Yu-Gi-Oh! (second series anime)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article does not cite any references or sources. (July 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
| This article or section seems to contain embedded lists that may require cleanup. To meet Wikipedia's style guidelines, please help improve this article by: removing items which are not notable, encyclopedic, or helpful from the list(s); incorporating appropriate items into the main body of the article; and discussing this issue on the talk page. |
| Yu-Gi-Oh! | |
|---|---|
| 遊☆戯☆王デュエル モンスターズ (Yūgiō Dyueru Monsutāzu) |
|
| Genre | Action, Adventure, Fantasy, Shōnen |
| TV anime: Yu-Gi-Oh! (known in East Asia as Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters) | |
| Director | Various |
| Studio | Studio Gallop, Nihon Ad Systems |
| Network | |
| Original run | September 29, 2001 – June 10, 2006 |
| Episodes | 224 |
Yu-Gi-Oh!, known in Japan and the rest of East Asia as Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters (遊☆戯☆王デュエル モンスターズ Yūgiō Dyueru Monsutāzu?) is an anime based on the Yu-Gi-Oh! manga. It is produced by Studio Gallop and Nihon Ad Systems, and the English adaptation is distributed by 4Kids Entertainment.
Duel Monsters is not to be confused with the earlier series of the same name. As the series is the second to be based on the manga, it is often referred to by fans as the "second series". Some sources state erroneously that the first series produced by Toei is a "lost first season", although the two series are unrelated aside from plot continuity.
The success of Duel Monsters was one of the main factors in creating a real-world version of the game that served as the focal point of the series, the Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game.
The series began its 224-episode run in Japan on April 18, 2000 and U.S. on September 29, 2001. The series ended its run on September 29, 2004 in Japan and on June 10, 2006 in America. In Japan, the series aired on TV Tokyo. The English version is broadcasted on many channels. In the United States it was originally broadcast on Kids' WB, and reruns were previously seen on 4Kids TV and Cartoon Network, and can still be viewed online at www.4Kids.TV. In Canada, Yu-Gi-Oh! is broadcast on YTV. In Latin America and Australia, it is broadcast on Nickelodeon, and formerly on Network Ten in Australia. In the United Kingdom it is broadcast on Nickelodeon and Sky One. In Hong Kong, it is broadcast on ATV from July 13, 2002
Contents |
Like the earlier series, Duel Monsters is mainly about the various battles of a high school freshman named Yugi Muto (romanized as Yugi Mutou in the English-language manga) through a card game known as Duel Monsters (Magic and Wizards in the original, although Duel Monsters is also used). However, Duel Monsters picks up its focus from where the earlier series leaves off, roughly corresponding to the eighth volume of the manga series.
The plot of the series is divided into several story arcs:
- Duelist Kingdom: Duelist Kingdom is the second story arc in the manga and the first in Duel Monsters, and involves a tournament hosted by the game's creator, Maximillion Pegasus (Pegasus J. Crawford in the original version) , on his own personal island. Pegasus, using the power of the Millennium Eye, manages to seal the soul of Solomon Muto (Sugoroku Mutou in the English-language manga and the Japanese versions) away, and it is up to Yugi to save him. Meanwhile, Joey Wheeler (Katsuya Jonouchi) enters the tournament in order to pay for his sister's surgery, and Pegasus and several top executives at KaibaCorp plot to remove Seto Kaiba from the head of his company.
- Legendary Heroes: In a continued attempt to remove Seto Kaiba from his position as head of KaibaCorp, KaibaCorp's former executives trap Kaiba in a virtual reality game based on Duel Monsters. Yugi and his friends enter the game to save him. The video game Yu-Gi-Oh! The Falsebound Kingdom was loosely based on this storyline.
- Dungeon Dice Monsters: When a new game shop opens to compete with Sugoroku's game shop, Yugi is challenged by its owner, Ryuji Otogi (Duke Devlin in the English-language version) in a game of his creation, with the title of "King of Games" on the line.
