➡ Click here: Best yugioh episodes
Yusaku concludes that the unknown enemy knows all about his past. Following his rescue from the Hanoi Project and learning that his parents died searching for him, Takeru becomes depressed and closed off over the years, while his grandfather encourages him to move forward and away from his past. Later on it's discovered that all of the students have been bribed into building a giant colosseum for the bad guy of the day, an Amazonian woman named Tania. The economy is built around a children's card game.
Amazon Tracking Pixel Some articles display amazon products as part of the Amazon Affiliate north, this pixel provides traffic statistics for those products. You didn't read that wrong. What should I do. He's kind of a dick. Makes perfect sense, doesn't it. Soulburner and Flame challenge Bit and Boot, while Playmaker continues his chase for Haru and Bohman. Solo's even an episode where the main villain is a guy doing a pretty good impersonation. Bohman tries to stop Playmaker's advances by only allowing Playmaker to attack with one monster through the effect of his monster.
Tag-team duels with an audience are also prone to this pacing faux pas, since tag-team duels are almost always accompanied with twice the chit-chat. Meanwhile, Playmaker reaches the edge of the wind world and prepares to face off against Bohman once again. So what makes the show so much fun?
The Top Ten Craziest Episodes of Yu Gi Oh GX - To stop Paradox's plans and retrieve Stardust Dragon, Yugi, Jaden, and Yusei's grand duel with Paradox unfolds. If you guessed the third option, congratulations!
Are you a fan of Yu-Gi-Oh? Or do you just want to laugh at the stuff that makes it onto kid's TV shows these days? Well read on, as I take you through the top ten craziest episodes of one of the most delightfully strange and meta anime out there:. It's insane, it's funny, it's incredibly confusing, and for that it's one of my favorite anime of all time - any one who hasn't seen it should check it out right away! Welcome to the world of Yu-Gi-Oh, a world with no police force, where all disputes from petty school yard bickering to the question of whether you should be allowed to murder someone in cold blood is settled using a children's card game -. The economy is built around a children's card game. The education system is built about a children's card game. You can rule the world if you want... Oh, and the monsters inside the cards are real, but only certain people can talk to them. Did I mention that this world doesn't have psychiatrists either? We follow , a new student at Duel Academy, the world's leading school for learning how to play Duel Monsters and occasionally being roped into saving the world. His best friends are timid blue haired kid with confidence issues , Zane Syrus' brother , Chumley he's... That's kinda it , token female , the rival , vaguely British logic-freak and annoying Texan army-wannabe stereotype with a man-crush on Jaden. In season three another group of clinically insane people are added to the mix, an australian guy with a live alligator strapped to his back , who sacrifices his life once an episode and always appears again at the end with no explanation of how he survived, like some sort of anime Kenny and Jaden-clone with blue hair and a southern accent. Together they fight evil and save the world from those who would destroy it. So what makes the show so much fun? Part of it is the pure barrel of insanity that is the setting itself, where playing is serious business and losing a card game might mean losing your job, reputation or even your life. But the biggest part comes from the Dub. The writers and voice actors in this show just don't take it seriously, and characters constantly comment on the absurdity of the plot, the oddly translated lines and make meta pop culture jokes at inappropriate moments. There's even an episode where the main villain is a guy doing a pretty good impersonation. The writers and cast are clearly having the time of their lives, and its their joy and humour that really brings the show to life. That's why I've decided to compile my top ten list of the most hilariously insane episodes of Yu-Gi-Oh GX. In a world that apparently is able to function with no laws, it seems inevitable that havoc will ensue in the name of science. What wasn't inevitable was that someone would get the bright idea of hooking a monkey up to electronics and forcing it to play card games. This unfortunate soul, Wheeler the duelling monkey, escapes from the high tech Laboratory of Evil Science Incorporated and onto Duel Academy Island. Unfortunately for him, shotgun wielding evil henchmen