Yu Gi Oh Bonds Beyond Time English Dubbed

2020. 1. 23. 06:15카테고리 없음

Yu Gi Oh Bonds Beyond Time English Dubbed
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IT'S TIME TO D-D-D-D—D-D-D-D-D-D- DESCRIBE!There were actually two anime series., which loosely adapts the first seven volumes of the, made by, and this one, Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, which was produced by NAS, animated by, and is generally adapted from volume 8 onwards.This adaptation is given the subtitle 'Duel Monsters' to demonstrate the elevated prominence of the card game compared with the manga and first series anime, though the manga was also given the subtitle of 'Duelist' in the English localization.

It was sponsored by as a successful attempt to remain dominant of the license to the card game, after it stripped it away from, which failed to retain the license of capitalizing on the manga's card game with Toei's movie and anime. There are a huge number of video games based on the anime and manga. It also spawned a movie called. This version of Yugi and his alter ego return in that was written to take place six months after the manga continuity in the Japanese version, but takes place a year after the anime in the dub, and is the first Yu-Gi-Oh! Anime adaptation with direct involvement from.This show in particular is also responsible for the creation of genre of internet videos, with.The dub is, and is now starting.: In the wake of his defeat to Kaiba towards the end of the Duelist Kingdom arc, Yugi suffers a and vows never to duel again, saying he is afraid of the way Dark Yugi was prepared to win the duel even if. He snaps out of it by the end of the following episode, though the dub has him take longer to recover, only snapping out of it during the duel with Mai.: Bandit Keith duels Yugi in an abandoned warehouse that has its own Duel Monsters arena.: Beginning in Season 2 of the anime, the stone tablet that continues to be a plot point for the rest of the series shows Kaiba and Yugi dueling in ancient Egypt.

Ishizu shows Kaiba a vision of the battle. Later, in Season 3 another vision of this battle is shown, but it's completely different from the vision showed before. The battle is seen first-hand in Season 5, and is rather underplayed given the amount of foreshadowing and importance given to it before. Furthermore, though they differ greatly, both visions show Kaiba is quite clearly the Pharaoh's enemy, but in Season 5 he's mostly loyal and the only reason the battle occurs is because he gets possessed. This is attributed to Kazuki Takahashi never getting to flesh out the story with Seto and Kisara the way he wanted. Seto rebelling against the Pharaoh on his own was intended to be a larger plot point that didn't end up happening, so he ended up brainwashed.

It can be excused by the fact that the season 5 arc ended up being an RPG and the betrayal did occur in the real past.: Shadow Games plus Duel Monsters means the world is frequently at stake. Also, the Doma arc has the characters losing their soul if they lose while the Seal of Orichalcos is in play, meaning the loser is left with an empty shell of a body.: Gozaburo Kaiba, and Marik and Ishizu's father. Aknadin also becomes this once Zorc's corruption sets in.: In the 4Kids dub, Jonouchi was given a Brooklyn accent to represent his plain speech patterns in the original. Ryou Bakura was given a British accent to reflect his politeness.: Since Honda and Anzu are stowaways on the ship to Duelist Kingdom, and Jonouchi isn't really supposed to be there either, Honda advises everyone to 'act casual' going past the guards.

And then marches past looking ridiculously uncomfortable and suspicious.: Zig-zagged. Atem: What you seem to forget Bakura is that this is a game. And you face The King of Games.:.

Yugi — the normal one, not the Pharaoh one — manages to take out all three God Cards in one turn against Atem. Jonouchi, as well, who's the most normal of the main duelists.: The final opening for the Millennium World arc is more faithful to the manga than the anime, lacking the diadhanks that the priests had in the anime but didn't have in the manga.: Any time one of the characters has a sudden revelation. Mostly when Dark Yugi figures out how to beat his opponents. It happens when Yugi collapses during his second duel with Pegasus. Yugi's friends can sense it, despite his isolation in the Shadow Game.: The three-part duel with the Paradox Brothers is all about this.: Shizuka, Anzu, and Mai.:. The heroes' ace monsters are, even the Blue-Eyes White Dragon looks noble and majestic. Meanwhile, the villains use monsters that wouldn't look out of place in horror movies.

Bakura and Marik are both good-looking, but when their take over, they look significantly rougher and are prone to making terrifying faces.: In episode 201, Yami Yugi or Pharaoh Atem, finally time travels back in time to Ancient Egypt just in time for the coronation ceremony of the new Pharaoh. Once the festivities begin in celebration of the new ruler, a couple of dancers, entertainers and musicians are brought out for the party.: If you don't want to see a very angry Kaiba, don't tell him Yugi lost a duel. Or try to take over his company. Or.: This shot is how Rebecca is introduced in her first appearance.:. Ryo Bakura is a very sweet, shy, quiet, polite guy with a that he's only vaguely aware exists. Yugi, later on in the series, shows that he has the ability to kick ass even without his Other Personality, at times.: Pegasus, The Big Five, Noah and Gozaburo Kaiba, Marik and Dark Marik, Dartz, Zigfried von Schroeder, and Zorc/Dark Bakura. Subject to the.: Seems to happen a lot.

Notable because oftentimes the mere presence of the friends of whoever is dueling gives them the strength to win, or at least continue playing into the next episode.: Pegasus tells Dark Bakura to shut up after the latter reads his past like an open book through Duel Monster cards used as Tarot cards.:. Played straight with the Egyptian text. Atem's name is written as 'Atemu' and the carvings on Odion's face and Marik's back are genuine hieroglyphs. The author. The card title spells 'Orichalcon' and the rim of the seal spells 'Oreichalcos' twice, the card text itself seems to be flavor text in transliterated Japanese.: Marik Ishtar, Ryo Bakura, and Ryuji Otogi. The latter two even have their own in-universe fan clubs.:. The spirit of the Millennium Ring.

He uses the innocent Bakura as his 'sheep's clothing'. One can almost never be sure who is in control, as one second Bakura is smiling innocently, and the next second when the others have turned their backs the spirit smirks. Marik. When he personally meets up with Yugi's friends for the first time, he pretends to have just found Bakura injured. He actually does this to gain their trust. He introduces himself to them as 'Namu', acting as a humble beginner who is participating in the Battle City Tournament.

