"I wanna play Call of Duty." says Kitten as he holds up a game with the box art of Battlefield 3 and with the title HALO. I think Alfabusa is trying to say something.
So, I guess this falls up to me to point this out. The Yugioh decks used in these specials are all very evocative of the characters who use them. Kitten's deck is very basic, centering around cat-themed cards. It's straightforward and simple, and works wonders against much quirkier, specialised decks. It consists of Earth-attributed beasts that are individually weak, but support each other by buffing each other up or sacrificing themselves to allow the others to accomplish greater things, as well as spells and abilities that either enable the creature-reliant strategy or clear the enemy's presence from the field entirely. All of this is, as Kitten himself states, is ultimately a metaphor for the Imperium itself and how it operates at its best: large armies united by kinship, enabled by numerous different organisations (Imperial Navy, Adeptus Mechanicus etc), with individuals sacrificing themselves for the greater good, and the willingness to sometimes just not play the enemy's game and Exterminatus the planet from the orbit, avoiding sacrificing tons of troops trying to attain a hopeless victory. By contrast, we have the Emperor's deck. Focused upon building up the ultimate creature, it uses draw/tutor spells and creature abilities to pool the necessary ingredients into the hand right away, and has plenty of expendable creatures to be used for sacrifices. It also utilises the life points as a resource, and has means of ensuring that said life points can be exploited to the fullest without it being fatal. It also has DNA Surgery, which allows one to change the innate nature (the creature type) of the ultimate creature in order to enable it further. And it comes without saying that the deck utilises many straight up overpowered cards, with the anime-only cheat version of the Golden Castle of Stromberg being a really unsubtle one in particular. This is all built around the Emperor's worldview, more specifically his perception of himself, his origin, and his creations the Primarchs and the Astartes. He himself is the "ultimate creature", one that the ancient shamans sacrificed all their combined knowledge and might to create, a being fundamentally beyond a human. Same thing with his creations: the many sacrifices are nothing when the final result is so much greater than what they were. And of course, his failing is in that he didn't expect a simple means of undoing what he has. Both in-game and in his past. He didn't account for his indestructible warrior and castle to just simply be unsummoned, without needing to destroy them. Nor did he account for Chaos to be able to turn his sons against him and empower Horus to such an extent as to be able to take him down. And to wrap this up to a close, there is Tzeentch. His deck is all spells, with just one creature that is there specifically to abuse its ability to enable his spell-reliant strategy. Many of his cards interact with the graveyard, either by sending cards there, returning cards from there back to his deck, or deriving their power from the amount of cards there. And many of the cards are played face-down, hidden but clearly still there, ready to activate unexpectedly. And of course, his strategy does rely on self-milling. All of this is very accurate to Tzeentch's personality. He specifically favours psykers, the spellcasters of Chaos, among his followers, and his daemons are powerful casters as well. His home is the Warp, the afterlife and what both he and the Emperor liken the graveyard to, and where he constantly alters everything as he pleases. His actions are the most chaotic and the most seemingly self-defeating of all the Chaos gods, but he has many, many plans constantly in motion, some of which outright rely on some of his other plans failing or the defeat or other detriment of his own forces. And his blessings often come with unexpected mutations, and always with some manner of complications. This is ultimately his failing, deck and otherwise. The self-defeating nature of his many conflicting schemes and the drawbacks from the constant uncontrollable change leave him and his daemons and other minions more vulnerable, not to mention over-reliant on all the trickery and magic.
I thought he was referring to “Red and Blue” which was the first thing to come up when I googled “Red Blue card game” which i think is some kind of Hearthstone knockoff.
No, I did as I already had mtga open. I didn't get why he shouldn't be able to criticise Giant Trunade, though. As far as I know, Izzet doesn't have one-card-destroy-your-enemies-entire-combo stuff.
@@Brutalyte616Counter is almost the control archetype, but yes modern red has a few swarm cards too; burn isn't really my favoured style, I'm more into non-infinite combo jank, but it is the figurehead of mono red.
The best part about the deck Tzeentch uses is that every card is banned from legal play in actual Duel Monsters, or at least I recall that being the case. But what are rules really?