and the mad scientist responsible for his torment are in hot pursuit. So what does our monkey friend do? He takes a hostage and dangles her off a cliff. Hey, I'd do the same if I were him. So how do our heroes save the girl? Call a hostage negotiator? Challenge the monkey to a card game? If you guessed the third option, congratulations! Over the course of the duel Jaden figures out why Wheeler ran away. Aside from the horrible torture. He just wanted to get home to his family. And the horrible torture. Jaden wins the duel, but the gang bands together to let Wheeler escape the scientists. No one calls the police though. I guess there's no card-game playing PETA in this universe. Every Friday at Duel Academy is apparently 'sandwich day', a bizarre ritual which probably breaks the Geneva Convention on Cruel and Unusual Punishment in which the students have to pick their lunch from a tub of unlabelled sandwiches. Selections include, and I quote, ostrich burgers, sardines, grilled tongue sandwiches and the focus of this episode, the Golden Eggwich, a fried egg sandwich made from the egg of a chicken that lays golden eggs. Yes those exist in this universe. No it's never brought up again after this episode. But for the past month someone has been stealing the Golden Eggwich, and our heroes make it their business to find out who. That guy up there. They call him 'Damon', but he does the chest thumping cry, speaks in broken English and everything. The story is that this guy was a student, who was so sick of drawing horrible sandwiches that he went missing and trained Rocky Balboa-style until he could draw the good sandwiches without looking. You're probably asking: what's any of this got to do with children's card games? Well apparently your ability to detect egg sandwiches is tied to your ability to always be able to draw the right card from your randomly shuffled deck. Makes perfect sense, doesn't it? And I do mean 'decides'; they'd barely shared any lines of dialogue and he'd never even acknowledged her as part of the group before. Then one day he woke up and decided he was going to commit grand larceny of the season's plot MacGuffin the Seven Spirit Keys to get her attention and blackmail her with a children's card game into becoming his girlfriend. I thought it was going to turn out that he was possessed by the Shadow Riders the big bads at the time , but no... Chazz is just crazy. What's even creepier is that Alexis' brother Atticus is totally down with all of this, and even gives Chazz the idea to steal the keys and a few extra cards to help him in the duel. He's kind of a dick. The weirdest thing about the Yu-Gi-Oh shows is that in situations like these, the protagonists never take the easy route - you know, taking advantage of the fact that there's like 8 of you and dog-piling him until he stops being a moron. Hell, Zane even suggests they just tackle him at one point, but Alexis agrees to duel anyway. She wins of course, because the implications would be majorly unpleasant if she didn't. Speaking of unpleasant implications, check out the next craziest episode of Yu-Gi-Oh! The episode begins with a really... What is this I don't even. Later on it's discovered that all of the students have been bribed into building a giant colosseum for the bad guy of the day, an Amazonian woman named Tania. After she pays her loyal workers with children's trading cards, she declares that one of Jaden's gang must duel her, and if she wins the loser must marry her. Coming from a female-only tribe, the only way for Tania to find a husband is to win one in a duel. You didn't read that wrong. And apparently it's impossible to refuse a duel in the Yu-Gi-Oh universe, so that makes forced marriages perfectly legal. Card games are the law after all. She chooses to duel Bastion, our delightful and very oddly voiced British logic-freak. Mid way through the duel he randomly falls head over heels in love with her for no adequately explored reason vaguely implied to be some sort of spell cast by Tania. He promptly loses the duel because he was distracted by his erec- burning infatuation. The first part ends with the rest of the gang being chased out of the colosseum to give Bastion and Tania some... Here's where it starts getting weird. The second part begins with the gang sat outside of the colosseum listening to Bastion... But before you assume he's being molested against his will, Chazz quickly explains that he's been 'duelling' Tania all night. Bastion later emerges looking despondent and exhausted, stating that Tania dumped him because he 'wasn't enough of a man'. Still talking about duelling. Definitely still a kids show. Tania demands