- Battle City: When Kaiba hears of the three legendary God Cards, Kaiba believes that with the three cards in his deck, he will be able to defeat Yugi. In order to obtain the God Cards, Kaiba hosts a tournament to take place in the streets of Domino, with the rule that each person that enters the tournament must ante up a card for the winners of the duels to keep. Meanwhile, Yugi hears of the three God Cards and how they are tied to an ancient Egyptian legend - one that involves the nameless Pharaoh. At the same time, Marik Ishtar, guardian of the Pharaoh's Tomb, wants the Pharaoh's power for himself, and seeks to defeat Yugi. In the Japanese version, he actually wishes to torture and kill Yugi for revenge and to free his family from serving the Nameless Pharaoh.
- Virtual World (Noa's Arc): As Yugi, Kaiba, Joey, and Marik are travelling to the destination of the Battle City Finals, the airship they are riding in suddenly takes an unexpected turn. The main characters find themselves trapped in a virtual reality simulation, in which the former executives of KaibaCorp plan to take their revenge against Yugi and Kaiba.
- Waking the Dragons (DOMA Arc): When an ancient organization known as Doma (not named in the English anime, although the name Paradius was used in both versions as a front for their operations) steals the God cards and begins to seal the souls of people and duel monsters in an effort to revive a monster thought to have lead to the destruction of Atlantis 10,000 years ago, it is up to Yugi and friends to stop them. To do so, Yugi, Joey, and Kaiba join forces with the three legendary dragons, Timaeus, Critias, and Hermos, and take on Doma's leader, Dartz and Doma's three swordsmen: Rafael, Valon and Alister
- Grand Championship (KC Grand Prix): With Dartz's group defeated and no money to return home to Domino, Yugi and company enter a tournament hosted by Kaiba, in his new amusement park, in return for a ride home. With Kaiba Corporation crippled because of Doma's activities, one tournament entrant seeks to finish the job and take down KaibaCorp for good. "Grand Prix" in French means "Big Prize."
- Dawn of the Duel (Millennium World): With all three God Cards in his possession, Yami Yugi (Dark Yugi in the English Manga and Japanese anime) is ready to find all his lost memories. However, he's in for more than he bargains for when he is thrust into the World of Memory, an alternate reality inside the Millennium Puzzle based on the events that occurred in Egypt 5,000 years ago (3,000 years ago in the Japanese anime). There, the Pharaoh must relive the last days of his previous life, fighting his old enemies and reuniting with his old friends. But his new friends have not forgotten about him, and Yugi and his friends travel inside the Millennium Puzzle to find the World of Memory and help the Pharaoh recover all his memories. However, Yami Bakura (Dark Bakura in the English manga and Japanese anime) won't let the Pharaoh gain all his memories just yet, as he plans on using the information gained in the World of Memory to gain the powers of the Millennium Items and reawaken an ancient evil that has remained dormant for the past 5,000 years.
- The Ceremonial Battle: Most of the quest is complete. Pharaoh Atem has obtained all seven millennium items, acquired all three Egyptian God Cards, defeated Zorc Necrophades in the Memory World, and has found out all about his past, including his name. Now, the pharaoh can quietly leave the mortal world, and join his faithful priests in the afterlife. However, the doorway to the afterlife can only be opened if the pharaoh is defeated in a duel. Yugi takes on the challenge, dueling Atem to let Atem go. Even though Atem would very much want to go to the afterlife, he has a good pride in his skills, and will never let anybody beat him easily. Yugi defeats Atem and he is released in to the afterlife leaving Yugi and his friends to mourn his departing.