Right afterwards Marik's minions attack and Anzu and Jonouchi get kidnapped, then brainwashed. He keeps up the innocent act later, too, claiming to having gotten into the finals only because of dumb luck, even as Jonouchi grows suspicious of him.: The IC chips inside the cards are described as this in the Pyramid of Light novelization.: Marik Ishtar and the other Rare Hunters are garbed like this when they are first introduced.: due to the 'Dark Magician Girl' card, which is actually named 'Black Magician Girl' in the original anime.: The card known in Japanese as 'Shisha Sosei', literally 'Raise Dead', is called 'Reborn the Monster' early in the English dub. It's later changed to 'Monster Reborn', which makes more sense.: Mai is a blond, Anzu is a brunette and Shizuka is a redhead.: Marik causes much grief to the protagonists by doing this during the Battle City arc.: Yugi's winning card in the last duel of the series is Golden Sarcophagus; it's that the card looks just like the box the Millennium Puzzle was in, and that the box that brought Yugi and the pharaoh together would be the very thing to bring them apart.:. Of the manga.

Skipping approximately the first seven volumes of Dark Yugi challenging bullies/criminals to Shadow Games and inflicting Penalty Games, disregarding Kaiba's death-themed amusement park, and changing Dark Yugi's Penalty Games into Mind Crushes, among other things. Duelist Kingdom, Dungeon Dice Monsters, and Millennium World get most of this treatment, whereas Battle City gets less of it. The English dubbed anime is this to the above, notably in Battle City. Marik's Rare Hunters can't invoke shadow games since they don't have millennium items and instead set up elaborate death traps.

The English dub had most of them be Shadow Games anyway thanks to Marik's magic.: The Dark Magician Girl, being the of the franchise, is far more popular than any other duel monster from the original series save for the iconic Blue-Eyes and Dark Magician. She's even playable in some of the video games.:. A breather arc, actually.

The relatively laid back KC Grand Prix story fits right in between the much more intense Doma and Millennium World storylines. The anime version of the Dungeon Dice Monsters story serves as this as well.: A truly long term one. In one of the first chapters of the manga, Jonouchi gives Yugi a (rather pixilated) porn tape. In the first chapter of the final arc, Jonouchi asks Yugi if he can have the tape back, but Yugi says his mom found and confiscated it.: Mai Valentine/Kujaku, whose past has made her an aloof, untrusting loner.: The only thing that keeps Marik from interfering in the events of Noah's arc is. A locked door.

Although, he does manage to blow up Noah's control system.: Priest Seto and Kisara in Ancient Egypt, Dark Yugi and Anzu in the main timeline.: Atem has to pass on to the afterlife after he saves the world from the Shadow Games once and for all.: 'BLACK MAGICIAN, BLACK MAGIC!' BLUE-EYES WHITE DRAGON BURST STREAM OF DESTRUCTION!' And so on ad infinitum. Several of these attacks even have their own cards, which require their monster to be out.

Mainly used for important monsters early on, with smaller ones just getting descriptions of what's happening.: Duel Monsters is closer to this in Duelist Kingdom, since the manga storylines and the related cards were closer to an RPG at the time, leading to Normal monsters having effects, being able to destroy your own spell cards, and field power bonuses affecting both sides.: Countless examples, the most famous of which are the Dark Magician, Blue-Eyes White Dragon and Red-Eyes Black Dragon. Later releases have done more to keep them viable, but they're still fairly specialized decks.:. Exodia has chains on his wrists and ankles. Yugi later uses a chain necklace for his Millennium Puzzle.: In the Doma arc, Dark Yugi regresses to a more vengeful persona without Yugi around, much like the earlier manga, and tortures Haga in a fit of rage until Anzu convinces him to stop.: Kaiba can throw cards at someone with such force that it hurts like they're shuriken, Jonouchi can break down a wall, etc. Each of them have almost no visible muscle.: Mai and Jounouchi. Also Yugi and Anzu, though the latter has a crush on the former's.: In the Duelist Kingdom arc, Jonouchi is seen trading for Sword and Shield, which he later uses against Ghost/Bonz to pull off a win.

Kaiba: So you have a dweeb army. Am I supposed to be scared to attack?Dartz: Well, only if destroying an innocent soul concerns you.Kaiba: Nah. As the president of a major corporation, I have to do that every day.: Marik's mother dies giving birth to him.: Kaiba claims that Anzu helping Mokuba escape from the Rare Hunters is the only reason he's helping Yugi find his friends. Then he uses it as his reason for saving Anzu's life. Considering all the times he makes a point of explaining how he's only 'helping' the gang out of selfish reasons, it's pretty clear that it's a shield for his.: Otogi in the Dungeon Dice Monsters arc.

To an extent, Mokuba Kaiba and Marik Ishtar later on.:. Mai Kujaku/Valentine for the first few arcs, and then heads back to Arctic levels during most of Season 4 due to her. Kaiba is a male example, at least in the Japanese version. He becomes more amiable and less openly insulting towards the others over time.:. Ryou Bakura in the second anime.

In the manga, he appears with the main group most of the time after his initial appearance and has tons of screentime, whereas in the anime he usually only appears whenever it involves Dark Bakura or if it's Dark Bakura pretending to be the real Bakura. This is so bad that on the official Yu-Gi-Oh website, Ryou Bakura does not have a character profile but Dark Bakura does.

The same goes for the official Japanese websites. Bobasa as well, as his major role in the Millennium World arc from the manga was instead given to Shadi whereas he is mainly reduced to comic relief for the few episodes he appears in, until his final appearance where he takes Yugi and the others to the Pharaoh's temple. In fact, in the manga, Bobasa is an alternate identity of Shadi/Hasan.: The first two seasons of the anime follow Kazuki Takahashi's manga style pretty well, but the various animators start to show their specific styles around the end of the Battle City finals and into. This causes discrepancies between the proportions of the characters, IE the ever-changing size of Yugi's hair.: A staple of Kaiba, to the point where many a fanfic has waxed eloquent over his 'icy death glare'. Dark Yugi usually prefers speech-making, but has been known to utilize this effectively as well. Jonouchi doesn't do this as frequently as Kaiba, but when he does, a crowning moment of awesome will ensue.: Yugi has Giant Soldier of Stone destroy his own Full Moon card.

It recedes the ocean from the field, beaching Kajiki's monsters. Years later it would be ascended into.: Whenever one of the heroes is in a hopeless situation, the solution is often them drawing a card we've never seen or heard of (and in many case never will again) that provides the perfect solution.: The three Egyptian God cards, which Yugi worked hard to acquire in Seasons 2 and 3, are stolen in the very first episode of Season 4 by the local and are drained of their power. Yugi manages to regain them in time for the final battle, but up until then only one God is used.: Though occasionally the exact details are fuddled, the mythological concepts explored throughout the franchise show that someone obviously did their homework.: Some moments from the manga where cards are implied to be alive are given more concrete explanations in the anime:.

