![]() The visual style isn't the only thing about Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: The Beginning of Destiny that takes from Tag Force. There is also an appropriate amount of sound effects while in a battle for placing cards and activating them. While in duels, the look of the characters become much more like their TV-series counterparts, complete with anime-styled action lines going on in the background as they activate traps or flip cards.Īudio wise, there is no voicework, but the energetic music keeps your ears busy while you try to plot out your next moves. Characters appear as big-headed, chibi-style versions in a top-down isometric world, and during the duel, the layout of the board and visual representation of the cards are the same as the portable version. Visually, The Beginning of Destiny has the same style both in-duel and out. ![]() In fact, Duelists of the Rose was a turn-based strategy game that could very well have not had this license attached and Capsule Monster Coliseum dealt with the spin-off miniseries and the game played in those episodes.Įverything about this game hearks to the recent PSP Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: Tag Force line of games. ![]() The other two games for this system, Duelists of the Rose and Capsule Monster Coliseum, while having the Yu-Gi-Oh! name, weren't in the form of a trading card game. ![]() Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: The Beginning of Destiny is, as hard is it may be to believe, the first Yu-Gi-Oh! game to come out for the PS2 that depicts the actual TCG. ![]()
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June 2023
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