Duel Monsters serves as a continuation of the earlier series in terms of the story, yet there are differences in the two series where they overlap. In particular, the Death-T fight which is held by Yugi and rival Seto Kaiba, is redone, and Miho Nosaka, a supporting character in the manga and the earlier series, does not appear in Duel Monsters. Whereas the earlier series introduces the characters (by virtue of being adapted from earlier volumes of the manga), Duel Monsters assumes that the viewers are familiar with the characters from the onset, and scenes referring to chronologically earlier events are redone. Because of the relative speed between the manga and anime releases, three extra story arcs that are not found in later volumes have been added for Duel Monsters: Virtual World, Waking the Dragons, and Grand Championship. One of the other most notable changes is that, unlike the manga, the Duel Monsters anime, as the title suggest focuses on the Duel Monsters card-game more than the manga, and adds many Duel scenes that were not in the original manga itself, often changing parts of the plot to fit around addition of the duels.
There are two adaptations of the second series in English: a United States adaptation by 4Kids Entertainment aired in the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand, and a Southeast Asia version by A.S.N. for Singapore and the Philippines. Both versions have edits, most of which are content edits.
| To meet Wikipedia's quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup because it is in a list format that may be better presented using prose. You can help by converting this section to prose, if appropriate. Editing help is available. (September 2007) |
- Americanization of character names (e.g. Katsuya Jonouchi, Hiroto Honda, and Anzu Mazaki became Joey Wheeler, Tristan Taylor, and Téa Gardner, respectively)
- Replacing the background music to suit a younger demographic (e.g.: upbeat, pop and generic tracks in sharp contrast to the darker, orchestral and melodramatic score of the original Japanese soundtrack)
- Replacing the Japanese sound effects with familiar American sound effects.
- Replacing each of the Japanese opening themes (Rock/Pop songs by various groups) with a single (occasionally altered) instrumental song done on a synthesizer. The Japanese ending themes are also replaced with a similar version of the US Opening.
- Reworking the plot in certain parts of numerous episodes and story arcs, mostly for censorship reasons, but also for unknown reasons.
- Removing all instances of weapons (like pistols and knives, which are often prevalent).
- Removing scenes where two or more characters are fighting.
- Removing or obfuscating many references to religion, such as the pentagram or hexagram. The Seal of Orichalcos, a fantastic version of an actual occult symbol, the unicursal hexagram (popularized by Aleister Crowley), continues to play a central role in many episodes. Other occult references have remained.
- Removing or rewriting scenes where characters die or are in real danger of death (In the English anime, characters are instead threatened with the possibility of going to the Shadow Realm, or in some cases they are "captured").
- Removing or editing scenes where monsters undergo some form of violent death (such as being eaten or being stabbed)
- Removing scenes where characters make obscene gestures
- Editing scenes where a female (or male) character or Duel Monster appears to be nude or might be wearing something too revealing.
- Changing the setting of the country from Japan to United States.
- Removing assorted sexual innuendo
- Removing much writing in Japanese and English (this resulted in the unusual design of the Duel Monsters cards in the English version of the series).
- Removing any kind of references that could be accused of causing children to develop bad habits (truancy for example).
- To get around FCC rules concerning advertising in shows, as well as to make the show more marketable in non-English countries, all the cards in the show have been painted over to feature only the card illustration, card element and the attack/defense of the card if it is a monster card.
A separate "uncut" DVD release was commissioned between 4Kids Entertainment and FUNimation, with a new adaptation that is more consistent with the original. The uncut DVDs were pulled from solicitation after Volume 3 "Stolen - Blue-Eyes White Dragon" for no apparent reason, with a variety of explanations including legal issues and poor sales, with limited elaboration. Lance Heiskell, a FUNimation representative, has noted legal rights as the reason for cancellation, although he was unable to expand on it.
Kids' WB! also edited episodes 4 and 5, and later episodes 14 and 15, fusing these episodes that were originally two-part episodes into half-hour episodes. 4Kids dubbed the episodes separately; the separate episodes appeared in other countries and on DVDs. During the rebroadcast of the series on 4Kids TV, the episodes were shown in their full form.
- The pilot airdate for Yu-Gi-Oh! was originally 9/15/01 but was switched to 9/29/01 because of Terrorist disasters
- Americanization of character names (e.g. Katsuya Jonouchi, Hiroto Honda, and Anzu Mazaki became Joey Wheeler, Tristan Taylor, and Téa Gardner, respectively)
- The original background music is kept, along with the original opening and endings.
