MegaHouse Monsters Chronicle Accesscode Talker Figure Preorders Open

May 17, 2024 at 6:00 pm | Posted in VRAINS, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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Close-up of the Monsters Chronicle Accesscode Talker figure by MegaHouse

Forge the bond that connects the real with the virtual with Playmaker’s ultimate Code Talker — the Link 4 monster Accesscode Talker! Tokyo-based figure producer MegaHouse is back with the next Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS creation in its Monsters Chronicle line.

Standing about 140 mm tall (about 5.5 inches) and armed with a massive lance, Accesscode Talker comes ready to subjugate its enemies with its Access Integration ability. The PVC figure stands on a base decorated with purple blocks, as if it has just been summoned.

Front of the Monsters Chronicle Accesscode Talker figure by Megahouse

Accesscode Talker is available for preorder now from numerous U.S. retailers, including BigBadToyStore, Entertainment Earth, Gundam Planet, and USA Gundam Store. You can also ask your local hobby/comic shop to special order it for you from Diamond Comic Distributors.

Gundam Planet offers the best deal out of these stores with its $71.95 preorder deal. The others range from around $83 to $90.

Back of the Monsters Chronicle Accesscode Talker figure by Megahouse

Shipping begins in the fourth quarter of this year.

Pose Accesscode Talker with the Borreload Dragon (also available for preorder now) and the upcoming The Arrival Cyberse @Ignister figures for a battle of the mighty Link monster aces!

MegaHouse first announced Accesscode Talker at an exhibition in August 2023.

Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty McDonald’s Happy Meal Promo Comes to 55 Countries, Including US

May 14, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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All 10 Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty and Friends Happy Meal toys from McDonald's

Konami announced today a global collaboration between Yu-Gi-Oh! and Sanrio — the lifestyle brand best known for Hello Kitty — at McDonald’s restaurants in 55 countries, including the United States. The promotion, named “Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty and Friends,” features their most recognizable characters as collectible Happy Meal toys and showcases them on McDonald’s menus and packaging.

The Happy Meal toys have Sanrio characters dressed as Yu-Gi-Oh! monsters, with 10 little plushies (pictured above) to collect:

  • Hello Kitty x Dark Magician
  • Cinnamoroll x Blue-Eyes White Dragon
  • Badtz-maru x Red-Eyes Black Dragon
  • Pompompurin x Exodia the Forbidden One
  • My Melody x Dark Magician Girl
  • Keroppi x Kuriboh
  • Pochacco x Time Wizard
  • Kuromi x Slifer the Sky Dragon
  • Tuxedosam x Obelisk the Tormentor
  • Chococat x The Winged Dragon of Ra

Jill Koch, SVP of marketing and brand management at Sanrio, hopes “to surprise and delight our fans around the world with these limited-edition collectibles.”

Jennifer Coleman, VP of licensing and marketing at Konami Cross Media NY, called this promotion “a must-have for anime fans of all ages.”

Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty Happy Meal box graphic

The Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty and Friends promo kicked off this spring in Europe, where it landed in McDonald’s all over the continent, from Austria to Estonia, Portugal to Azerbaijan, Ireland to Malta, and beyond.

In Southeast Asia, the promo made a splash in Brunei, Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and other markets.

In the Americas, the promo debuted in Canada and will make its way to Mexico, the Caribbean, and Brazil. It will arrive in the U.S. this summer.

It will also head to Australia and New Zealand.

To learn when Yu-Gi-Oh! x Hello Kitty and Friends will arrive in your country, keep an eye on the official Happy Meal website and your local McDonald’s social media channels.

Konami noted that this mash-up of two cherished anime properties “may be the start of a licensing trend, paving the way for a new wave of promotional collaboration between brands managed by different entities.”

(News from Konami PR)

‘Off Duty’ or ‘Dastardly’? Choose Your Duelists with The Yetee’s New Shirts

May 13, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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New T-shirts by The Yetee, May 2024

The Yetee hits the streets of Battle City with two new T-shirts in its Yu-Gi-Oh! collection.