another duel, and Jaden steps up the plate and kicks the Amazonian's ass to next Sunday, breaking the spell over Bastion. The twist to the episode? Tania is a tiger. When she loses to Jaden, she literally transforms back into a tiger and wanders off. Bastion: She says she wants a... Some one who can give her a... Bastion: I can't duel... Jaden: I hate to say it, but she's probably duelling without you. Chazz: Oh gag me. Bastion: You don't understand! When I first duelled Tania, there were fireworks between us! You saw how our cards danced that dangerous duel monsters dance together! Definitely still talking about card games. I have a theory that Duel Academy is actually an insane asylum for delusional and psychotic children, and that Duel Monsters is just some Shutter Island-esque way of letting them act out their delusions in the hopes of bringing them back to the real world. Why do I think that? Because everyone on the Island is completely. The episode opens up with Syrus browsing an online Agony Aunt website. When we're face to face, I back down. What should I do? We are then introduced to our love-struck antagonist. Real original naming right there. Anyway, Bob has a crush on Alexis, as evidenced by the stalker pictures of her he has in his room. And the fact that he lurks outside her room spying on her with binoculars. And sends her anonymous sonnets. During one of his spying sessions, he is caught by Jaden and the gang, and their arguing attracts the attention of Alexis, who accuses Jaden of spying on her... By a convoluted series of events, Bob intends to prove his love to the woman he has never spoken to by jumping out of a bush while she is manhandling Jaden and defending her honour in a duel. Jaden understandably doesn't know what on earth is going on, but Alexis threatens to have him expelled if he doesn't duel. What ensues is possibly the weirdest duel in the whole show. Bob uses a game-show themed deck. And by game-show themed deck, I mean an actual quiz game-show breaks out which is only tenuously linked to actual duelling. Jaden eventually wins and inadvertently reveals that he was the one who gave Bob the advice at the beginning of the episode, causing Bob to instantly start fan-girling over him and chasing his around the ring, believing him to be some kind of love-god. See what I mean? This episode gives you a good idea of just how completely warped the values of the Yu Gi Oh universe are. It is a running plot on the show that several students have gone missing at the Academy's Abandoned Dorm, including Alexis' brother. This episode revolves around an undercover reporter who infiltrates the school hoping to investigate the rumours of missing kids and sell the story for a huge profit, of course ruining Duel Academy's reputation in the first place. Here's where the problems start piling up. Firstly, it is revealed that the school has actually been covering up the disappearances, faking records that show them going on vacations or special programmes. And these are our good guys folks. Did the parents not find it strange when their kids failed to come home after two years? Why hasn't Alexis gone to the press about this yet? Or, you know, told her parents that her brother isn't actually on vacation? Are we seriously meant to root for an institution that actually tried to cover this up? Secondly, the reporter's motivation for investigating the story? No, it's not because what the school is doing is truly heinous. It's because he is greedy, hates children's card games and wants to ruin everyone's fun. At the end of the episode he is inspired by Jaden's duelling and realises that duelling is the greatest thing ever, destroys the evidence he found, and leaves. Thirdly, why is no one aside from Alexis even remotely suspicious about this guy not being who he says he is? He's like twenty years older than everyone else. The new villain, Professor Viper, has been forcing everyone to wear wristbands that drain their energy while they duel, and issued a mandate that everyone must duel once a day. Though the gang have only just begun to suspect this plot, a new student named Adrian Gecko has uncovered it for certain. Viper wants him out of the picture, and so reminds him he must duel once a day or be expelled, and turns up the energy draining power to 11 so that when Adrian duels, he'll be killed. Adrian is smart though, and organises a tournament at his dorm so that when he duels, half the school will be duelling at the same time, reasoning that Viper wont slaughter hundreds of people. He goes out looking for an opponent, and is challenged by our favourite restraining order waiting to happen, Chazz Princeton. You