- There is mild use of profanity.
Duel Monsters is heavily centered around the card game, with plot details frequently added between game turns. However, there are several main differences between the rules found therein and the rules of the real-world card game.
The real-world rules essentially correspond to the "new rules for experts" set out by Kaiba at the start of the Battle City story arc. Prior to this, a simplified version of the rules were utilised, which featured several differences, including the summoning of monsters without the use of tributes, the inability to attack a player's life points directly, the restriction that only one monster could attack per turn, and certain types of monsters being stronger or weaker against other monsters of a logical type (quite similar to the often compared Pokémon).
These earlier rules take considerable artistic liberty in their depiction - for example, allowing monsters to be "partially destroyed", monsters to be played as magic cards, and traps and magic cards to be disabled as a result of monster effects. At times, some duels feature particularly unusual events which only "work" because the field and monsters are represented by holograms, allowing for exciting or dynamic visuals that accompany events which could never actually be realistically employed in the real-life card game. A prime example of this is Yugi's two-part duel against Panik, in which, among other things, the light from the manifestation of the Swords of Revealing Light dispels the cloud surrounding the field obscuring Panik's monsters, and the Castle of Dark Illusion has its floatation ring destroyed, causing it to fall on and destroy those monsters.
Some differences, however, are not just limited to the Duelist Kingdom arc. Throughout the series, some cards are in different classifications in Duel Monsters as compared to the real-world game - for example, Flame Swordsman is a normal monster in the series, but is a Fusion monster in the real-world game. Spellbinding Circle was notably entirely redone as a "trap with magic-card properties", complete with a different function. Also, duelists are shown normal summoning their "monsters" in face up defense position, while this is only possible in the real card game when permitted by the effects of certain magic or trap cards. Additionally, duelists constantly place their cards face down in their graveyard, as opposed to face up.
In the Battle City story arc, the "advanced rules" also prevented Fusion monsters from immediately attacking, where there is no such provision in the real game. To avoid this rule in the anime, the Spell card Quick-Attack was created. From the Doma story arc onwards, no such provision exists. By that point, the only difference is the starting amount of life points, which was shrunken for brevity purposes.
Several cards were created exclusively for the anime, including cards that are tied to unique story elements, such as the Legendary Dragons, but also a few cards like Defense Paralysis, which would prevent the opponent from playing monsters in Defense Mode, and is basically a trap-card version of Stop Defense. However, such cards are usually seen only for one duel.
- Volume 1: The Heart of the Cards (Episodes 1-3)
- Volume 2: Into the Hornet's Nest (Episodes 4-6)
- Volume 3: Attack From the Deep (Episodes 7-9)
- Volume 4: Give Up the Ghost (Episodes 10-12)
- Volume 5: Evil Spirit of the Ring (Episodes 13-15)
- Volume 6: The Scars of Defeat (Episodes 16-18)
- Volume 7: Double Trouble Duel (Episodes 19-21)
- Volume 8: Face Off (Episodes 22-24)
- Volume 9: Champion Vs. Creator (Episodes 25-27)
- Volume 10: Duel Identity (Episodes 28-30)
- Volume 11: Best of Friends, Best of Duelists (Episodes 31-34)
- Volume 12: Match of the Millennium Part One (Epsodes 35-37)
- Volume 13: Match of the Millennium Part Two (Episodes 38-40)
- Volume 14: Ties of Friendship (Episodes 41-43)
- Volume 15: Legendary Heroes (Episodes 44-46)
- Volume 16: Dungeon Dice Monsters (Episodes 47-49)
- Uncut Volume 1: The Shadow Games (Episodes 1-3)
- Uncut Volume 2: The Insector Combo (Episodes 4-6)
- Uncut Volume 3: Stolen: Blue Eyes White Dragon (Episodes 7-9)
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Complete First Season (Tin Set) (Episodes 1-49)
Each volume in this series has the subtitle, "Battle City Duels."