Yugi and the gang are enjoying some downtime in “Off-Duty Duelists.”

Yu-Gi-Oh! Off-Duty Duelists shirt Design by The Yetee

Meanwhile, rivals and antagonists are plotting their next move against the heroes in “Dastardly Duelists.”

Yu-Gi-Oh! Dastardly Duelists shirt design by The Yetee

Both T-shirts are available in unisex/men’s and women’s/junior cuts for $32 each. Preorder them now and they’ll ship by the end of this month.

These new designs are created by Canadian artist Nicole “HelloWinter” Martin and screen printed at The Yetee’s headquarters in Aurora, Illinois.

For more apparel and other goods, check out The Yetee’s full Yu-Gi-Oh! collection.

(News from @theyetee)

Displate Revs It Up with Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s Metal Posters

May 12, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in 5D's, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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Displate Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's metal posters and logos

Show everyone that your heart beats in Hyper Drive with Displate’s new Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s metal posters. Displate, the Polish marketplace and producer of metal wall art, continues to grow its selection of official Yu-Gi-Oh! posters with a small Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s collection featuring Yusei Fudo, Jack Atlas, and their signature monsters.

Some highlights:

Displate metal poster of Jack Atlas with Red Dragon Archfiend and Yusei Fudo with Stardust Dragon
Yusei Fudo and Jack Atlas

Displate metal poster of Yusei Fudo on his Duel Runner with Stardust Dragon
Yusei with Stardust Dragon

Displate metal poster of Jack Atlas with Red Dragon Archfiend
Jack with Red Dragon Archfiend

Since my last update, Displate has also added one more Yu-Gi-Oh! GX monster poster: Elemental HERO Sparkman.

Furthermore, Displate has introduced a new type of finish for its posters called Textra. This finish features 3D-printed embossed contours, tactile textures, and a mix of matte and glossy finishes. The result is a poster where you can see the outlines of the art and touch the 3D effects.

The Textra finish is not available for every poster. Currently, only a handful of Yu-Gi-Oh! posters have the Textra option, including Seto Kaiba with Blue-Eyes White Dragon scribble, TCG Dark Magician Girl, and Classic Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters.

Displate states that it will continue grow its Textra selection in the coming months.

For even more Yu-Gi-Oh! metal posters, check out Displate’s full Yu-Gi-Oh! collection, which includes official artwork from the TCG and the Duel Monsters and GX anime.

Previously:
Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Characters, Monsters Shine on Displate’s Metal Posters

FiGPiN Announces Dark Magician ULTRA (U5)

May 11, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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FiGPiN ULTRA Dark Magician (U5)

Yu-Gi-Oh! fans who are die-hard FiGPiN collectors are rewarded for their loyalty with the announcement of the newest FiGPiN ULTRA. On Friday, FiGPiN unveiled Dark Magician as the fifth FiGPiN ULTRA.

Struck in 3 millimeters of solid copper with deep black enamel and a gold-plated finish, this luxurious FiGPiN ULTRA is available to collectors who have reached the following point milestones:

  • 1,700,000 Collection Power
  • 2,000 Collector Score
  • 60 originally unlocked FiGPiNS

Dark Magician (U5) can be purchased exclusively in the FiGPiN app for $85. It includes a FiGPiN app badge and a solid metal ULTRA power base. Only 750 units are available (down from 1,000 for the previous four FiGPiN ULTRAs) — the most limited ULTRA to date.

(News from FiGPiN)

Gemini Elf Prize Card Sold (Again) for $250K

May 10, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, Other Stuff, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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Photo of the Gemini Elf T3-04 prize card sold in May 2024

A one-of-a-kind Yu-Gi-Oh! prize card has changed hands for a gargantuan sum. The “T3” Gemini Elf has a new owner after selling for 40 million yen (about $250,000) — over double its previous sell price. This Yu-Gi-Oh! OCG card was awarded to the fourth-place finisher of the Asia Championship in 2001.

The colossal sale was announced on Wednesday by Vintage Card Japan, a retailer that specializes in Yu-Gi-Oh! and Pokemon cards from the early 2000s. The company is based in Osaka and offers entry to its store by appointment only.

