Gender
This list is based primarily on card text and art. Some cards are clearly female. This may be because it has feminine pronouns in its name ("Archfiend Empress", "Serpentine Princess"), is referred to as female in its card text ("Gyakutenno Megami", "X-Saber Anu Piranha"), or possesses female secondary sex characteristics ("Mist Valley Shaman", "Performance of Sword"). Others may have an overtly feminine appearance ("Dryad", "Water Omotics"), are part of a female archetype (Amazoness, Harpie, Reptilianne) or are merely presumed female based on their voice and/or role in the anime or manga ("Ancient Fairy Dragon", "Gravekeeper's Assailant"). Others yet may have an androgynous or ambiguously-female appearance, such "Jain, Lightsworn Paladin", who could either be female or male.
Contents
Archetypes
- Amazoness
- Butterspy
- Charmer (with the exception of "Dharc the Dark Charmer")
- Cyber Girl
- Doll Part
- Fortune Fairy
- Fortune Lady
- Harpie
- Reptilianne
- Rose
- Valkyrie
OCG/TCG
Normal Monsters
Effect Monsters
Gemini monsters
Spirit monsters
Toon monsters
Tuner monsters
Union Monsters
Ritual Monsters
Fusion Monsters
Synchro Monsters
Xyz Monsters
Token Monsters
Spell Cards
Trap Cards
Anime, manga, and video games
Trivia
- In the Yu-Gi-Oh! second series anime, "Shadow of Eyes" was shown to be innefective against female monsters.
- In the Yu-Gi-Oh! ZEXAL manga, "Number 22: Fran Ken" has an effect that prevents it from attacking female monsters.
- In the Yu-Gi-Oh! Forbidden Memories game, some monsters can be Fusion Summoned by using female materials, including "Mystical Sand", "Queen of Autumn Leaves", "Nekogal 2" and "Dark Witch".