- Volume 1: The Mystery Duelist (Episodes 50-53)
- Volume 2: Obelisk the Tormentor (Episodes 54-56)
- Volume 3: The ESP Duelist (Episodes 57-60)
- Volume 4: The Master of Magicians (Episodes 61-64)
- Volume 5: Mime Control (Episodes 65-69)
- Volume 6: Double Duel (Episodes 70-74)
- Volume 7: Friends Til' the End (Episodes 75-79)
- Volume 8: The Dark Spirit Revealed (Episodes 80-84)
- Volume 9: Awakening the Evil (Episodes 85-89)
- Volume 10: Mind Game (Episodes 90-93)
- Volume 11: Showdown in the Shadows (Episodes 94-97)
Each volume in this series has the subtitle, "Enter the Shadow Realm."
- Volume 1: Back to Battle City (Episodes 122-125)
- Volume 2: Darkness Returns (Episodes 126-130)
- Volume 3: Clash in the Coliseum (Episodes 131-134)
- Volume 4: Battle for the Bronze (Episodes 135-139)
- Volume 5: The Final Face-Off (Episodes 140-144)
Both volumes in this series have the subtitle, "Waking the Dragons."
- Volume 1: A New Evil (Episodes 145-151)
- Volume 2: My Freaky Valentine (Episodes 152-159)
- Volume 3: Flight Of Fear (Episodes 160-168)
- Volume 1: Grand Championship (Episodes 185-198)
- Volume 2: Dawn of the Duel, Part One (Episodes 199-212)
- Volume 3: Dawn of the Duel, Part Two (Episodes 213-224)
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: Capsule Monsters Part One
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: Capsule Monsters Part Two
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Movie
- Yu-Gi-Oh! main characters
- List of Yu-Gi-Oh! anime and manga characters
- Yu-Gi-Oh! anime, manga or movie only characters
- Official website of English Yu-Gi-Oh!
- Yu-Gi-Oh! on YTV
- Nickelodeon United Kingdom Yu-Gi-Oh! webpage
- Nickelodeon Australia Yu-Gi-Oh! webpage
- Janime - features full-detail summaries of all the Japanese episodes (written in English) all the way to the end of the series. Also contains full-detail summaries of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX
- Yu-Jyo - A Yu-Gi-Oh! Episode Guide - features TV episode synopses, with a focus on the differences between the American and Japanese versions
- Yu-Gi-Oh! card - The official site of the Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game
- Kokoro No Naka - features screen-captures, manga scans and more
- TV Tokyo Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters site (in Japanese)
- NASinc. Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters site (in Japanese)
- Yugioh Episode Comparisions - focus on differences between Japanese and English dub. episodes includes screenshots.
|
|
|
|---|---|
| Japanese manga | Yu-Gi-Oh! (in future updates) • Yu-Gi-Oh! R |
| Japanese anime | Yu-Gi-Oh! (Japan-exclusive) • Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters |
| English manga | Yu-Gi-Oh! • Yu-Gi-Oh! Duelist • Yu-Gi-Oh! Millennium World |
| English anime | Yu-Gi-Oh! • Yu-Gi-Oh! Capsule Monsters • Yu-Gi-Oh! GX • List of Yu-Gi-Oh! episodes |
| Movies | Yu-Gi-Oh! (Japan-exclusive) • Yu-Gi-Oh! the Movie: Pyramid of Light |
|
Merchandise
|
|
| General | Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game • Duel Disk • Yu-Gi-Oh! related video games |
|
Other
|
|
| Characters | Main characters • Anime and Manga characters • Anime, Manga or Movie only characters |
| Elements | Millennium Items • Kaiba Corporation • Dungeon Dice Monsters |
| Cards | Egyptian God Cards • Orichalcos |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from July 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Wikipedia laundry list cleanup | Anime series | Articles that include images for deletion | Cleanup from September 2007 | Articles with sections that need to be turned into prose | Anime of the 2000s | YTV shows | Yu-Gi-Oh!-related anime | Kids WB shows | 2000s American television series