When the Mimic of Doom uses Blue-Eyes White Dragon on Yugi it destroys itself rather than attacking, mirroring Kaiba’s original duel with Yugi. In the anime the real Kaiba activates a virus that has a hand in destroying it, heavily downplaying the implied sentience of the card.

During Yugi and Jonouchi's duel on the pier, Jonouchi begs Red-Eyes Black Dragon to attack him to activate Yugi's key. Red-Eyes obeys. The anime changes this so that the attack is part of a very convenient and otherwise useless effect of Meteor of Destruction that he just played.: Kaiba appears on every TV screen in the city to announce the Battle City Tournament.: The cheerleaders' interactions with Jonouchi, where they repeatedly pummel and demean him, are played as comic relief.:. A creeping one happens as far back as Episode 2.

Jonouchi is motivated to play Duel Monsters to win an upcoming district tournament when he sees the prize is 3,000,000 yen, so he trains under Solomon/Grandpa to get better. After that scene it flashes forward an estimated few days to weeks where he ends up losing in the quarter-finals. In the dub all mention of his entrance in the District Tournament disappears. This ends up causing a bit of confusion when Season 3 rolls around and he ends up comatose after his duel with Marik, where during his time in the coma he relives his memories from the tournament showing how he lost in the quarter-finals to show how much stronger he's become since then, and fighting subconsciously to fulfill his promise and face Yugi again.

In the dub he's just straight-up dreaming and is told this by Yugi in the dream, turning it into an of sorts as he fights his way out of the Shadow Realm. It's a plot point in season 5 that the Pharaoh has to remember his name, Atem. However the dub of season 2 has several characters (primarily Ishizu and Marik) referring to the Pharaoh's spirit as 'King Yami' as if that were his real name. This plot hole is just quietly ignored by the time season 3 comes around, with no one referring to him as 'Yami' anymore.

Mokuba, upon waking up when his soul is returned to him, immediately recognises Bakura in the dub, even though the two have never met before. In the original he says nothing. The English dub actually fixed some plot holes from the original anime.

In the original (including the manga), Yugi says that duelists were only allowed to have exactly 40 cards on hand, but Yugi lost 3 Exodia cards and gave Time Wizard to Jonouchi, meaning that his deck had only 36 cards. This line is absent from the English dub. In the original version, Jonouchi tells the Rare Hunter that 'only Yugi has Exodia', despite the fact that Yugi lost the Exodia cards in Duelist Kingdom. In the dub, Jonouchi just says that Exodia is very rare. In the English dub, a moan is added when Pegasus's body is carried off with Croquet explaining he'd taken ill, and unlike the manga he's alive for seasons 4 and 5.: The dub was done by, after all. Jonouchi becomes 'Joey,' Anzu becomes 'Tea,' Honda becomes 'Tristan,' Shizuka becomes 'Serenity,' Mai's last name changes from Kujaku to Valentine, Dinosaur Ryuzaki becomes 'Rex Raptor,' etc. Some card names were also changed, for example, Black Magician being renamed to Dark Magician (and the same for the card's female counterpart, Black Magician Girl to Dark Magician Girl) and its corresponding attack card, Black Magic, being renamed to Dark Magic Attack.: invoked.

Anzu replies with this when Jonouchi jokingly suggests that Kaiba died after his soul was stolen by Pegasus at the end of the Duelist Kingdom arc. After everyone gets off of Alcatraz Island, Kaiba tells everyone that he knew the blimp's engines weren't working. All the while, he was smirking when he said that, meaning he thought that it was funny. Jonouchi, reasonably, gets mad at him for almost letting them die.:. Jonouchi says this almost word-for-word upon hearing that Kaiba refused to invite him into the Battle City tournament even though he was the runner-up in Duelist Kingdom. in Duel Academy's school pledge.: Apparently, even before Dark Yugi Duel Monsters games decided a few inane things, but post-Season 2 pretty much every Duel could be a Shadow Game or a Dangerous Bet.: Several characters experienced a tragic and/or depressing past, especially the villains.:.

Duelist Kingdom uses completely different rules than later arcs, playing more like an RPG than a trading card game. Examples include Yugi being able to beach Kajiki's sea creatures, being able to target separate parts of monsters, attacks being able to miss, etc. In-universe, this is justified by Pegasus mentioning that the tournament will use different, special rules, than the typical game.

Later seasons bring the rules in closer with the real-life card game. Speaking of Duelist Kingdom, the dub version of it is this when compared to future seasons. While most other seasons go out of their way to, all deaths, implied deaths, and attempted murders are retained in the dub's first season. The Shadow Realm is used as an explanation for the dark field of Shadow Games, as well as a general punishment implied to be worse than death. Kaiba also believes in and plans for Pegasus's use of magic, while in later seasons he's skeptical of it. Early on some cards are called different names, such as Monster Reborn being 'Reborn the Monster' and Harpie Lady being 'Harpie's Lady.' .

Even the cards are this. In this series the cards are mostly inclined towards the horror genre, religion and mythology, especially but not restricted to Ancient Egypt. Later series have more of a 'futuristic and dragons theme' with occasional gruesome cards.: Any villain who undergoes a is almost immediately forgiven by Yugi and his friends, though Jonouchi takes the longest to come around.: Whenever Shadi with his Millennium Key, the environment reflects their personality and mental state.:. Played straight with Yugi/Dark Yugi and Marik/Dark Marik. Both played straight and subverted by Bakura/Dark Bakura in Japanese. Dark Bakura does have a deeper voice than Bakura, but both have a. Played straight in the dub.

Also used with Marik when his isn't in control. When he's pretending to be a protagonist, and after his, his voice is higher and softer. Also inverted with Noah; when he's a villain, his voice is high-pitched and bratty, but when he makes his, it gets lower and more mature.: The duel between Dark Marik and Dark Bakura is a very clear this, with neither party holding good intentions.: Happens during late season one (but not in the dub). After Pegasus has been defeated, the -shot of him is replaced by a clip more relevant to the current episode.: A lot of the cards, like 'Red-Eyes Black Dragon,' 'Man-Eating Treasure Chest,' and 'Dark Magician,' just to name a few. Ladies and gentlemen, feast your eyes upon the!.: At one point, Yugi and Anzu go up against a guy named Johnny Steps at a clone. Doubly hilarious seeing as DDR is also put out by Konami.: Pegasus' Thousand-Eyes Restrict somehow has, as the name implies, one-thousand eyes covering its body.: Every major villain has this going on for them, especially friends who have been made.: Marik does this at the end of his first in-person appearance, as he sends out the Rare Hunters.

