16-09-2021

Taking place several years after the previous Yu-Gi-Oh! Series, GX is set in a 'Duel Monsters' boarding school where pencils and books are replaced by Duel Disks and monster cards! It is here that game designers-in-training and future dueling champions train to master the now legendary card game known as Duel Monsters. GX: Created by Kazuki Takahashi. With Matthew Labyorteaux, Wayne Grayson, Tony Salerno, Kanako Irie. A semi-spinoff of the popular Yu-Gi-Oh anime series, focusing on a boy named Jaden and his misadventures as a student at an esteemed Duel Monsters academy. Time to wa-wa-watch this timeline video! I'm breaking down how Duel Monsters, 5Ds, and GX are all connected and tries to see how Arc-V and Zex.

Series
Yu-Gi-Oh! GX
Yu-Gi-Oh! GX
遊☆戯☆王デュエルモンスターズGX
(Yū☆gi☆ō Dyueru Monsutāzu Jī Ekkusu)
GenreAction, Adventure, Fantasy, Comedy
TV anime
Directed byHatsuki Tsuji
Produced byNihon Ad Systems Inc.
Written byShin Yoshida, Jun Maekawa, Akemi Omode, Yasuyuki Suzuki
Music byYutaka Minobe
StudioStudio Gallop
NetworkTV Tokyo
English networkCartoon Network, The CW4Kids, Toonzai
FUNimation Channel
YTV
CITV Channel, NickToons
RTÉ Two
Network Ten, Nickelodeon, Cartoon Network
TV2
Original runOctober 6, 2004March 26, 2008
Episodes180 (List of episodes)
Manga
Written byNaoyuki Kageyama
Published byShueisha
English publisherViz Media
DemographicShōnen
MagazineV-Jump
Original runDecember 17, 2005 – ongoing
Volumes8
Anime and Manga Portal

List Of Episodes

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, known in Japan as Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters GX(遊☆戯☆王デュエルモンスターズGXYūgiō Dyueru Monsutāzu Jī Ekkusu?), is an animespin-off and sequel of the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters anime. It aired in Japan on TV Tokyo between October 6, 2004 and March 26, 2008, and was succeeded by Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's. Yu-Gi-Oh! GX follows the exploits of Jaden Yuki (Judai Yuki in the original Japanese version) and his companions as he attends Duel Academy.

  • 4Media

Plot

Set ten years after Yu-Gi-Oh!, GX follows a young boy named Jaden Yuki who, along with his friends, attends Duel Academy, a special institute founded by Seto Kaiba, in the hopes of becoming the next King of Games. Using his Elemental Hero deck and a Winged Kuriboh given to him by Yugi Moto, Jaden faces various challenges against other students, teachers and other mysterious beings.

For the first two years at Duel Academy, the main cast faces major threats including the Shadow Riders, who intend to revive the Sacred Beasts by creating a strong dueling presence on the island and obtaining the Seven Spirit Keys (held by Jaden Yuki, Zane Truesdale, Alexis Rhodes, Bastion Misawa, Chazz Princeton, Dr.Vellian Crowler and Lyman Banner) ,[2] as well as the Society of Light, which intends to enslave humanity with the mind control satellite of Misgarth.[3] During the third year, Duel Academy is transported to another world–a desert plane with three suns and resident Duel Monster spirits–right into the hands of the Martin Empire.[4] Upon returning home, Jaden and a select group of his partners dive into the rift left in their escape to recover their missing companion, Jesse Anderson, and embark through second and third worlds called Dark World. Jaden and friends meet up with an underground group that intends to fight the Dark World Order. During the duel that was Jaden vs Brron: Mad King of Dark World, Chazz, Hassleberry, Alexis, Ojama Green, Ojama Black, and Atticus are sent 'to the Stars'. After Jaden wins, he feels completely alone, and the spirit of the Supreme King takes over Jaden's body. Jim and Axel get sent to the stars trying to bring Jaden back to his normal self. Jaden overcomes his fear of the dark power that controlled him. During those very dark times, they find themselves face to face with the vindictive Yubel. When Jaden realizes the connection between Yubel and his past self, he uses Super Polymerization to fuse his soul with Yubel's, giving him certain powers and setting his friends free. Jaden's exact words were, 'I fuse my soul with Yubel's!'.

