Chancellor Sheppard Ygopro Deck

Chancellor Sheppard Ygopro Deck 4,8/5 9465 votes

“Git your game on!” those oft-uttered words by series protagonist Jaden Yuki, announcing he wants to have a Duel Monster battle with the next villain in a long line of characters. Taking place 10 canonical years after the events of Yu-Gi-Oh!, Yu-Gi-Oh! GX introduces a whole new era of duelists training at Kaiba Corp funded Duel Academy on an isolated island. This time around the series takes a more lighthearted stance with season-long plots and fantastic character development. Yu-Gi-Oh! GX does what its predecessor ignored by cramming each new story arc with a repetitive construction of world ending notions. GX focuses on a select group of students as they do battle with, well, other students and the occasional world-ending event, but that is generally reserved for the season finale. Most of the conflict stems from Jaden and his plot armor getting triggered every 10 minutes. Further setting GX apart is the era of its air dates (2005 – 2008) and the brighter colors with more upbeat, exciting music. GX does not suffer from the mysteriousness of the Pharaoh and his Shadow Games. GX is fun, often lighthearted in tone, and showcases a period in Yu-Gi-Oh! of dueling decks made up from more than just six different cards. This time around there shouldn’t be any mythical monster cards or ridiculously possessed antagonists serving as a vehicle for exposition. Right? Right?

Chancellor Sheppard Names Japanese translated Samejima Japanese 鮫島校長 Personal Gender Male Career Occupation Chancellor of Duel Academy Education School Duel Academy Appearances Manga debut Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Chapter 1: 'A New Hero!!' Manga Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Chancellor Sheppard, known as Prinicipal Samejima (鮫島校長) in the Japanese version, is a character in the Yu-Gi-Oh! Apr 20, 2020  Cyber Style Origins, Chancellor Sheppard's deck updated. Trying to bring the best out of his character deck whilst keeping it in the GX era so no Synchro, Xyz, Pendulum or Link monsters. Let me know if you've got any ideas to improve it. Toggle Deck List; Monster: Cyber Dinosaur x1. Cyber Ogre x3.

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX follows the adventures of Jaden Yuki and his friends Syrus Truesdale and Chumley Huffington in his dorm unit as they study the art of dueling. Because Seto Kaiba is impossibly obsessed with Duel Monsters and set up a private academy to help these children live out a fantastic dream. Seriously. Along the way, Jaden meets even more friends in Chazz “The Best Character” Princeton, Bastion Misawa, Alexis Rhodes, and Tyranno Hassleberry. That’s a lot of names all at once, just bear with me while we get through these opening statements.

The essential, basic plot of GX is just a bunch of kids going to school. Because this is an anime, though, there are a series of story arcs built upon each other throughout. Frustratingly, these story arcs are entirely focused on Jaden, so nothing about him ever changes. His friends and allies, though, do grow immensely and sometimes renew their sense of humanity (Astor Phoenix for that example) or they lose their blind, innocent optimism and become darkly cynical in a realist sense (Zane “Edgelord” Truesdale for that example). Jaden is the least interesting of the characters we meet, I’m sorry if you like him but his only flaw is being optimistic. Not that being optimistic is a negative quality of course. Yet, we see throughout the three broadcast seasons here in the states (there was a fourth non-dubbed season aired in Japan) that the other main and even the secondary or season specific characters offer more diverse views.

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Re-watching this series I was struck by how indifferent I felt towards anything Jaden was facing (although, the season two finale battle against Sartorius was fairly entertaining). I was more enthralled by literally the entire rest of the characters. Syrus Truesdale growing confident in himself, awesome. Chazz “The Best Character” Princeton adapting his play style to using weaker cards, incredible. Bastion Misawa having six different decks for whatever the occasion, amazing. Zane “Edgelord” Truesdale going all goth and physically abusing his opponents, sickly cool. Hassleberry having an actual dinosaur bone in his leg, how freaking cool! Jaden remaining consistent and never wavering from his idiotic space creatures turned superheroes, snooze-fest. Comparatively, Yugi Muto from the previous series was the centerpiece to the show, but we got to watch him cheat all the time to win and there was this whole mystery surrounding his ancient past. Jaden plays straight up (except for when Professor Banner gives him that Philosopher’s Stone card at the end of season one, that card was just blank and let Jaden play whatever he wanted).

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX takes viewers to a place still in the early days of the real-life card game, before the current meta of surprisingly common first turn wins. GX is an intensely plot based, dramatic example of what anime can do and, as such, impressed upon on an entire generation of how good anime can be. Ignoring the skin of a children’s card game, GX is fun to watch without prior knowledge of the series or game. The theme song is super upbeat and is kind of an earworm, sorry. The colors are bright and, even in the more shadowy sequences, the character’s colors remain vibrant throughout. This in itself is a stark departure from the previous Yu-Gi-Oh! series. As I mentioned above, the original Yu-Gi-Oh! series is decidedly more mysterious (and if you compare that to the legendary Yu-Gi-Oh! season zero, where the Pharaoh is a murderous gambler and Duel Monsters is more of an afterthought, the comparison is most obvious) while GX follows a more typical path of story layout. A lot of the story based conflict isn’t generally explained until Chancellor Sheppard just up and gives a full synopsis of what is going on. There isn’t a lot of needed inference and you can easily follow along at a pretty quick clip.

Deck

While the plot of the dubbed version here in the West can be at times lackluster, the characters are what make the series so memorable. As is even more common in franchises, there are the mascot characters who get recycled each new series (Mobile Suit Gundam comes to mind). Yu-Gi-Oh! illustrates this in spades. Jaden is obviously supposed to be Yugi Muto, but the rest of the cast are tricky to pin down. They all tend to embody wholly varied personalities and emotional spectrum depending on what the story arc calls for. ending on what the story arc calls for.