see, Chazz has recently learned that Adrian is richer and more popular than he is, and he isn't going to stand for it. So he challenges Adrian to a duel... Did I mention Chazz is insane? This one isn't nearly as insane in the content of it as the others, but it is a good demonstration of the writers getting bored and just deciding to mock the show relentlessly. That's why I'm gonna give you the highlights... Jesse: Remember what Jim said? About the weird energy? And how its being caused by our bio bands? Syrus: I've been saying that all along! Alexis: You know Jim brings up a good point. I never thought of that. But no one listens to me. I'm just the wimpy side-kick who's here for everyone's amusement. I'd never actually have an idea that could help move the plot along. Alexis: Anyway, getting back to Jim's idea... Who cares if he's richer than me. And so what if he's more powerful! I'm really good at playing card games! And that's what life is really all about anyway!! Ojama Yellow: Take it easy boss, you'll pop a blood vessel! I'll just buy a new one! Do you hear me Adrian Gecko?! What kind of a stupid name is that anyway. I've got a much cooler name. And unlike you, I also have my own catchphrase! I hate it when he conjures lightning. There isn't much to say about this episode. It's an episode done entirely in rhyme. As punishment for breaking school rules in an earlier episode, Jaden and Syrus are forced to duel the paradox brothers, a cameo from the first Yu Gi Oh series who are incapable of speaking in a normal rhythm and force every sentence into a torturous rhyme. Suffice it to say, they were annoying as hell then, and they are as annoying as hell now. Through a long and convoluted series of events, Jaden ends up stranded on a boat out at sea, having resolved to quit duelling forever. Despondent, he asks for a sign... The gods in the Yu-Gi-Oh universe have never been the most subtle lot, I'll admit. He wakes up washed up on a beach, on a completely different planet, in a completely different dimension, where talking, walking nightmare abomination dolphins give him a pep talk about why he needs to keep playing cards because he is the only one who can save the world from the monster of the week, yadda yadda. Then a robot shows up and challenges him to a card game. Having previously been forced to abandon his cards, Nightmare-Dolphin-Man leads Jaden to a new deck, hidden inside a space probe. It turns out these cards were actually created by Jaden himself, designed when he was a child as part of a competition. The winning cards would be shot into space WHY , and apparently Jaden had completely forgotten this, despite it being something as high-profile and impressive as shooting cards into space WHY. And to top it all off, he has a card with Nightmare-Dolphin-Man on it. This episode would have made a lot more sense if it had turned out to be a hallucination induced by dehydration, but at the end of the episode, Jaden wakes up mysteriously back on Duel Academy Island, holding the deck of cards that had been shot into space. Aside from the whole scenario being a complete barrel of 'what the hell', it also gets the prize for making absolutely no sense. How did the cards get into a different dimension? Why are there a race of dolphin men living on the planet in another dimension when they are supposedly figments of an eight year old's imagination? Where did the duelling robot come from, and how did it know Jaden would be there? What were the creators smoking? WHY WOULD YOU SHOOT CARDS INTO SPACE?! Anyone who thinks they've got what it takes can enter. Just create a design for a new card, then mail your design to the Kaiba Corporation. Winners will be hand-picked by me. Then your cards will be launched into space on a KaibaCorp satalite. No, I will not get over this whole shooting cards into space business. The show and I are having this out, right here right now. The story arc leading up to this episode is already fantastically weird, with the school being transported into another dimension, and the students being taken over by a curse which turns them into 'duel ghouls'. These are basically creepy zombies that force you to duel them over and over until you collapse from exhaustion and become one of them. Eat your heart out Romero. The creature responsible for all of this is possessing a boy with a stereotypical French accent, and Jaden has finally cornered him in a duel. Over the course of this duel, the creature reveals itself to be Yubel. When Jaden was a child, his favourite card was one his father bought him, a card named Yubel. But whenever Jaden duelled with Yubel, his opponents would have horrible