There is never a consistent level of difficulty in the game and that is also due to the fact that the decks you start out with are garbage in comparison to your virtual opponent. But then there are times where I can do the exact same thing to them. I've had games where I can be under complete lockdown and can only surrender to stop the duel before it gets any uglier. When they decide to bring their A game, you'll know it. Playing against Yugi and Kaiba has its highs and lows. It's always something to hope for in the future though. Although I would imagine they would have to dramatically increase the number of usable cards if they planned to do that. Why player versus player/online play is not present is well beyond me. Thankfully to break up the monotony of dueling they brought in the voice actors to have them speak during the duel, a little something to spice things up as you hear Yugi/Kaiba deny you of a game breaking move, or vice versa. Yugi the Destiny has you playing against Yugi and Kaiba the Revenge has you squaring off against Kaiba. Duelist selection is non-existent as each title spells it out on who you'll be dueling. That is less than half of what you get in one copy of any of the World Tournament games found on the GBA.
There is a very limited number of cards to obtain by the count in Kaiba the Revenge there are 466 cards total. Both games suffer from simply a lack of things to do. Save for The Sacred Cards, that game is just awful.Įssentially each of the Power of Chaos games is the same, just a few new cards and a new duelist to face with a shiny new interface. What this all equates out to is money coming from your pocket for what is really a substandard entry in the YuGiOh universe that you're better off investing in almost any other version of the game. Having played a number of versions of Yu-Gi-Oh! from the standard card game itself with friends to the Game Boy Advance versions, to even the Xbox version and now the PC releases Power of Chaos looks to build an empire of games starting with Yugi the Destiny followed by Kaiba the Revenge with another release coming in the near future. Kaiba the Revenge can be installed and played by itself, or in conjunction with the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Yugi the Destiny. In all, hundreds of new cards are added for play on the computer with this game. As fans of the series will realize from the title, this game prominently features Kaiba, and the many powerful and rare cards in his deck.
Konami's second Yu-Gi-Oh! release for North American home computers follows the lead of the first, and is designed to present an accurate and detailed virtual version of the popular table-top trading card game.