When he does, he glares at the screen as it fades to black around his.: Seto Kaiba is the president of a multi-billion-dollar gaming company, which he from his stepfather.: Virtual World, DOMA, and Kaibacorp Grand Prix. Kaiba hilariously lampshades this directly after the Virtual World Arc, directly after they've all narrowly escaped with their lives. Kaiba: Alright, that little detour was a complete waste of my time and effort. So let's move on and pretend that nonsense never happened.

It's time for us to continue the Battle City Finals! Set us back on course, to Kaiba Corp Island.: Noah and Gozaburo Kaiba in season 3, Dartz in season 4, and Zigfried von Schroeder in season 5, respectively.: Yugi invokes this during his Duelist Kingdom match against Joey. It's his way of ensuring that the eventual victor will have the best possible preparation before facing Pegasus.: Added in to the dub, the second episode has Pegasus revealing to Yugi that Duel Monsters is based on magical duels performed in Ancient Egypt; an important fact to be sure, but in the original version it wasn't revealed until the next arc entirely.:. Kaiba's rude tendencies in the dub.

Dub!Kaiba: Wait and see, you geeks haven't seen the last of me. Pegasus: UNBELIEVABLE! This is a NIGHTMARE! Bad dream!.

Most of the cards have names in too. Red-Eyes Black Dragon and Blue-Eyes White Dragon are completely unchanged from the Japanese version. Also in the Japanese anime, terms like 'duel(ist),' 'player,' 'direct attack,' 'Duel Disk,' 'deck,' 'card,' 'Monster/Magic/Trap Card,' 'turn,' 'draw,' and the different phases of the duel (i.e., Draw Phase, Standby Phase, Main Phase 1, Battle Phase, Main Phase 2 and End Phase) are said in English. 'Reverse card, open!'

Is another commonly-heard English phrase in the Japanese anime. Rebecca also speaks a lot of English. Her very first line in the series is 'Hello, my name is Rebecca.'

Both Pegasus and Rebecca are American, so it stands to reason that they would speak English. However, Bandit Keith, who is also American, rarely speaks English. The Egyptian God Cards have the names written on them in English in the Japanese version of the anime. The names written on them are completely different from what they're called in both Japanese and English - THE SUN OF GOD DRAGON (The Winged God Dragon of Ra), THE GOD OF OBELISK (Giant God Soldier of Obelisk) and SAINT DRAGON - THE GOD OF OSIRIS (Sky Dragon of Osiris).

DORO! MONSTA CARDO!.: Pegasus does this by showing his favorite cartoon rabbit character when he counter-hacks Kaiba trying to hack into his system.: There is one owned by Seto Kaiba in episodes 9 and 10.: Although many duels feel this way, the Yugi vs. Kaiba ones are the greatest examples.

At some points it feels like their voice actors are competing to see who can do the most over-the-top performance and still keep it in the final cut. The Dark Marik vs. Seto: If I had a dime for every time you said the word 'destiny,'.: Bonz from the Duelist Kingdom used the ' note a Trap Card in the US version to match the against Joey/Jonouchi in the terrain. It revives his monsters into -types (if they weren't already) with of their original attack power, but with, each time that they are killed.

Coupled with the effects of the terrain and the anime version of 'Pumpking the King of Ghosts,' the Zombies' ATK powers kept on increasing each turn. However, Joey defeated Bonz when he played Shield & Sword, a card that switches ATK and DEF powers of all monster cards in the field, then killed one of his Zombie monsters with a and dealt its full Battle Damage.: Seto Kaiba believes in this. He doesn't have any friends, and he doesn't even want any. He thinks depending on no one but yourself is for the strong. From the looks of it, though, it's the 'monsters' of and talking.: In the Virtual World arc, Gozaburo says he considers Seto this.: during Duelist Kingdom. The boulder in question was just a balloon with a speaker in it.: Seto Kaiba. As far as he's concerned, the only option is victory.

And the only allies. Are enemies.:.

There's a reason why we never see Yugi and Seto play chess. King of games or not, you can't use the 'heart of the chess piece(?)' to win a game. And there are no power-ups (other than promoting pawns, which isn't too hard to see coming) or convenient special abilities. Ryuzaki and Haga were in a tournament championship facing each other right before the Duelist Kingdom arc.

Yet, from then on out they never pose much of a threat to, well, pretty much anyone, effectively becoming who sure don't look like champions of any level of tournament. Ryuzaki is an unfortunate case. Of all the duels he loses in the canon arcs, almost all of them are against opponents who are willing to cheat or against Jonouchi (who wins by dumb luck). Admittedly, we don't see anything to suggest that Haga cheated in their first duel, but considering that it is Haga who throws Yugi's cards into the ocean it wouldn't be too surprising. (He also doesn't cheat against Yugi in the original Japanese version; the reason he knows about the new rules ahead of time is because Pegasus told him about them as a prize for winning the Regional Championship.). The same could be said of Haga really. Other than that, Haga went up against Yugi/Dark Yugi twice and did very well both times.

Certainly Haga cheats but he's still shown to have great skill. The cheating only seems to serve as a supplement to his own abilities, or because he.

Other than, Haga's only ever lost to. The main reason he becomes a joke character is because he's a who as far as powerful cards go.: In the anime, Ryuji Otogi/Duke Devlin's evil plan is made up of some pretty epic idiocy. He plans to prove that Yugi must have cheated in his duel with Pegasus. By cheating in his duel with Yugi, by challenging him to a game of Otogi's own creation and refusing to explain the rules.

Not just cheating, either, but cheating openly and bragging about it. Sure, if he wins he would still get half of what he wanted (forcing Yugi to give up dueling), but even then all he would manage to prove to the world is that he is a liar who can't win without cheating, not Yugi. If his plan works he would lose all credibility, and probably all of his customers and fans, too. Manga Ryuji averts this; not only was his plan more sensible, most of it wasn't even his plan, it was his (legitimately insane) father's.: The most powerful cards in the game are dragons, and it was carried over to the sequels. The villain in the crossover movie with GX and 5DS summons nothing but dragons, to show how superior they are to the audience. Even Kaiba (the most dragon-obsessed guy in the series) has some variety in his deck.: 'You know, I'm not quite sure what to call you.