In their final adventure, Jaden and his friends deal with the mysterious Trueman, a dark agent who copies the identity of his defeated opponents and seemingly wipes out their existence with them, trapping them in a nightmarish realm where they are mentally tortured by their personal failings. When a solar eclipse draws near, Trueman is revealed to be working for the real mastermind behind the vicious plot around the entire season - the former Shadow Rider, Nightshroud, using Yusuke Fujiwara as an avatar. Jaden and Jesse form a tag team to defeat Fujiwara and later Nightshroud himself in order to save the rest of the humanity from his World. After Jaden graduates, he is sent back in time in order to have an opportunity to duel with a younger Yugi Moto.

Characters

Main article: List of Yu-Gi-Oh! GX characters

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX sports many different characters. The principal cast is composed of the series' hero Jaden Yuki, the passionate Alexis Rhodes (Asuka Tenjōin) and her brother Atticus (Fubuki Tenjōin), the easily discouraged but determined Syrus Truesdale (Shō Marufuji), elitist Chazz Princeton (Jun Manjōme), the analytic Bastion Misawa (Daichi Misawa), the strong-willed Tyranno Hassleberry (Tyranno Kenzan), and the love-struck Blair Flannigan (Rei Saotome). Supporting characters often have connections to the educative or professional dueling worlds, and include Obelisk Blue professor Vellian Crowler (Chronos de Medici), duelist-turned-Industrial Illusions designer Chumley Huffington (Hayato Maeda), and professional duelists Zane Truesdale (Ryo Marufuji) and Aster Phoenix (Edo Phoenix). A group of foreign duelist champions, consisting of Jesse Anderson (Johan Andersen), Axel Brodie (Austin O'Brien), Adrian Gecko (Amon Garam) and Jim Crocodile Cook, along with the new professor, Thelonius Viper (Professor Cobra), would also find a place in Duel Academy's student body in the third year. In the fourth season a mysterious student named Yusuke Fujiwara appeared at the Duel Academy. The vast majority of said characters are either friends, rivals or enemies of Jaden Yuki, who seems to attract both friendship and trouble.

Antagonists of the series range from elderly Kagemaru and the enslaved Shadow Riders (Seven Stars Assassins), the manipulative Sartorius (Takuma Saiou), the deranged Duel Monster Spirit Yubel and the terrifying Nightshroud (Darkness).

Production

Yu-Gi-Oh! GX is produced by Nihon Ad Systems, Inc., and directed by Hatsuki Tsuji.[5] Scripts are prepared by an alternating lineup of writers–Shin Yoshida, Jun Maekawa, Akemi Omode, Yasuyuki Suzuki–with music arrangements by Yutaka Minobe.[5] Takuya Hiramitsu is in charge of sound direction, supervised by Yūji Mitsuya. Character and monster designs are overseen by Kenichi Hara, while Duel layout is overseen by Masahiro Hikokubo.[5]

The 'GX' in the series' title is short for the term 'Generation neXt'. 'GENEX' was conceived as the series' original title, as can be evidenced in early promotional artwork. It also refers to the GX tournament that takes place between episodes 84 and 104.

The program is divided into episodes classified as 'turns'. The title sequence and closing credits are accompanied by lyrics varying over the course of the series, with the former immediately followed by an individual episode's number and title. Eyecatches begin and end commercial breaks halfway through each episode; in the first season, there were two eyecatches per episode, usually showcasing the opponents and their key monsters for a given episode while in later seasons, a single eyecatch appears with only the duelists. After the credits, a preview of the next episode, narrated most frequently by KENN and Masami Suzuki, is made, followed by a brief 'Today's Strongest Card' segment.

Media

Anime

The 180-episode series was produced by Studio Gallop and aired in Japan on TV Tokyo between October 6, 2004 and March 26, 2008, and was followed by Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's.[6]

It was subsequently licensed by 4Kids Entertainment and adapted into English with the title Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, picked up by Cartoon Network and 4KidsTV in North America, where it is also distributed by Warner Bros. Television Animation. Like previous 4Kids adaptations, several changes were made from the original Japanese version, including the names and personalities of characters, the soundtrack, the appearance of visuals such as Life Point counters, and the appearance of cards. The story and some of the visuals are also edited to remove references to death, blood, violence and religion in order to make the series suitable for a younger audience.[7] These edits are also used in various localizations of the show in countries outside of Asia where 4Kids had distribution rights.