This same Gemini Elf card sold in May 2018 for 19 million yen (about $175,000 at the then exchange rate).

The Yu-Gi-Oh! Logo and the Incredible Story of Its Creation

May 2, 2024 at 9:00 pm | Posted in 4Kids, Duel Monsters, English dubbed, Other Stuff, Yu-Gi-Oh! | 3 Comments
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The Yu-Gi-Oh! logo, with a pencil sketch effect on its left half

The Yu-Gi-Oh! logo — so ubiquitous, yet so little is known about its origins. A representation of the entire Yu-Gi-Oh! brand outside Asia, the first Yu-Gi-Oh! logo was created under cutthroat deadlines and involved the efforts of a graphic designer in California, several Japanese restaurant employees, and a spunky artist and businessman who worked at a fast-paced, flourishing licensing company.

The story of the Yu-Gi-Oh! logo’s creation was told in the latest episode of the 4Kids Flashback podcast, a show that interviews former employees and freelancers of 4Kids Entertainment. Hosted by actor Tara Sands (the original voice of Mokuba Kaiba) and artist Steve Yurko (a host of the One Piece Podcast), the podcast delves into the behind-the-scenes stories of the burgeoning company behind the success of Yu-Gi-Oh!, Pokemon, and other international hits, straight from the mouths of those who worked there.

In this week’s episode, 4Kids Flashback spoke with Waldo Cabrera, who worked for about 12 years at 4Kids Entertainment. Cabrera began as an art director, was promoted to creative director, and eventually rose to become the vice president of 4Kids Entertainment Home Video. Cabrera discussed his origins as a young artist, detailed the early years at 4Kids (named Leisure Concepts back then), and told a remarkable story about how he spearheaded the creation of the Yu-Gi-Oh! logo.

Waldo Cabrera: Young Artist and Businessman

Waldo Cabrera grew up in the Bronx in New York City. At school, he was the class artist. He loved anime and wanted to create his own manga too. Even at a young age, Cabrera knew he wanted to work in the art industry. But because he didn’t want to fall into the starving artist cliché, he was savvy enough to focus on the field of advertising.

Cabrera brought his passion for art and advertising to the High School of Art and Design in Manhattan. Afterward, he further honed his skills at Syracuse University in upstate New York. There, he split his time between its Newhouse School of Public Communications, which taught the business of the advertising industry, and its College of Visual Performing Arts, which trained visual creatives.

After graduating with a degree in advertising, Cabrera immediately landed in the entertainment industry working for a small company called Ericksen/Basloe Advertising. He started as an assistant, and then became an art director. He worked with clients like Orion Pictures, Turner Home Entertainment, and others in the television industry.

Early Days at Leisure Concepts

In 1993, Cabrera joined Leisure Concepts Inc., a fast-moving, quickly expanding licensing business of about 30 employees. Leisure Concepts owned the rights to numerous big names, like Cabbage Patch Kids, World Wresting Federation, and many Nintendo properties. It was an inspiring and enterprising place to work for Cabrera, who was now in his mid-20s. As the company’s art director, he was responsible for creating style guides and marketing materials for all those exciting properties.

One pivotal day, a new property arrived at Leisure Concepts, a strange TV show from Nintendo called Pokemon. Everyone in the office gathered to watch the first episode.

“You should’ve seen the look on people’s faces when it [arrived],” Cabrera laughed. Even today, the cries of the creatures he heard in that episode remain firm in his memory. “It was just like, what is happening?! It was slow and none of us got it.”

As the employees began to vote on whether or not they should acquire the property, the brash CEO of Leisure Concepts, Al Kahn, stepped in and told them that there was no need to vote. They were taking it.

Cabrera and his team were tasked with creating a logo for Pokemon. They tried so hard to come up with the right design, but it was “swing and a miss, swing and a miss, and we just never nailed it,” Cabrera recalled. Eventually, Nintendo sent over its own logo that would be used to this very day.

That experience irked Cabrera. He vowed that if he ever got another chance, he would get it right.