I was thinking about 'monster'. But I wouldn't want to insult the cards.' .: Big time, between Yugi and.: Jonouchi perpetually comes from behind to win. Granted, everyone does this, but Jonouchi never seems to be picked as a favorite to win anything, despite several finals showings.: In season one, Kaiba threatens that he'll fall from the castle's battlement if Yugi wins the duel, so Yugi forfeits in fear that Dark Yugi would finish Kaiba off. In season five, Yugi again faces the decision of defeating his opponent in a duel to kill him.

In this case, the opponent is Dark Yugi. Yugi hesitates on finishing the duel, but carries it out, as this time, the reason is to send Dark Yugi to the afterlife.: Honda and Otogi have an open crush on Jonouchi's sister Shizuka, which Jonouchi is. At one point in the English dub, Honda talks about how he's going to visit Serenity (read: hit on her) in the hospital, to which Jonouchi responds ' I'll send you to the hospital!' .:.

Kaiba is an with a lot of money and a superiority complex, fond of insutling whoeevr he comes across. Bandit Keith is a bigger one. He and his trap Yugi and the gang in a cave, and he also steals Jounouchi's Glory of the King's Hand card while the latter is sleeping. Haga might just reign supreme in this category, possessing almost no sympathetic traits and having a noteworthy moment with almost each appearance he makes.: In the dub version of the Virtual World arc, Johnson, whose Deckmaster and appearance is that of Judge Man, claims he is putting Jonouchi on trial for gambling. He then proceeds to make every trial joke imaginable.: Ushio, compared to the original manga. In the anime, nothing is really mentioned on what happened to him after the flashback to the scene where he beat Yugi and his friends up. The dub does add in a very quick line where school authorities expelled him, but the original version never says anything beyond that, implying he got off completely scot-free for what he did.: During a duel using the Orichalcos, Haga makes the mistake of claiming he has Yugi's soul in his hand, then tearing it in front of Dark Yugi (which was really a normal bug monster card, making it much worse as he was using it as a way to ).

This.: While he started as a split personality, Dark Marik eventually ejects Marik out of his own body and takes it over, attempting to kill him in his final Shadow Game.:. This is the title Yami Yugi has for his mastery of gaming.: Thief King Bakura's self-proclaimed 'King of Thieves' title comes from the weight of what he steals, and because he seeks the Millennium Items.: In the first season, Tristan hid from Pegasus' guards in one of the suits of armor decorating his castle.: Mai does this with Anzu at Duelist Kingdom, and later in the Duelist Kingdom finals when facing Yugi. Both times, she says she doesn't have a monster strong enough to take down what the opponent has on the field and surrenders.: Pegasus, in the original manga, anime, and dub versions.

Dark Yugi, especially.: The Ishtar family has been serving the Pharaoh for thousands of years, most of that living in an underground labyrinth protecting his tomb. Resentment over this is a huge part of what fuels Marik's =Darkness.: Some cards are weak or nearly-useless on their own but devastating in the right circumstance. Baby Dragon is the earliest example.

It starts with only 1200 ATK, easily destroyed, but with Time Wizard, it becomes Thousand Dragon, with 2400 ATK, stronger than most cards in the game at that point.: Almost everyone settles disputes via Duel Monsters.: Happens during Yugi's final duel with Marik. He uses Obelisk's ability to destroy Ra. The triumphant music starts playing and it seems he won, only for the smoke to clear, revealing Ra to still be on the field, at which point this trope plays out.: Compared to the manga. Within the anime, the KC Grand Prix, a with a campy villain whose crime is.: Dark Marik started out as Marik's even worse side, but by the end of Battle City he gains a separate soul, kicking his other half out of the body. This comes back to bite him when Marik surrenders their final match, letting him vanish into the shadows while Marik remains unharmed.: Mokuba is pretty much just around to provide moral support to Kaiba and/or Yugi. Shizuka, Otogi, Anzu, and Honda are lesser examples as they do get to duel now and then, but it's rare.: Arkana was in love with his Lovely Assistant, Catherine, and they were engaged—before his disfiguring accident.

Although Catherine still loved him, Arkana pushed her away. He later regretted his choice and fell in with Marik when Marik promised he could restore Catherine to Arkana.: Pegasus' motive is to revive his dead lover Cecelia (wife in the dub).: Akhnadin reveals that he is Priest Seto's father to him in the Memory World arc.: Compare the Dub to the Japanese version.

Some scenes have added dialogue, especially if in the original the characters are silent.: Pegasus is occasionally seen sipping a glass of red wine while lounging around in his. Infamously by the dub into.: Pegasus' Millennium Eye, possessing the power to read minds and probably do other sinister things. According to, it also Pegasus into creating Duel Monsters, making it a literal evil eye.: Arguably Yu-Gi-Oh's central trope, as everyone, hero and villain alike, draws the exact cards they need to make a duel challenging but winnable. Episodes 41 and 42 show Yugi and Rebecca's duel, which apparently goes exactly like a duel their grandfathers played decades earlier, turn for turn, card for card. Lampshaded in Waking the Dragons, along with, in the English dub by Ryuzaki, when he and Haga witness Yugi use the Eye of Timaeus with Dark Magician Girl.

He mentions how Yugi and company tend to draw the cards they need at the right moment, but he and Haga don't.: As part of his backstory, Seto Kaiba was given two percent of the shares to his stepfather's company Kaiba Corp, but had to use them to make 100 times their worth within a year's time. Seto did this by buying 51% of a company and threatening to close it and put everyone out of work unless the original owner agreed to buy it back for five times it value, which he did for the sake of the employees. It's implied Seto repeated this with other companies to work up the needed money to please his stepfather. He later took over Kaiba Corp itself with the same strategy.: Towards the end of the Yugioh! Episode, 'Explosion-Ultimate Yoyo Technique', this effect is used on Anzu/Mai and Miho, thanks to Jounichi/Joey using his own yoyo trick, Loop the Sky, with the disks end of it inadvertently lifting their skirts from the front.

Rafael:.: No, is not misspelling Yami as, it is actually Your Move.: Mokuba Kaiba is one for his brother Seto. Odion and Ishizu Ishtar are the same for their master/brother Marik.: Dartz in Season 4, who is only partially possessed by the Orichalcos god (hence just one green eye) while the rest of him has just been driven insane.: Mai Valentine and Dark Magician Girl, also Anzu on occasion.: Yugi has black and purple spiky hair with freestanding streaks of blond in it. His grandfather had the exact same hair when he was younger, and although it's now gray it retains the same shape.: The whole premise of the show is to make card games into epic duels.: The track in the Japanese OST is a pastiche of from, it's not too surprising since both show's share the same composer, Shinkichi Mitsumune.: As if the nature of the scene is not enough, the lack of the 'Life Points hitting 0' sound effect when Dartz brings Dark Yugi's LP down to 0 makes it very obvious that the duel is not over.: Played with, as Duel Monsters is perfectly safe by itself. It's duelists like the Ghouls that add in their own, more dangerous, rules or invoke the dark magic of the Millennium Items that make it so.: Some anime-only arcs reference the manga obliquely. Episode 11 has a flashback to Joey's days on the streets.

