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[[Duel Disk]]s had cheating-prevention mechanisms, although this didn't prevent [[Espa Roba]] from having his siblings read Joey Wheeler's cards, Weevil from slipping a copy of "[[Parasite Paracide (anime)|Parasite Paracide]]" into Joey's Deck, a [[Seeker|Rare Hunter]] from using counterfeit cards (marked cards in the dub), and [[Arkana]] from trimming his cards down to size to draw those cards more often. The [[Duel Disk]]s also allowed Kaiba to monitor every Duel by communicating with a satellite, in order to track the progress of all the Duelists. | [[Duel Disk]]s had cheating-prevention mechanisms, although this didn't prevent [[Espa Roba]] from having his siblings read Joey Wheeler's cards, Weevil from slipping a copy of "[[Parasite Paracide (anime)|Parasite Paracide]]" into Joey's Deck, a [[Seeker|Rare Hunter]] from using counterfeit cards (marked cards in the dub), and [[Arkana]] from trimming his cards down to size to draw those cards more often. The [[Duel Disk]]s also allowed Kaiba to monitor every Duel by communicating with a satellite, in order to track the progress of all the Duelists. | ||
− | + | In a move ostensibly to promote the real-life ''[[Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game]]'', the tournament used rules much closer to the Trading Card Game's rules (unlike the [[Duelist Kingdom]] tournament). The most significant difference from the real-life Trading Card Game is that Duelists start a Duel with 4000 [[Life Points]] rather than 8000 [[Life Points]] (2000 Life Points in the [[Duelist Kingdom]] tournament), for the purposes of brevity. There are also other minor differences, such as being able to [[Summon]] [[Monster Card|monster]]s in [[face-up]] [[Defense Position]] (rather than [[Set]]ting them) and [[Fusion Monster]]s not being able to attack during the [[turn]] they are [[Summon]]ed. From this point onward, almost all Duels in the series follow these rules, except for the restriction on Fusion Monsters attacking. | |
===Marik and the Rare Hunters=== | ===Marik and the Rare Hunters=== |