fossil Dig and Souleating Oviraptor help search out your prehistoric beasts while Pot of Desires again takes advantage of your larger deck size to draw two cards for one. With so many slots, this deck is very customizable, and you might even prefer mixing it with the deck-destroying Lightsworn series.

I'm tempted to replace this entry due to its similarities with True King with Lair of Darkness, which probably just hasn't had time to reach the list, but True Draco decks often but not always disregard their extra deck, favoring tribute summons and anti-special summon tricks for your opponents. But if you really want the extra deck intact, you can still mix the series with Invoked or Demise cards. Amano-Iwato and Skill Drain both cancel out your opponent's monster effects, while True King's Return is a behemoth of a trap that can revive a True Draco from your graveyard each turn, tribute summon during your opponent's turn, and destroy a monster upon exiting the field.

Feel the surge of radiance with Structure Deck: Wave of Light! Fairies are back in a big way this New Year, harnessing a bounty of wisdom to counter anything their foe throws at them. Technology vs. The second half of is a season for Dragons in the Yu-Gi-Oh! Ancient Monarchs are back to rule with the addition of several brand-new cards and a ready-to-play Deck in the Emperor of Darkness Structure Deck!

New Pendulum Monsters arise in the Master of Pendulum Structure Deck , bringing with them powerful effects and strategies to mystify your opponent! In addition to these monsters, the Master of Pendulum Structure Deck contains 10 brand-new cards, including brand-new Synchro and Xyz Monsters!

New Duelists can now get their hands on these popular cards while advanced Duelists can support their existing Geargia Decks or other Machine-Type Decks to bolster their strategies. The Lightsworn have defended the Realm of Light for years and now these forces can be at your command with the most powerful of the Lightsworn forces and allies, including the introduction of a world-premiere Spell Card! Following the successful journey back to the origins of the Yu-Gi-Oh! GX era and features the formidable Cyber Dragon!

The legendary monster in the Yu-Gi-Oh! The "Roid" Monsters included are solid for the archetype, but what makes Starter Deck - Syrus good is the Spell and Trap card line-up it provides.

Giant Trunade, Heavy Storm, and Book of Moon were all fantastic staples at the time, so much so the former two have been banned for quite some time. It has good cards that can still be used today, such as Sakuretsu Armor and the aforementioned Book of Moon. Dark Legion includes plenty of awesome cards, with only three useless Normal Monsters included in the deck.

Dark Legion included a few cards that deal piercing damage, as well as cards that set up the graveyard. Staple cards such as Monster Reincarnation and Smashing Ground are great additions to the deck as well. Zexal came out and served as an introduction to the then-new Xyz mechanic. Its cover card was Number Utopia, a card which is still used in modern decks to this day thanks to Utopia: The Lightning and Double or Nothing.

Starter Deck: Dawn of the Syz served as a great starting off point for Xyz summoning, with cards in it being used to this day. It's a fantastic one as well, as it's easy to special summon and build up advantage thanks to its effect. Odd-Eyes Saber Dragon can destroy a Monster an opponent controls without targetting whenever it destroys a Monster by battle. The Calculator is also a very fun Monster to build around, and Cyber Dragon is an always-fantastic card for any deck to take advantage of.

Based off of Seto Kaiba's card deck from the first episode from the original anime. The deck is built around two strategies. The other strategy being to summon as many monsters as possible. The deck is designed for quick tribute summoning or keeping as little monster cards in your hand. The problem with the simplicity of this deck's strategy is that it is easy to counter once your opponent knows how you are using this deck.

The deck is also vulnerable to decks based around anti-Dragon monsters like the Buster Blader. Based off of Yugi Moto's deck from the first episode from the original anime.



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