The gang members that attack him look like Hirutani's gang from the manga, and have similar styles of uniforms. Yugi getting upset when Earu the virtual fairy died is like when his virtual pet in the manga died. Yami Bakura's soul-eating Morphing Jar card is similar to Imori's soul-eating Dragon Jar.

Noah's arc and character design are a reference to the manga's Death-T arc, as well as Toei's Yu-Gi-Oh anime.: Pegasus got his after his beloved wife Cyndia/Cecilia passed away and he vowed to bring her back.: In the English dub, at least, with the exception of the first season, which include:. Episode 8 where Pegasus plots Kaiba's death and says for him to have an accident. Which actually works as, since that's what a (or a member of ) would do to a business rival.

Kaiba tells Pegasus's men he'd rather die than be captured and promptly leaps to his supposed death, which is mentioned in the next episode where Yugi duels Kaiba's 'corpse.' .

Episode 13, when Honda (Tristan) is first sent to the Graveyard. Pegasus: Oh, I know you'd like to think that your friendship would be enough to sustain you through any mishap or misfortune, but that's not the way the world works.Pegasus. When fate hits you with a cold slap of reality and shows you who's boss. Yes, the world has taught me that only the strong and the ruthless survive.

Kaiba is seen reading Nietzsche in his first appearance. No better way to paint yourself a villain immediately, aye?.: Numerous times, characters will pointlessly weaken themselves in order to boost their monsters powers or completely clear the field before delivering a final blow so that not only do their opponent's life points drop to 0, but all their monsters are gone too - this being in situations where they could save themselves the trouble and just attack outright and win. A prime example is Atem's fight with Haga, after the latter pretended to destroy Yugi's soul just to.

Atem used a card that let his monster attack directly every time he drew a monster card, and proceeded to pound Haga again and again, long after his Life Points ran out. He would've kept going too, if. Note that this is during a special duel where you actually feel the pain of attacks.: In Duelist Kingdom, Yugi severely weakens Kaiba's Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon by fusing his Mammoth Graveyard into it, which, because both are incompatible types,.: NPCs are seen in the Legendary Heroes arc and Virtual World arcs with varying importance. Noah: Seriously, though, that was splendid, Yugi! You possess both the skill and judgement necessary to catch your enemies off-guard the second they lose focus.

When you think about it, you and I have no reason to be enemies. If you swear your loyalty to me, I'll save all your friends from Hell this very instant!.: Mai during her duel with Yugi in the Duelist Kingdom finals.

She manages to talk Yugi out of his funk so that he can duel her with a clear and focused head. And it works! Definitely one of her most brilliant moments.: Both virtual realities suffer from this, despite how fleshed-out everything else in them is. In the latter, since Noah spent years trapped in his world and was driven mad by everyone saying the same lines.: From episode 52. Ishizu Ishtar: And the young man who stands behind the pharaoh. Above his head is the Blue Eyes White Dragon.: Gurimo from the first two episodes of the Waking the Dragons arc. Once he's finished being, everybody forgets about him, including his cohorts, even when all of the souls are being restored.

Only the battle is referenced briefly during Raphael's last fight, prior to his. Also, the last time we saw Bonz and his friends, they were put into the Shadow Realm by Dark Bakura. Nobody ever rescues them, although they may have been freed upon Dark Bakura's own defeat at the hands of Dark Marik. They're dead in the original Japanese version.: Rebecca does this to Dark Yugi when his reckless use of the Seal of Orichalchos results in Yugi losing his soul. Even Haga does this effectively, pointing out that although he might be an asshole, at least he didn't knowingly endanger his friend simply to win.: In the original, there's a scene where Pegasus is drinking a glass of wine.

For the dub, this got changed to. Note Funny enough, this could still allude to it being wine.

After all, wine is often made from fruit and would be considered the 'world's greatest fruit juice' by some.: Jonouchi is often the subject of mistreatment from Anzu and Honda, particularly in filler arcs. It reaches egregious levels in Dungeon Dice Monsters and the KC Grand Prix—though they support him just as often, particularly in the manga-adapted arcs and the Virtual World.: Yugi faces off against Vivian Wong inside a Chinese restaurant. His friends get distracted from their usual cheerleading routine by all the food.: Kaiba's Crush Card. Number of times he tries to use it: Seven. Number of times it actually works: Three, and of those three times, Yugi found ways to work around it and lost for entirely unrelated reasons and Ishizu made its effect work to her advantage and turned it back on Kaiba. So, really, of the seven times he uses it the Crush Card only works the way he plans it to once.

Though, the one time he couldn't get it off normally, he was able to combine it with the Fang of Critias and win that way.:. The anime adds several duels not in the manga for Jonouchi, most of which he loses.

Mai Valentine/Kujaku. Top-notch duelist who gets seeded off against the most dangerous opponents, eventually becoming in Season 4. Despite being a very skilled duelist, she keeps going up against super-powerful opponents to show the viewers how hard it'll be for the other heroes to win. On top of, she starts to have a breakdown over it (to the point of destroying a first-place trophy she just won), and Dartz is able to because of it.: Especially when two. The Kaiba/Dark Yugi matches go compared to others because of their rivalry.: Yugi and Kaiba regard each other this way, with Yugi being the only duelist that Kaiba considers worthy of being his rival.: While this is averted for the vast majority of the time given the nature of the series, they did make one small slip-up in the Zigfried vs. Rex and Weevil duel. Specifically, Zigfried would only have One-Turn Killed both of them if they were sharing a pool of 8000 LP, rather than the separate pools of 4000 they were shown with.

Explanation Zigfried summons two Valkyrie Zweite (1600 ATK each) to destroy Rex's Black Tyranno and Weevil's Insect Queen, along with two Valkyrie Erste to copy the ATK of Insect Queen (2200) and Black Tyranno (2600). While this adds up to exactly 8000 damage, there's no way to divide it evenly between two opponents; at best, he would've overkilled one of them by 200 points, leaving the other with 200 LP remaining.:. Used by Dark Marik during his duel with Dark Yugi. Marik manipulates the game so that when a player takes damage to their life points, normal Yugi and normal Marik suffer the damage as well.