...Banned from play in Duel Monsters? Considering Duel Monsters is a different game, and they were playing Yo-Gi-Oh ... yes, ALL YGO cards are banned in Duel Masters. ^_^
Clarification? Tzeentch and the other Chaos Gods pulled some time travel shenanigans to snatch the gestating Primarchs into the Warp and sent them careening into their 'home planets' before adopting them again during/after the Horus Heresy.
Brutalyte616 I was mostly referring to the ones specific to a single Chaos god. I remember the few Deamon Princes that are Undivided, I hadn’t forgotten.
This episode had also a subtle and not so subtle tribute to the Master of Eldritch Horrors, H. P. Lovecraft. As Tzeentch is basically based off of an Eldritch Horror and one that is a schemer and cheat. On top of that Lovecraft was a cat owner and well...he named his cat after a word that I know many would truly find offensive. That also being TH-cam...even though it is Historical Fact. So won't say anything. Will just say later in life Lovecraft did apologize for this known information and other stuff he said that was rather spicy. Even for the time, he lived in. BUT, of course, those who try to pick apart history will omit that kind of information. All to push their equally politically racist ideals. So Kitten, a Dark Skinned Human (Earlier in the series shown), beating Tzeentch, Eldritch Horror, with CATS is that nod.
In a magic the gathering game I played once, my opponent just went through some long drawn out play which eventually led to the summoning of some 6/6 black monster, and he planned on using it, and other cards to lower my health points to 13 and using some weird card that would kill me instantly if that were the case, after he summoned said monster, he ended his turn gloating, assured of his victory, I then immediately killed the monster with the card Smite the Monstrous, in which he yelled FUCK in a room full of random people. I later won the game, because I had a white deck completely geared to destroying anything red or black.
The best thing is Kiwi the one who voices Tzeentch commented that he doesn't belive that it's a real thing when someone else commented that yes it's real and explained all the moves. Kiwi preceded to say that while he was scared he still couldn't beilve it was real than that same person preceded to point out all the flaws on how the cards where used and the legality of them that Kiwi finally realized that it was an actual thing.
Funny story. Mystical Space Typhoon can destroy spell and trap cards, and it can even be played on the opponent's turn because it's a quick-play spell, but because of the card text it _doesn't_ actually negate the effects of the cards it destroys, so Magical Explosion's effect would have gone through and won the game for Tzeentch anyways. *BUT!* Tzeentch fucked himself by activating Exchange of the Spirit, which would go into effect first since it was the last card played in the chain and swap his grave with his deck, thus causing Magical Explosion to do almost no damage. _And,_ because nobody called it out during the duel, Kitten's win is still totally legal. Tzeentch's deck however is not, as damn near every card in his deck that's shown is on the Forbidden list, or at least they _were_ at the time of the video's release, and many of them have been banned for over a decade. Pot of Greed is one of the most egregious offenders in that regard since it's been on the banlist practically since the start of the TCG. Same goes for the Monster Reborn card Kitten used.
@@LordTyph To my knowledge, there is no clearly defined restriction as to whether or not cards can be chained after a coin flip has occurred, and trap cards themselves can be activated basically at any time provided the conditions of the card are met.
@@Brutalyte616 That's not the point. The point was that it was mid-chain. Cup of Ace was activated first, then Magical Explosion, then Mystical Space Typhoon. Any activation would have to happen before starting to resolve Cup of Ace's effect.
@@LordTyph Unless Exchange of the Spirit has a lower spell-speed than a quick-play spell(which I doubt), it would resolve first, followed by Mystical Space Typhoon, then Magical Explosion(which again, wouldn't do much, even if someone remembered it would actually still go through Mystical Space Typhoon), then Cup of Ace. They fucked up the order of operations, but that's common, and unless someone calls it out during the game, it's perfectly legal.
red/blue is a type of deck from magic specifically a deck consisting of red/blue cards also tzeentch uses multiple banned cards but considering he is a warp god its to be expected
Magnus saying he plays Red/Blue is a reference to *Magic: The Gathering*, I thought you said you played, or at least was more familiar with it relative to Yu-Gi-Oh
btw airier, you should prop watch the eldar video after part 1 of episode 26, as it contains quite some spoilery material for episode 26 part 1 it's your choice, just saying that, you will prop get a bigger surprise if you see them out of the video upload order.
"Mark the target" deck: :) Etrata the silencer & Strionic Resonator & Mimic Vat (to avoid re-decking) & Winds Zendikon to animate their lands for Etrata and Eradicate targets. kirra/spellskite/Padeem & Grand Architect for the shell.