With Pokemon’s launch on the horizon, Leisure Concepts was ready for a change. In November 1995, the company renamed itself 4Kids Entertainment Inc. Cabrera created a new logo for the company. Meanwhile, the company’s licensing arm, where Cabrera worked, was established as a separate subsidiary and adopted the Leisure Concepts name. (It would eventually be renamed 4Kids Entertainment Licensing Inc. in July 2001.) Still, his biggest logo design project was yet to come.

Yu-Gi-Oh! and The Nightmare Before Christmas

In 1997, Cabrera was promoted to creative director. In his new role, he oversaw seven or eight artists and established the general creative focus of the company, he explained.

On another pivotal day, Cabrera and his team were tasked with developing the logo for what would eventually become 4Kids’s next big hit: Yu-Gi-Oh!. Cabrera remembered his dismal experience with the Pokemon logo and proclaimed that they would get it right this time.

However, time was of the utmost essence. Konami was about to print the cards and needed a logo immediately. Cabrera would have only a week and a half to get this job done.

Norman Grossfeld, the president of 4Kids Productions Inc., and his team explained to Cabrera that Yu-Gi-Oh! “is similar to Pokemon but is scarier. It has a sharper edge.” When Cabrera heard that description, the vision that appeared in his mind was Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas. Cabrera made numerous sketches with his ideas. But ultimately, he loved the font used on The Nightmare Before Christmas’s movie poster and wanted Yu-Gi-Oh! to be in that font.

So Cabrera went to the source. He called up the designer of the font of The Nightmare Before Christmas, an artist in California named Mark Andrew Allen. As the clock continued to tick away, Cabrera sent Allen the job on a Friday and paid him “a ton” of cash to complete it over the weekend.

Allen came through. On Sunday, Allen faxed over his designs. Cabrera and his team picked the one they loved and faxed it to Yu-Gi-Oh!’s licensors in Japan for approval.

The licensors approved Allen’s design but suddenly added a new wrinkle in the process. It wasn’t enough just to have the Yu-Gi-Oh! logo in English. They wanted there to be kanji spelling out Yu-Gi-Oh! in the background.

Cabrera’s stomach was in knots. “How am I going to visualize this? I don’t know kanji,” he thought. He had no clue what to do next and the clock was still ticking.

The Crazy Origin of the Yu-Gi-Oh! Logo’s Kanji

Cabrera needed to calm his anxious stomach. Whenever he got stressed, he would eat sushi because it’s easy for his stomach to digest. Two blocks from his office was a row of Japanese restaurants. So he headed there and sat down at one of the restaurants. When he picked up a menu, he saw that half of the menu was in handwritten kanji.

A light bulb went off in Cabrera’s head.

“So I call them. I’m like, ‘Hey, who wrote this?’ And they go, ‘Oh, it was the dude that rolls.’ The guy that’s sitting there, he goes, ‘Oh, I wrote that.'”

Cabrera was thrilled and unleashed on the man a crazy idea. If Cabrera returned to the restaurant right after closing time with some paper, ink, and brushes, would he be able to write Yu-Gi-Oh! in kanji for him?

“He goes, ‘Ah, no problem!'”

So Cabrera did exactly that. Five minutes after the restaurant closed, he returned with a bunch of newsprint, enough to cover the floor. And just like Cabrera requested, the man picked up a big brush and began to write Yu-Gi-Oh! in kanji over and over.

The restaurant’s hostess walked by and saw what he was doing.

“‘That doesn’t look that good,'” Cabrera recalled her quipping. “‘Gimme that!'” She picked up the brush and started writing Yu-Gi-Oh! too.

Then, one of the chefs in the back came out and saw what they were doing.

“‘Ah, you guys don’t know how to do this!'” He also picked up a brush and joined in.

The restaurant employees probably weren’t experts in Japanese calligraphy, but that didn’t matter a single bit to Cabrera.

“I had about four or five people in there just writing Yu-Gi-Oh!, and I was in heaven,” Cabrera gushed.

With the ink still wet, Cabrera ran back to his office and plastered the walls with all of the newsprint. He and his team pored over the details of each kanji character and chose a “Yu,” a “Gi,” and an “Oh” that they liked.