If Dark Yugi loses the duel, then Yugi is consumed and Marik walks free. However, if Yugi wins then Dark Marik walks free anyway, seeing as his good half is destroyed instead.

It's subverted at the last minute. Used in the final duel between Yugi and Atem. Yugi correctly predicts that his opponent has a Mirror Force trap, used to destroy any attacking monsters. He attacks anyway.

Had he been wrong, his attack would have gone through anyway and destroyed Atem's monsters. Had he been right (which he was), then Yugi had a plan in place to immediately counteract it.: Some minor characters. Also, Yugi and Dark Yugi's hair has some purple in it.: Happens to Anzu/Tea, who is promised a chance to be a dancer like she's always wanted.: Inverted with the pharaoh's backstory, seeing as how more information is revealed from the early manga, to Duelist Kingdom, to Battle City, to the Millennium World.: At one point, Yugi uses Monster Multiply, which causes Kuriboh to multiply each turn, in conjunction with Kuriboh's special ability that allows it to nullify the damage done by one enemy monster. Due to there being no limit on how many monsters can be summoned with one magic card in the anime's version of the game, this allows him to create a virtually impenetrable barrier of the little guys.: Rebecca Hawkins manages to pull off a grade-A in her initial appearance. Also, she's twelve years old.

. 50 minutes. 60 minutes (4Kids version)CountryJapanLanguageJapaneseBox office$2,017,928Yu-Gi-Oh!: Bonds Beyond Time (: 劇場版 遊☆戯☆王 〜超融合!時空を越えた絆〜,: Gekijōban Yū-Gi-Ō!: Chō-Yūgō!

Toki o Koeta Kizuna, lit. The Movie: Super Fusion! Bonds That Transcend Time) is a based on the series. It was produced to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the -produced series, and features the main characters from three of the franchise's anime series and links to the story of. The events of the film take place before the 'Crash Town arc,' which is the of Yu-Gi-Oh!

5D's.It was released in Japanese theaters on January 23, 2010. An English-language version of the film was produced. The digital cinema developer and distributor screened the film in selected stereoscopic 3D theaters in the United States. In the United Kingdom, released the film in selected stereoscopic 3D cinemas, and followed this with a and DVD release. The film was also released in the United States on Blu-ray and DVD.The film earned over US$2 million in Japanese theaters, and also sold well on DVD, both in Japan and the United Kingdom.

Film critics, however, criticized it for its limited scope of audience, claiming it was strictly marketed to children or fans of the series. Contents.Plot As ponders the state of New Domino City, Jack Atlas and Crow Hogan cheer him up with the idea of riding on their Duel Runners. As they ride, a mysterious Turbo Duelist called challenges Yusei to a duel. Yusei summons his Stardust Dragon but Paradox seals it inside a card and disappears with it.

They later discover an article that shows a mysterious battle in the past of that Yusei knows did not happen in history before. Compounding the situation, New Domino City is vanishing.

As a result, the Crimson Dragon appears, giving Yusei's Duel Runner the ability to travel through time.In the past, sometime after the GX era, is attacked by evil versions of stolen monster cards in, including Stardust Dragon. As Paradox prepares to kill Jaden, Yusei and the Crimson Dragon arrive and protect him. Afterward, Paradox flees to an earlier point in time. Jaden tells Yusei that he was pursuing Paradox, who stole his friends' cards. Yusei explains to Jaden the situation, and they decide to work together.

Jaden pulls out a computer and uses the Manjome foundation's database to pull up an article, which states that Paradox killed Pegasus, using Stardust and other famous dragons. Suddenly, Jaden's Neos card disappears like Stardust Dragon did, and this era starts to vanish as well. Yusei and Jaden travel back even further in time to try to prevent Pegasus's death. Years earlier, is holding a duel in Domino City, which is attending with his grandfather.

Paradox uses his newly acquired monsters to attack the event, killing Pegasus, Yugi's grandfather, and several bystanders, but Yugi survives. Then, Yusei and Jaden arrive, and the Crimson Dragon transports them and Yugi 30 minutes back in time before Paradox's attack, in order to stop him, as Pegasus' premature death would drastically alter the course of history. After learning about Paradox's actions, Yugi decides to join them.

Jaden notices his Neos is back and proclaims that right now, all their cards are safe from being destroyed by any alteration already done to time.The trio then confronts Paradox, who reveals that he comes from a future beyond Yusei's in which the world lies in ruins, and claims that the only way to fix it is to eliminate Duel Monsters from history. However, the three heroes protest that by doing so, all the future events and people associated with Duel Monsters will be erased as well, and they challenge him to a duel. By combining the powers of their key monsters, Yugi, Jaden, and Yusei defeat Paradox, who is destroyed by the attack.

After the duel, Yusei, Jaden, and Yugi say that they will do what they can to make sure the future does not end up like Paradox's, and they say goodbye and the latter two return to their respective time periods. New Domino City returns to normal, and Yusei now feels that he can finally let go of the past and focus on the future.Cast CharacterJapanese voice actorEnglish voice actor/Ai HoranaiEileen StevensWayne GraysonJiro Jay TakasugiDevelopment and release In July 2009, Yu-Gi-Oh!: Bonds Beyond Time was first announced through 's magazines as a short film to be screened at the Jump Super Anime Tour to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the anime series. It was revealed in the November issue of magazine, that the animation would be a 3-D film. The film's imagery, however, was originally produced in 2D, and then was converted to 3D by the company Qtec. The 3D effect is emphasized in scenes where are used, such as in the scene when the Duel Runners and the cards appear.The film's official website released a 65-second trailer in September 2009, and a 139-second trailer in December.

Yu Gi Oh Bonds Beyond Time English Dubbed

On January 21, 2010, before the film's release, a guidebook titled Yu-Gi-Oh! 10th Anniversary Animation Book was publisher under 's V Jump Books line. It contains an interview with —the author of the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Manga—and information about the film's story and characters and was accompanied by a poster of the film. The film was released in Japan on January 23, 2010; those who attended the premiere receiving a promotional Malefic Red Eyes Black Dragon card.

The film received an encore screening in Japan which was held on February 20, 2011, which included ten extra minutes in 2D. Bonds Beyond Time was released on DVD and on June 15, 2011 by a partnership between,.