Dubbed episodes were recently uploaded onto 4Kids' Youtube page until March 29, 2011, when Nihon Ad Systems and TV Tokyo sued 4Kids and terminated the licensing agreement for the Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise.[8] The fourth season has not been dubbed, as it was replaced by the North American airing of Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's in September 2008.

The Japanese version uses eight pieces of theme music, four opening themes and four ending themes. For episodes 1-33, the opening theme is 'Fine Weather Hallelujah' (快晴・上昇・ハレルーヤKaisei Josho Hareruya?) by Jindou, while the ending theme is 'Genkai Battle' (限界バトルGenkai Batoru?) by JAM Project. For episodes 34-104, the opening theme is '99%' by BOWL while the ending theme is 'Wake up your Heart' by KENN. For episodes 105-156, the opening theme is 'Teardrop' (ティアドロップTiadoroppu?) by BOWL while the ending theme is 'The Sun' (太陽Taiyou?) by Bite the Lung. For episode 157-180, the opening theme is 'Precious Time, Glory Days' by Psychic Lover while the ending theme is 'Endless Dream' by Kitada Nihiroshi. In the English version, the opening theme is 'Get Your Game On' by Alex Walker, Jake Siegler and Matthew Ordek.

Manga

A manga spin-off of the series supervised by Kazuki Takahashi and written and illustrated by Naoyuki Kageyama began serialization in V-Jump on December 17, 2005.[9] The chapters so far have been collected and published in eight tankōbon volumes by Shueisha starting on February 8, 2007. The manga is licensed for English language release by Viz Media, which is serializing the individual chapters in its Shonen Jump manga anthology. It published the first two volumes on November 6, 2007 and November 4, 2008, respectively. The plot of the manga is more of a continuation to the original Yu-Gi-Oh! series with Shadow Games and the Millennium Items playing a major role within the story.[10][11] There are also new monsters and changes to some of the characters' personalities. Unlike the original Yu-Gi-Oh! manga, all the names used in the English version of the manga are taken from the dubbed anime.

Video games

See also: Yu-Gi-Oh! GX (video games)

Several video games based on Yu-Gi-Oh! GX have been developed and published by Konami.

Two games were released for Game Boy Advance; Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Duel Academy and Yu-Gi-Oh! Ultimate Masters: World Championship Tournament 2006.

Five games have been released for Nintendo DS; Yu-Gi-Oh! Nightmare Troubadour, Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Spirit Caller, Yu-Gi-Oh! World Championship 2007 and Yu-Gi-Oh! World Championship 2008. A fourth title, Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters GX Card Almanac, is not actually a game, but a catalog of cards up to 2007. Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Stardust Accelerator was later released in 2009

Yu Gi Oh Gx Serie Completa

The Tag Force series has appeared on the PlayStation Portable, which adds the ability to form tag team duels, with the first three games in the series being based on the GX series (subsequent games are based on Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's). The titles are Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Tag Force, Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Tag Force 2 and Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Tag Force 3. The first game was also ported to PlayStation 2 as Yu-Gi-Oh! GX: Tag Force Evolution. So far, Tag Force 3 has not been released in North America. It was however, released in Europe, and its follow up, Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Tag Force 4, has been released in all regions including North America. An unsuccessful title Yu-Gi-Oh! DX[12] was developed for the Nintendo 64DD but was never completed and was only promised to be available via Japanese mail order.

Parodies

See Full List On En.wikipedia.org

The artist Inu Mayuge (犬 マユゲ?, Dog Brows) parodied Yu-Gi-Oh! GX in the comic De-I-Ko! GX (犬☆眉☆毛DE-I-KO! GX). The parody was posted in the June 25, 2009 V-Jump.[13]