Cabrera scanned the characters in Photoshop, outlined them, and dropped them behind Allen’s English Yu-Gi-Oh! logo text. The licensors loved it. So Cabrera delivered the logo and, about four days later, the cards went to print.

“It was crazy,” he said.

To this day, Cabrera does not know which person wrote which character.

* * *

The full episode of 4Kids Flashback is well worth listening to, especially to Yu-Gi-Oh! fans.

In May 2002, 4Kids established a new subsidiary named 4Kids Entertainment Home Video Inc. Cabrera was tapped to head this business, and it was in this role that he developed a short-lived Yu-Gi-Oh! product: the uncut Yu-Gi-Oh! DVDs. In the podcast, Cabrera explained in depth his reasons for creating that product and why it was discontinued. Spoiler: it failed because no one bought it.

Cabrera also discussed how 4Kids’s corporate structure contributed to its success, his opinions about why 4Kids ultimately collapsed, and the Emmy Award-winning work that he does today.

For more episodes of 4Kids Flashback, check out its website, and listen and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.

Yu-Gi-Oh! Streaming Update, March–April 2024: Cineverse, Freevee, Funimation, Hulu, RetroCrush, and More

May 1, 2024 at 6:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, English dubbed, Pyramid of Light, SEVENS, VRAINS, Yu-Gi-Oh!, ZEXAL | Leave a comment
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Yami Yugi with a stern expression on his face after winning a duel in episode 142

March and April 2024 saw a spate of updates in the Yu-Gi-Oh! streaming sphere with numerous additions, removals, and other strange occurrences. Let’s get into it!

Hulu kicked off March by adding all three seasons of Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS. Then, on March 27, Disney announced that it finally integrated Hulu into Disney+, something that it had been beta testing for months. It’s a great convenience for Disney bundle subscribers, but also doesn’t negatively affect anyone who subscribes only to Hulu either.

* * *

Cineverse, the company formerly known as Cinedigm, announced on March 26 that it signed a multiyear extension as Konami’s video distribution partner for the Yu-Gi-Oh! anime franchise. Cineverse called Yu-Gi-Oh! “the flagship streaming brand driving anime growth for” the company.

The new deal grows Cineverse’s holdings to include Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS and Yu-Gi-Oh! The Dark Side of Dimensions. Additionally, Cineverse expressed interest in expanding the Yu-Gi-Oh! linear streaming channel, which currently runs on Pluto TV.

Furthermore, Cineverse announced that it is adding more of Konami’s shows on its RetroCrush service, which it bills as the leading independent streaming anime channel. After heaping praise upon the platform and upon Yu-Gi-Oh!, Cineverse locked almost all of its Yu-Gi-Oh! content on RetroCrush behind its subscription paywall in April.

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, 5D’s, ZEXAL, ARC-V, and VRAINS now all require a RetroCrush subscription to view. Duel Monsters remains free but RetroCrush suddenly removed its first two seasons and the first 3 episodes of Season 3 in April. Bonds Beyond Time remains free as well but requires registering an account to watch. (This has been the case since late 2023 so it’s nothing new.) Meanwhile, Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie has always required a subscription.

In early March, Cineverse retired its CONtv streaming network. The CONtv website now redirects to Midnight Pulp, another of Cineverse’s streaming services. CONtv opened in March 2015 and included Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D’s and Bonds Beyond Time among its launch titles. It added a mishmash of other Yu-Gi-Oh! titles over time. While all its Yu-Gi-Oh! content was originally free with ads, CONtv eventually locked it all behind its subscription paywall.

* * *

DisneyNOW, the official website and app for Disney Channel, Disney Junior, and Disney XD programming, no longer hosts Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS. Meanwhile, Disney XD’s YouTube channel has taken down the six full episodes it had uploaded (Season 1 episodes 1–2 and 42–43, and Season 2 episodes 1 and 23) and is gradually removing the clips that it had uploaded throughout the show’s run. Could this be related to Cineverse’s acquisition of the anime’s distribution rights?