Staff Members of the staff from the different Yu-Gi-Oh television series were involved in the film production. Shin Yoshida, the film's screenwriter, worked on,. Masahiro Hikokubo did the of the duels for the film as he previously did for GX and 5D's.

Kenichi Takeshita, the director of 5D's, went on directing Bonds Beyond Time. The same production companies for all the anime, and, were involved in the film. The film's music was composed by Minobe Yutaka and the Wall 5 Project, both also responsible for 5D's songs. The main theme music of the film is 'Makemagic' by Atsushi Tamura's band. English localization and release During 's quarterly conference call in March 2010, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Alfred Khan said they are 'participating in a brand new Yu-Gi-Oh! 3D movie,' implying that 4Kids would produce an English-language version of the film for a Western release.

A 20-minute preview for the English version of the film was shown at 2010, and an American release date in early 2011 in select 3-D theaters was announced. The film's debut in the United States occurred at an event in New York on February 23, 2011. It included demonstrations of 's, the anime's voice actors, a costume contest, and benefited the Make-A-Wish Foundation of Metro New York.showed the film in selected American stereoscopic 3D theaters on February 26 and 27, 2011, and on March 5 and 6, 2011. Manga Entertainment holds the license to distribute the film in the United Kingdom, and released it in selected stereoscopic 3D cinemas on May 14 and 21, 2011. Viewers gained a rare card for each ticket bought. Manga Entertainment released the film on Blu-ray 3D and DVD in the UK on July 25, 2011. It was released on Blu Ray and DVD in the US by New Media Group on July 15, 2014.The English-language version of the film features an additional ten-minute prologue that recaps the original three television series, made up of clips taken from them.

As with those series, the movie's English dub is heavily edited and localized for younger audiences outside Japan. Musical tracks and sound effects are completely replaced with original American-made ones, foreign text is erased or obscured, and the trading cards are visually edited in the same manner as the TV series to not resemble the actual real-life cards. Manga Entertainment's home video release of the film in the UK includes both the edited English and the unaltered Japanese versions of the film. Reception Yu-Gi-Oh!: Bonds Beyond Time debuted at number six in the Japanese box office charts, earning over US$1 million in its first week from around 124 theaters. It grossed $2,017,928 in Japanese theatres, making it the 125th-highest-grossing film released in Japan in 2010. The DVD and Blu-ray releases of the film reached number two in the best-selling lists of their respective media. In the first week, the DVD edition has sold 5,488 copies, while 4,653 copies of Blu-ray has been sold in the same period.

It was the film's UK distributor Manga Entertainment's second-best selling anime release of 2011. A representative of Manga Entertainment said, 'I think it was because it was available in Asda and Morrisons, came with a free rare card and was stupidly cheap on the shelf'. When it was broadcast by in 2014, the film earned a 0.3 percent television viewership rating.Andy Haley from UK Anime Network praised the English version and stated it is 'arguably preferable even to the original Japanese audio'. Haley praised the film 'for keeping its focus and plot progression impeccable tight', which made it 'an intense, non-stop experience'. However, Haley said the film was created to increase the sale of cards; he commented it has 'plot holes that even kids will see through as it serves only to bring its three characters together at one time and nothing more'. Writing for, Phelim O'Neill affirmed it has 'a very limited style of animation' and that it may be exciting for children but for anyone over ten, 'it'll be hard to see this as anything other than a shouty, tacky advert for things you'll never buy'. Chris Homer of The Fandom Post praised the film's animation and the matching up of the three protagonists.

He criticized it and stated the time travel and the antagonists motives are not well developed, 'if at all about why he wants to get rid of what is basically a card game'. 's Jamie Russell wrote it is difficult for a non-fan of the series to appreciate. Bridget Fox, writing for, also said it is 'not for non-fans' but that it is good entertainment with 'its frenetic pace, the capable animation, and its refusal to overcomplicate matters'.

References. Loo, Egan (July 5, 2009). Anime News Network.

Retrieved September 27, 2014. Loo, Egan (September 17, 2009).

Anime News Network. Retrieved September 27, 2014. ^ 遊戯王 10th Anniversary Animation Book (in Japanese). P. 133. (in Japanese).

Retrieved December 9, 2014. Loo, Egan (September 18, 2009). Anime News Network. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

Loo, Egan (December 18, 2009). Anime News Network. Retrieved September 27, 2014. ^ (in Japanese).

Retrieved December 12, 2014. ^ (in Japanese).

Retrieved December 17, 2013. Loo, Egan (December 9, 2010). Anime News Network. Retrieved 31 December 2018.

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(in Japanese). March 25, 2011. Archived from on June 18, 2011. Retrieved December 9, 2014. ^ (in Japanese). Retrieved December 9, 2014. ^ (in Japanese).

Retrieved December 9, 2014. ^ (in Japanese). Retrieved December 9, 2014. ^ (in Japanese).

Yu Gi Oh Gx Dubbed Episodes

Retrieved December 9, 2014. (in Japanese). Retrieved December 9, 2014. Director: Kenichi Takeshita (2011).

10thアニバーサリー 劇場版 遊☆戯☆王 〜超融合!時空を越えた絆〜 (DVD) (in Japanese). Hodgkins, Crystalyn (March 17, 2010). Anime News Network. July 28, 2010.

Retrieved September 27, 2014. September 15, 2010. Retrieved September 27, 2014.

^ Manry, Gia (February 17, 2011). Anime News Network. Retrieved December 12, 2014. ^. Anime News Network. November 22, 2010. Retrieved December 12, 2014.

January 19, 2011. Archived from on January 14, 2012.

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Anime News Network. July 16, 2014. Retrieved September 27, 2014. ^ Homer, Chris (August 1, 2011). The Fandom Post. Retrieved September 27, 2014. ^ Hanley, Andy (July 18, 2011).

Yu Gi Oh Bonds Beyond Time Full Movie English Sub

UK Anime Network. Retrieved December 17, 2013. Hodgkins, Crystalyn (January 29, 2010). Anime News Network. Retrieved December 17, 2013. Retrieved December 17, 2013. Loo, Egan (June 21, 2011).

Anime News Network. Retrieved December 17, 2013. Loo, Egan (June 21, 2011). Anime News Network. Retrieved December 17, 2013. ^ Osmond, Andrew (December 22, 2011). Anime News Network.

Retrieved December 17, 2013. Ressler, Karen (April 3, 2014). Anime News Network.

Retrieved September 27, 2014. O'Neill, Phelim (May 12, 2011). Retrieved December 17, 2013. Russell, Jamie (May 11, 2011). Archived from on July 10, 2012.

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