References

  1. ^http://www.tongli.com.tw/Epaper_PreView.aspx?E=20080808150028
  2. ^Yu-Gi-Oh! GX. Episode #48. August 31, 2005.
  3. ^Yu-Gi-Oh! GX. Episode #84. May 10, 2006.
  4. ^Yu-Gi-Oh! GX. Episode #120. January 24, 2007.
  5. ^ abc'Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters GX Televising Data'. http://www5f.biglobe.ne.jp/~flying-in-the-sky/on-air-data.htm. Retrieved 2007-03-15.
  6. ^'Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Game Anime Sequel Confirmed'. Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/news/2008-02-21/yu-gi-oh-5d-game-anime-sequel-confirmed.
  7. ^'Kirk Up Your Ears'. Anime News Network. http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/anncast/2010-07-22.
  8. ^Anime News Network: 'TV Tokyo, Nihon Ad Terminated Yu-Gi-Oh! Deal, Sue 4Kids', March 29, 2011.
  9. ^V-Jump. February 2006 issue. December 17, 2005. ISBN 11323-02.
  10. ^'YU-GI-OH! GX Volume 1'. Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1421513781/. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  11. ^'Yu-Gi-Oh! GX, Vol. 2'. Amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/dp/1421520826/. Retrieved 2008-07-08.
  12. ^'Yu Gi Oh! DX Screenshots'. Yu Gi Oh DX. http://www.yugiohdx.com.
  13. ^V-Jump. June 25, 2009. 237-243

External links

  • TV Tokyo Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters GX page(Japanese)
  • NASinc.(Japanese)
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! GX (anime) at Anime News Network's Encyclopedia
v·d·eYu-Gi-Oh! by Kazuki Takahashi
Franchise
Chapters • Yu-Gi-Oh!(1998 TV series) (Episodes) •Yu-Gi-Oh!(1999 film)Yu-Gi-Oh!(2000 TV series) (Episodes - Season 1 · 2 · 3 · 4 · 5 ) • RThe Movie: Pyramid of LightGX (Episodes -Season 1·2·3·4) • Capsule Monsters5D's (Episodes - Season 1 · 2 · 3 · 4) • Bonds Beyond TimeZexal (Episodes)
Characters
Yu-Gi-Oh! (Yugi Mutou • Ryo Bakura • Katsuya Jonouchi • Seto Kaiba • Anzu Mazaki) • Yu-Gi-Oh! GXYu-Gi-Oh! 5D'sYu-Gi-Oh! Zexal
Merchandise
Albums
Duel Monsters: Duel Vocal Best!!Original Soundtrack Duel IOriginal Soundtrack Duel IIMusic to Duel ByThe Movie Soundtrack
Card game
Video games
Yu-Gi-Oh! (The Duelists of the RosesThe Sacred CardsThe Falsebound KingdomWorldwide Edition: Stairway to the Destined DuelWorld Championship Tournament 2004) • Yu-Gi-Oh! GXYu-Gi-Oh! 5D's • Duel Terminal
Concepts

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

    episodes

  • An event or a group of events occurring as part of a larger sequence; an incident or period considered in isolation
  • Each of the separate installments into which a serialized story or radio or television program is divided
  • A finite period in which someone is affected by a specified illness
  • (episode) a brief section of a literary or dramatic work that forms part of a connected series
  • (episode) a happening that is distinctive in a series of related events

    yugioh

  • a manga and anime with a trading card game based around it. The original manga was written by Kazuki Takahashi and it cronicals the adventures of Yugi Mutou.
  • is a Japanese manga created by Kazuki Takahashi. It has spawned a franchise that includes multiple anime shows, a trading card game and numerous video games.
  • Yu-Gi-Oh! Uncensored!, Yu-jyo:A Yu-Gi-Oh! episode guide

    online

  • on-line: on a regular route of a railroad or bus or airline system; “on-line industries”
  • on-line: connected to a computer network or accessible by computer; “an on-line database”
  • on-line(a): being in progress now; “on-line editorial projects”
  • Controlled by or connected to another computer or to a network

    gx

  • This is a list of digraphs used in various Latin alphabets. (See also List of Cyrillic digraphs.) Capitalization involves only the first letter (ch – Ch) unless otherwise stated (ij – IJ).
  • GX was a design for an expendable launch system intended to compete in the commercial satellite launch sector.
  • (GXS (company)) GXS is an award-winning Managed Services Company providing Business-to-Business e-Commerce services around-the-world.

Episode 3 Unleashed

Episodes
Episode 3 Unleashed
Darth Sidious with Yoda, Anakin Skywalker, Obi-Wan Kenobi, and General Grievous

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Episode 1 Naboo Grasslands Action Fleet

Episode 1 Naboo Grasslands Action Fleet