Fortune Fairy
"Fortune Fairy", known as "Fortune-Telling Witch" (
Design
Each member of the "Fortune Fairy" archetype is named and colored according to their own Attribute.
In the Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's anime and the Yu-Gi-Oh! Tag Force series, they are Normal Monsters whose flavor text each tells the fortune of the person who draws it, along with a listing of a lucky number, color, and item. The lucky color and number correspond to that monster's Attribute and Level. The lowest Level "Fortune Fairy" monster, "Hikari", is the best prediction (Super Happy), and the predictions get less optimistic as they go up in Level, with the Level 6 "Chee" being the worst (Absolutely Awful). The fortune may be said to be based on the usefulness of you having such a card in the hand during a Duel (e.g. a Level 6 Normal Monster with 0 ATK and DEF being a pretty unlucky draw). Curiously, in the anime, "Chee" is the card Carly draws right before her Duel with Sayer, which ends in her death and transformation to a Dark Signer.[1]
In Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's episode Digging Deeper, Part 1", it appeared that their playstyle focused on Summoning as many and as fast as possible, using cards such as " 37: "Lucky Loan" and "Unacceptable Result", then using the key card "Miracle Stone" to increase their ATK. Otherwise, Carly's use of these monsters mimicked Sartorius' use of his "Arcana Force" monsters as tarot cards.
The redesign of the "Fortune Fairy" archetype in the OCG/TCG plays similarly but with a heavier emphasis on draw power. The "Fortune Fairies" are now Effect Monsters that the player can Special Summon from their hand upon drawing them and possess effects that can activate when Special Summoned from the hand. Additionally, "Miracle Stone" gives a smaller boost but boosts ATK and DEF, and allows a player to draw once per turn when a "Fortune Fairy" battles. This benefits the swarming ability at the expense of battling ability.
After Carly became a Dark Signer, the "Fortune Fairy" monsters evolved into the "Fortune Lady" archetype, where each member appear to be older and "more twisted" versions.[2]
Starting in the English version of Duel Terminal 1, the "Fortune Fairies" appear in the "Card Only Get" mode.
Members
Level | Fortune Fairy | Effect | Namesake | Fortune Lady |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hikari | Target 1 monster you control; send it to the GY to Special Summon a Level 1 Spellcaster monster from your Deck | Light | |
2 | En | Target 1 Set card your opponent controls; destroy it | Fire | |
3 | Hu | Target 1 of your banished Spellcaster monsters; add it to your hand | Wind | |
4 | Swee | Target 1 other face-up monster on the Field; banish it until your next Standby Phase | Water | |
5 | Ann | Banish 1 Spellcaster monster from your Deck | Dark | |
6 | Chee | Both players draw 1 card | Earth |
Playstyle
The main focus of the archetype is to swarm the field to take advantage of the ATK-boosting effect of "Miracle Stone". Since their effects activate upon drawing them, one should include cards that facilitate drawing outside of the Draw Phase such as "Reload", "Counter Gate", and "Defense Draw", as well as cards that facilitate Special Summoning from the hand such as "A Hero Emerges" and "Intruder Alarm - Yellow Alert".
Synchro Summoning becomes a viable strategy due to the ease of summoning the high-Level "Ann" and "Chee", as well as "Hikari's" effect facilitating the summon of Tuner monsters including "Sunny Pixie", "Fortune Lady Past", or any "With Eyes of Blue" Tuner monster. Since "Miracle Stone" boosts the ATK of all Spellcaster monsters the user controls, include monsters that facilitate Summoning such as "Magical Exemplar" and "The Tricky". "En" and "Swee" cause the most disruption against the opponent, while "Hikari's" effect can Summon monsters such as "Copycat" to turn the opponent's strength against them.
Recommended cards
Trivia
- This archetype's cartoony aesthetic is very similar to that of the 1999 magical girl anime Ojamajo Doremi.
References
- ↑ Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's episode Digging Deeper, Part 1" 37: "
- ↑ Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's episode Digging Deeper, Part 2" 38: "