seizures and fall into a coma. Soon, the connection between Yubel and the incidents was made. When Jaden discovered he'd won a competition to have his card designs shot into space, he asked KaibaCorp if they would shoot Yubel into the cosmos as well, and they agreed. I mean, ok, shooting a kids card's into space could be a cool if absurdly over-the-top prize for a competition. But why would you dispose of a dangerous card by shooting it into space? Did Jaden not have access to a lighter? Were his hands non-functional and incapable of just tearing the card up? He could have eaten it, or dissolved it in acid, or Morris danced on it until it was trampled to pieces, anything would have made more sense than shooting Yubel into space. Hang on, I hear you say; if Yubel is actually alive, then wouldn't that be murder? Ok, but 1 Jaden didn't know that and 2 how is shooting a living thing into space more helpful or any kinder? I mean, it's not like it will go insane from the isolation and be warped by space radiation into some all powerful super beast- oh wait that's exactly what happened. Also no one on the entire staff noticed in season 2 that majority of the studnt population is being inducted into a cult? Great educators, but then again every single teacher in the academy looks like a pedofile. Login This is necessary to sign in to the HubPages Service. Akismet This is used to detect comment spam. HubPages Google Analytics This is used to provide data on traffic to our website, all personally identifyable data is anonymized. HubPages Traffic Pixel This is used to collect data on traffic to articles and other pages on our site. Unless you are signed in to a HubPages account, all personally identifiable information is anonymized. Amazon Web Services This is a cloud services platform that we used to host our service. Cloudflare This is a cloud CDN service that we use to efficiently deliver files required for our service to operate such as javascript, cascading style sheets, images, and videos. Google Hosted Libraries Javascript software libraries such as jQuery are loaded at endpoints on the googleapis. Features Google Custom Search This is feature allows you to search the site. Google Maps Some articles have Google Maps embedded in them. Google Charts This is used to display charts and graphs on articles and the author center. Google AdSense Host API This service allows you to sign up for or associate a Google AdSense account with HubPages, so that you can earn money from ads on your articles. No data is shared unless you engage with this feature. Google YouTube Some articles have YouTube videos embedded in them. Vimeo Some articles have Vimeo videos embedded in them. Paypal This is used for a registered author who enrolls in the HubPages Earnings program and requests to be paid via PayPal. No data is shared with Paypal unless you engage with this feature. Facebook Login You can use this to streamline signing up for, or signing in to your Hubpages account. No data is shared with Facebook unless you engage with this feature. Maven This supports the Maven widget and search functionality. Marketing Google AdSense This is an ad network. Google DoubleClick Google provides ad serving technology and runs an ad network. Index Exchange This is an ad network. Sovrn This is an ad network. Facebook Ads This is an ad network. Amazon Unified Ad Marketplace This is an ad network. AppNexus This is an ad network. Openx This is an ad network. Rubicon Project This is an ad network. TripleLift This is an ad network. Say Media We partner with Say Media to deliver ad campaigns on our sites. Remarketing Pixels We may use remarketing pixels from advertising networks such as Google AdWords, Bing Ads, and Facebook in order to advertise the HubPages Service to people that have visited our sites. Conversion Tracking Pixels We may use conversion tracking pixels from advertising networks such as Google AdWords, Bing Ads, and Facebook in order to identify when an advertisement has successfully resulted in the desired action, such as signing up for the HubPages Service or publishing an article on the HubPages Service. Statistics Author Google Analytics This is used to provide traffic data and reports to the authors of articles on the HubPages Service. Comscore ComScore is a media measurement and analytics company providing marketing data and analytics to enterprises, media and advertising agencies, and publishers. Non-consent will result in ComScore only processing obfuscated personal data. Amazon Tracking Pixel Some articles display amazon products as part of the Amazon Affiliate program, this pixel provides traffic statistics for those products.