Yu-Gi-Oh! Online Review

Yu-Gi-Oh! Online does just enough to please the devoted Yu-Gi-Oh! fans that are already out there, but not much more.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Online is basically the best thing that Konami has done with Kazuki Takahashi's dangerously popular, tween-focused franchise since it started cranking out lo-fi Yu-Gi-Oh! games some six years ago. The ability to play the Yu-Gi-Oh! card game against other Yu-Gi-Oh! enthusiasts over the Internet is the only thing that separates this game from the seemingly hundreds of thousands of Yu-Gi-Oh! card-battling games released before. For established Yu-Gi-Oh! fans, whom this game was tailored almost exclusively for, it will be enough.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Online is...well, Yu-Gi-Oh!, with online play.
Yu-Gi-Oh! Online is...well, Yu-Gi-Oh!, with online play.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Online is not a terribly inclusive game. It makes a lot of assumptions about your familiarity with not just the overall card-battling philosophy, but also with the mechanical minutiae of the Yu-Gi-Oh! card game, and the smattering of in-game assistance is largely limited to helping you navigate the interface. There is some online explanation of how the game is played, but this quasitutorial comes off as dense and convoluted. If you don't know how to play Yu-Gi-Oh!, but you at least have experience with another collectible card game, you can reasonably assume that you'll pick up the specifics as you go. However, if you have no collectible card game experience whatsoever, you're better off picking up one of the older, offline Yu-Gi-Oh! card games on the cheap, as the competition is downright merciless online, and the suspicious pricing model doesn't really encourage trial by fire.

But if you already know what's up, Yu-Gi-Oh! Online makes it easy for you to quickly jump into a game. When you first create your account, you're given a random deck of 40 cards and then you're dumped into a lobby, where you can either directly challenge another player, or just let the game match you up with another player. You will be matched up with other players of the same level, but since those level designations are inexplicably reset at the beginning of each month, it stands to reason that you're most likely going to face a more evenly matched player at the end of the month than at the beginning.

The game doesn't really bother with too many interface flourishes, and as such, it ends up looking kind of lean, with more of a focus on functionality. The usual faux-Egyptian flavor that Yu-Gi-Oh! has been peddling for nearly a decade now is present and accounted for, and the melodramatic orchestral music that's peppered with some vaguely Middle Eastern instrumentation generally complements the look, though the music does get repetitive quickly. Even by the relatively modest standards of other card-battling games, the visuals in Yu-Gi-Oh! Online come off as stripped down.

The duel interface itself is pretty standard Yu-Gi-Oh! fare, but there are some odd quirks to other parts of the interface. Every time you load up the game, it requires you to agree to the Terms of Service, log in with your username and password, select the specific player account you'll be using, select which language-defined region you'd like to play in, and then it has you choose your lobby. It's not really a lengthy or arduous process, but it's something that could've been easily streamlined. Similarly, there is an in-game chat function, as well as one for the lobbies, but the implementation is clunky when you're actually dueling. Any time you want to chat, you have to pull up a chat window that obscures the actual game. And when you don't have the chat window open, the only indication you have that the other player has typed anything is a tiny, easily missed flashing light in the upper right-hand corner. Also, the language filter seems to have been implemented by either a crazy person or someone who is extremely paranoid. Most genuinely offensive language is easily filtered out, but so are more innocuous words like "dumb, "or in the most mind-boggling case, "Japan."

The gameplay is exactly what fans have come to expect from Yu-Gi-Oh! games over the years, but some interface and pricing issues hinder the package.
The gameplay is exactly what fans have come to expect from Yu-Gi-Oh! games over the years, but some interface and pricing issues hinder the package.

But the pricing structure in Yu-Gi-Oh! Online is probably the biggest quirk. Instead of just paying an up-front fee, or suffering a recurring monthly fee, Yu-Gi-Oh! Online basically splits the difference. The software itself will run you around $10, and it comes with a 10-point "duelpass." Each of these points represents a single duel you can play against someone else. So after you play through your first 10 duels, you'll need to pony up for another duelpass. As of this writing, you can get a 150-point duelpass for about $15, making it about a dime per duel. When you do the math, the price to play Yu-Gi-Oh! Online isn't totally unreasonable, but it doesn't seem terribly beneficial to players looking to go for the long haul, and the mere idea of having to pay for each duel you go into just makes it feel like you're being scammed.

The game comes with a host of caveats, not the least of which includes a gameplay model that's not terribly inviting to beginners, as well as an unconventional pricing model. However, by nailing the core mechanics of the card game and marrying them with a functional online component, Yu-Gi-Oh! Online does just enough to please the devoted Yu-Gi-Oh! fans that are already out there, but not much more.

The Good

  • Familiar Yu-Gi-Oh! card-battling action

The Bad

  • Weird pricing structure
  • Spartan production values
  • Lacks any kind of useful tutorial
  • Lots of minor interface quirks

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