2 things one kittens actor is actually English. And 2 kittens name and deck is a reference to a line in the horse heresy books specifically while space marines fight like a pack of wolves or dogs the custodies fight like tigers. Not completely relevant but he commands a deck full of cats as well
The Red/Blue coment from Magnus was refering to Magnuses favourite style of Magic the Gethering deck. Red is basicaly everything fire related. The spells usualy cause damage to monsters or livepoints and the monsters focus on atack over defense wich leads mor often than not to the destruction of both monsters involved. Blue on the other hand represents trickery. The monsters tend to have the ability to fly or avoid enemied monsters completely. The spells are also based on whays to avoid actual monster to monster combat. It's been years sinc i played so that's just a very general description. But jea, Red/Blue is one of the more anoying kombos to play against, because there is alwhays the posibility that you die in the next round for some stupid reason.
I gona be honest. This one is better than the last one AND better than the actual show just because all of these plays are posible to do. No asspulls here.
Before you do episode 26 part 2, you should watch Behemoth 1/3 and 2/3 (3/3 was never made). Scenes from Behemoth were used in Text To Speech Device, same voices, and there is one character that has certain... nuances you haven't seen yet.Might also want to see Fate of the Alfa Legion first as well, but less important. Other videos are Terran Drift and Vostroyan Charge by Karl the Deranged, Farsight Enclaves by Eliphas, and from 40k Theories are The True Identity Of Kitten and Do Tau Women Prefer Human Men.
Anybody ever notice how kitten's deck is compromised of individually weak monsters that do tremendous damage when teamed up (humanity in a nutshell in wh40k), emperor's deck is all about buffing a single unstoppable monster (the imperium, and tszeentch is random and unpredictable attack combos (his realm of chaos)?
Nah, still not pronouncing it right. It's not Broo-vuh, it's Bruh-vuh. Like someone trying to say "Brother" with a thick accent. Ya got the Alfabusa part correctly, though.
I have been playing yugioh for 6 years now (im 22) and this duel pains me so lol. Along with that, Red/Blue is Magic haha. I have played over 10 different kind of card games so I get around. I would honestly like to teach you some. That would be fun. MST DOESN'T NEGATE LOL
"I wanna play Call of Duty." says Kitten as he holds up a game with the box art of Battlefield 3 and with the title HALO. I think Alfabusa is trying to say something.
he does make another COD joke where the emperor says they need to stop releasing the same exact game each year.
Spunkgargleweewee
@@Cyber_kumo I see you used Zero Punctuation in that sentence.
@@jeremybk54 I think it also points at the fact that Kitten is a *casual* gamer.
So, I guess this falls up to me to point this out.
The Yugioh decks used in these specials are all very evocative of the characters who use them.
Kitten's deck is very basic, centering around cat-themed cards. It's straightforward and simple, and works wonders against much quirkier, specialised decks. It consists of Earth-attributed beasts that are individually weak, but support each other by buffing each other up or sacrificing themselves to allow the others to accomplish greater things, as well as spells and abilities that either enable the creature-reliant strategy or clear the enemy's presence from the field entirely. All of this is, as Kitten himself states, is ultimately a metaphor for the Imperium itself and how it operates at its best: large armies united by kinship, enabled by numerous different organisations (Imperial Navy, Adeptus Mechanicus etc), with individuals sacrificing themselves for the greater good, and the willingness to sometimes just not play the enemy's game and Exterminatus the planet from the orbit, avoiding sacrificing tons of troops trying to attain a hopeless victory.
By contrast, we have the Emperor's deck. Focused upon building up the ultimate creature, it uses draw/tutor spells and creature abilities to pool the necessary ingredients into the hand right away, and has plenty of expendable creatures to be used for sacrifices. It also utilises the life points as a resource, and has means of ensuring that said life points can be exploited to the fullest without it being fatal. It also has DNA Surgery, which allows one to change the innate nature (the creature type) of the ultimate creature in order to enable it further. And it comes without saying that the deck utilises many straight up overpowered cards, with the anime-only cheat version of the Golden Castle of Stromberg being a really unsubtle one in particular. This is all built around the Emperor's worldview, more specifically his perception of himself, his origin, and his creations the Primarchs and the Astartes. He himself is the "ultimate creature", one that the ancient shamans sacrificed all their combined knowledge and might to create, a being fundamentally beyond a human. Same thing with his creations: the many sacrifices are nothing when the final result is so much greater than what they were. And of course, his failing is in that he didn't expect a simple means of undoing what he has. Both in-game and in his past. He didn't account for his indestructible warrior and castle to just simply be unsummoned, without needing to destroy them. Nor did he account for Chaos to be able to turn his sons against him and empower Horus to such an extent as to be able to take him down.