Take, for instance, series regulars Chazz “The Best Character” Princeton and Zane “Edgelord” Truesdale. Chazz begins the series as an arrogant prep-school jerk who has the money to buy all the best cards and therefore, in the real world at least, should be the best duelist of his Freshman class. Hilariously, his interactions with Jaden and his collection of the school’s lowest-ranked players ultimately lead to initial downfall. This leads Chazz to abandon Duel Academy and run away … only to find himself as the new champion of rival North Academy. Now, though, his deck is comprised of more common cards trending towards the weaker strength ones. Following yet another defeat at Jaden’s hands, Chazz finally comes into himself and uses the subset of Duel Monsters cards known as “Union” cards, alongside the surprisingly still used “Ojama” cards. He embraces a filthy black long coat and moves into the lame Slifer Red dorm with Jaden. He loses himself for a time during season two when villain Sartorius mind controls him and makes most of the Academy wear white. Regardless, Chazz is a solid ally for Jaden and humanity at large.

Then we have Zane, the best duelist at Duel Academy and the older brother of Jaden’s best friend Syrus, his life gets complicated. For the first season, he is essentially Jaden’s only real rival and an incredibly competent duelist, using the still viable “Cyber Dragon” archetype. Following his graduation from Duel Academy, though, Zane gets fully slapped in the face by reality (Astor Phoenix publicly trounces him, it’s great to watch) and falls into the evidently viable and existing realm of “underground” dueling (?), sigh. There he gets that edgelord moniker I gave him. Zane loses his ridiculous academic ignorance and goes full violent, going so far as sending his opponents to the hospital at the end of their duels and then wearing all black for “plot” reasons. This, all of this, leads Zane to steal another deck from Chancellor Sheppard and rampaging around Duel Academy for the end of season two. He even seriously injures Syrus, because they are brothers or some cartoon reasoning. Yet, by season three he suddenly changes tactics and falls on the spectrum of like chaotic good.

What those two guys represent are different versions of Seto Kaiba (you’d have to have watched the shows before to keep up with that reasoning). Chazz and Zane are fascinating characters to watch in a cartoon milieu. If you remember from my original Yu-Gi-Oh! piece I spent a good number of words waxing fondly of my love for Seto Kaiba, Chazz and Zane share all of his sensibilities, dress style, and deck structure and that makes them compelling. Why compelling? Well, because they are the characters I was most interested in seeing (Zane more so from season two onward). That quiet sentiment concerning my preferred characters is what makes Yu-Gi-Oh! so endearing. When we all watch these shows, naturally we form attachments to a select number of characters who keep us coming back each week. Chazz and Zane are fun to watch as they represent not only my favorite character from the entire franchise but also the absolute antithesis of Jaden Yuki in every regard. That is dang awesome.

I can make a similar argument just about any of the characters in this particular series, heck Maximillion Pegasus shows up all the time in GX too and that’s only half as often as Kaiba himself. In the future, I plan to give many of them the same treatment I gave Duke Devlin in the past.

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Yu-Gi-Oh! GX is the prime example of my childhood Yu-Gi-Oh! experience. That era of the real world card game holds some of my best memories and I think that stems from the idea that the game was changing to be more personalized, like in the show. The early expansion sets of the real world cards were all about playing the strongest monster with the highest attack power and then overpowering your opponent’s own monster defense. Now, in the GX era, that idea is very much present, but with the added benefit of gaining immense complexity with regard to how players structure their dueling decks. Jaden uses a bunch of weaker monsters and fuses them into more powerful cards with fun effects. Syrus uses a bunch of cartoon machine cards who have effects to give them a competitive edge. Hassleberry uses the finally expanded upon dinosaur archetype to keep up a monstrous field presence. It is this subtle shift from Yugi Muto’s amalgamation of random cards to Jaden’s more precise construction around a singular set of cards which provides the most distinction between the two series.

In the current realm of the trading card game that use of favorite cards and creative construction is left at home. I never thought I would say this, but I slightly follow the competitive Yu-Gi-Oh! scene and that whole arena is fraught with absolutely no fun imagination. The dueling decks who make it into the top eight places regularly are essentially cookie cutter, color by numbers blasé attempts to only win. That is not a bad thing, but good lord it is very repetitive to watch. If watching the same seven decks is not your cup of tea, there is a subset Yu-Gi-Oh! format known as Goat Format, using only those cards between the years 1999 and 2005. A drastic difference from the currently accepted rules, Goat Format harkens back to an era where plays only used three cards opposed to half the deck today, the first turn kill ratio is severely lowered, and a slower, more relaxed play style emerges. I’ve included a link to the YGOPro article detailing Goat Format if you want to know the “ins and outs”.

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX has remained a fan favorite for a decade and well it should maintain that lofty position. Yes, the previous series had far more at stake than getting good grades in school and battling sentient monster cards, but GX gave us some of the most memorable characters in the cartoon realm. Unfortunately, because of a brilliant marketing strategy we never got the full GX story and that fourth season was never aired because of 4Kids! desperately wanted to air the new Yu-Gi-Oh! 5Ds series instead. Hooray for adults. Indeed, if not for that decision we could have gotten a deeper look at the final form of Zane “Edgelord” Truesdale’s journey. What we got is what we got and I for one am so very thankful that we got it at all. GX is awesome, simply one of the best examples of how engaging and engrossing a Saturday Morning cartoon can be.