It’s not the end of the world for Rush Duel fans though. Disney XD continues to airs reruns on TV of Yu-Gi-Oh! SEVENS most Saturdays and Sundays, and other streaming services that host Disney XD content, like fuboTV, Hulu, and YouTube TV, continue to offer the show too.

* * *

Another Yu-Gi-Oh! ZEXAL Season 2 episode hosted on the official Yu-Gi-Oh! YouTube channel has unexpectedly gotten geo-blocked. Episode 56 was geo-blocked worldwide sometime during the first week of April.

It’s already puzzling to see episode 57 blocked in the U.S. (which I thought was an oversight), but to now have the episode right before it suddenly get geo-blocked too is quite the coincidence.

The rest of the Season 2 episodes are available just fine in the U.S., so what’s going on over there that’s messing with these two episodes in particular?

* * *

The Funimation website and app ended their services on April 2. The move has been a long time coming. Sony’s Funimation Global Group announced its acquisition of Crunchyroll in December 2020 and concluded the sale in August 2021. The surviving company renamed itself as Crunchyroll afterward.

At the time of its shutdown, Funimation was streaming all five seasons of Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie, and Yu-Gi-Oh! The Dark Side of Dimensions, though not for viewers located in the U.S.

* * *

Amazon Freevee, whose Yu-Gi-Oh! listings have been fraught with numerous problems for months, fixed one small issue in March. Yu-Gi-Oh! VRAINS Season 3, episode 18, which was erroneously listed twice, had one of its duplicate episodes removed. It’s a small but satisfying victory. Now Amazon will definitely fix all the other problems with Freevee’s Yu-Gi-Oh! episodes, right? R-Right?

Amazon’s video catalog as a whole is rife with errors. On April 16, Business Insider published a report examining the pervasiveness of the problems in Amazon’s Prime Video service. According to internal documents obtained by BI, “60 percent of all content-related customer-experience complaints for Prime Video last year were about catalog errors.” The complaints raised issues like missing episodes, episodes posted out of order, and wrong content availability. Yu-Gi-Oh! is afflicted by all of these issues.

The documents also revealed that Amazon is well aware of these problems and is developing programs that it hopes will reduce customer complaints by 15,000 per year.

Although BI’s report specifically names the Prime Video service, Freevee videos are also accessible in the Prime Video app. And the report makes one thing abundantly clear: complaining works. It is important to continue reporting problems to Amazon customer service whenever you see them. Even if the errors don’t end up getting fixed immediately, Amazon is still cataloging them.

* * *

Let’s close with two pieces of weird news. First, Peacock decided in April to rename its Yu-Gi-Oh! ARC-V Season 3 listing as Season 1. The only problem with this is that the NBCUniversal-owned streaming service is hosting Season 3, not Season 1. That’s why it was labeled Season 3 in the first place! What the heck, Peacock?! If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.

And second, as we’ve seen before, Pluto TV loves doing weird and questionable things with its all-day Yu-Gi-Oh! channel. On March 6, Pluto decided to stream a 24-hour marathon of Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie. A marathon alone is not unusual. Earlier this year, Pluto played a 24-hour marathon of Bonds Beyond Time on January 23 to celebrate the film’s 14th anniversary, for instance. (Though how successful this kind of event is at attracting an audience is a completely different discussion.)

The weird thing is why Pluto decided to marathon Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie specifically on March 6. What is the connection between that date and the film? There is none as far as I can tell. Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie premiered in U.S. theaters on August 13, 2004. And the remastered version, which is hosted by Pluto, arrived in U.S. theaters on March 11, 2018.

The movie marathon didn’t even start at a good time, like after the final episode of a show’s run on the channel. Instead, it interrupted a marathon of Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters that was in the middle of a five-parter in Season 5.

Do better, Pluto TV!

Yu-Gi-Oh! Sets 2 Guinness World Records for Largest TCG Tournament, Most Entrants

April 30, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Konami, Other Stuff, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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Shoji Dewa accepting the Guinness World Records certificate for most entrants in a trading card game tournament at Yu-Gi-Oh! Championship Series Japan Tokyo 2024

Congratulations to Konami and the Yu-Gi-Oh! Official Card Game, which set two Guinness World Records at the Yu-Gi-Oh! Championship Series Japan Tokyo 2024 event this past weekend. The event celebrated the 10th YCS in Japan and, for the first time, was held over two days. It took place at Tokyo Big Sight, the largest convention center in the country.

YCSJ Tokyo 2024 challenged the Guinness World Records titles for “most entrants in a trading card game tournament” and for “largest trading card game tournament.” Admission to the event was by lottery only. Although the event could accommodate a maximum of 8,000 duelists, and although Konami announced multiple times that 8,000 really were participating, the Guinness adjudicator certified the official number of participants to be 7,443 for both records.

The Guinness World Records ceremony at Yu-Gi-Oh! Championship Series Japan Tokyo 2024

The first record, “most entrants in a trading card game tournament,” is for the largest number of people who played a TCG against each other in the same venue at the same time. This is a newly created record; it has no previous record holder.

At a ceremony during YCSJ Tokyo 2024 on April 28, Konami senior executive director Shoji Dewa (pictured up top) accepted the Guinness World Records certificate for this first record. Duelists who took part in the event received a commemorative token card with a description of this record and emblazoned with the Guinness World Records logo.

The second record, “largest trading card game tournament,” is for the largest number of people participating in one TCG tournament. This record was calculated after YCSJ Tokyo 2024 concluded. The previous record holder was another Yu-Gi-Oh! event — the 100th YCS in Long Beach, California, which took place on March 23–25, 2012, and involved 4,364 participants.

The Guinness World Records adjudicator speaking at Yu-Gi-Oh! Championship Series Japan Tokyo 2024

Shunsuke Kazama, the voice of Yugi Muto, congratulated the duelists at YCSJ Tokyo 2024 with a prerecorded message, stating that the records were achieved thanks to the cooperation of each and every duelist and the power of their bonds. Yutaro Takahashi, the winner of the tournament, said his victory was made possible because of his practicing with his friends that he made through Yu-Gi-Oh!.

Yu-Gi-Oh! is also the recipient of a third Guinness World Records title. In June 2011, Konami announced that Guinness certified Yu-Gi-Oh! as the “best-selling trading card game” with 25.1+ billion cards sold as of March 31, 2011.

(News from Konami PR [JP, EN]. Images from video by Yu-Gi-Oh! OCG Channel.)

Good Smile Company Opens Exodia POP UP PARADE SP Figure Preorders

April 27, 2024 at 12:00 pm | Posted in Duel Monsters, Yu-Gi-Oh! | Leave a comment
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Close-up of the head and torso of the Exodia the Forbidden One POP UP PARADE SP figure by Good Smile Company

Good Smile Company’s POP UP PARADE line has no pathetic figures! But it does contain…the unstoppable Exodia! On Friday, the Japanese hobby products company began taking preorders for its new Exodia the Forbidden One POP UP PARADE SP figure.

Featuring an anime-accurate design, Exodia is a non-scale, plastic figure that stands about 260 millimeters tall (10.24 inches) — larger than other typical POP UP PARADE figures.

Front view of the Exodia the Forbidden One POP UP PARADE SP figure by Good Smile Company

Yu-Gi-Oh! fans with a U.S. or Canadian address can preorder it directly from the U.S. Good Smile Company store for $97.99, while fans located elsewhere can preorder it from the international store for ¥16,000.

Rear view of the Exodia the Forbidden One POP UP PARADE SP figure by Good Smile Company

Good Smile’s POP UP PARADE began as a budget-friendly series of figures measuring 170 to 180 millimeters tall (6.7 to 7.1 inches). It has since expanded to include larger and more pricey figures. Good Smile states that its POP UP PARADE SP branch “transcends the boundaries of the regular POP UP PARADE lineup with special surprises.”

Exodia is one of five figures created to mark the fifth anniversary of POP UP PARADE this year. Good Smile notes that more Yu-Gi-Oh! monsters are in the works.

(News from @GoodSmile_US)

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