And to wrap this up to a close, there is Tzeentch. His deck is all spells, with just one creature that is there specifically to abuse its ability to enable his spell-reliant strategy. Many of his cards interact with the graveyard, either by sending cards there, returning cards from there back to his deck, or deriving their power from the amount of cards there. And many of the cards are played face-down, hidden but clearly still there, ready to activate unexpectedly. And of course, his strategy does rely on self-milling. All of this is very accurate to Tzeentch's personality. He specifically favours psykers, the spellcasters of Chaos, among his followers, and his daemons are powerful casters as well. His home is the Warp, the afterlife and what both he and the Emperor liken the graveyard to, and where he constantly alters everything as he pleases. His actions are the most chaotic and the most seemingly self-defeating of all the Chaos gods, but he has many, many plans constantly in motion, some of which outright rely on some of his other plans failing or the defeat or other detriment of his own forces. And his blessings often come with unexpected mutations, and always with some manner of complications. This is ultimately his failing, deck and otherwise. The self-defeating nature of his many conflicting schemes and the drawbacks from the constant uncontrollable change leave him and his daemons and other minions more vulnerable, not to mention over-reliant on all the trickery and magic.
Very well worded. Its a nice detail they added, that makes these card games more interesting.
...replying to this to say quite well said. youve hit this so hard on the head.
dude your analysis is spot on, this series really went in depth to portray characters through deck choices
i bet the Star Child uses a Utopia filled deck.
I haven't played (unspellable children's card game) since I was 10, but it all comes back when I watch athese videos. Your analysis is spot on.
By Red/Blue, magnus meant a Red/Blue deck in MTG.
I was shocked he didn't get that
@@solair4553 I'm not shocked, but definitely surprised.
A red/blue deck can suck my black/green/eldrazi dick
@@siralcatraz9049 ah, a fellow man of culture
I have no damn clue what you guys are talking about since I've never seen even a promotional material of MTG...
... You play Magic and you DIDN'T realize what Magnus meant by playing Red-Blue?
i know right.
I thought he was referring to “Red and Blue” which was the first thing to come up when I googled “Red Blue card game” which i think is some kind of Hearthstone knockoff.
No, I did as I already had mtga open. I didn't get why he shouldn't be able to criticise Giant Trunade, though. As far as I know, Izzet doesn't have one-card-destroy-your-enemies-entire-combo stuff.
Izzet real?
It has alot of counterspells
Magnus cant turn back to normal… I suspect, FOWL play!
HeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHeyHey
@@Skywolfhd20 You are inssssssuferably cocky!
I fucking knew this would happen.
@@tudormuresan2055 So are you.... but literally. Heyheyheyheyheyheyheyheyhey
Hah. That is funny. Magnus has the properties of a cock.
Red/Blue is a Magic: The Gathering Reference
Thought that was a Pokemon reference...
Counter-spells and burn.
@@TheArcSet Why not control and swarm?
@@Brutalyte616Counter is almost the control archetype, but yes modern red has a few swarm cards too; burn isn't really my favoured style, I'm more into non-infinite combo jank, but it is the figurehead of mono red.
@@Brutalyte616 Regardless, Magnus is right: he has no right to criticize. :-D
"The only intricate thing about this game is it's ban list!"
*Cries in Monster Reborn*
Wind Up Kitten is Kitten's Kuribo. It looks weak, but is very useful.
But it's very useful 'in the anime'.
Gotta love a good utility card
No it's his dark magician
The best part about the deck Tzeentch uses is that every card is banned from legal play in actual Duel Monsters, or at least I recall that being the case.
But what are rules really?
InTeReStInG QuEsTiOn AsShOlE!!!^^ (spins in eldritch)
...Banned from play in Duel Monsters?
Considering Duel Monsters is a different game, and they were playing Yo-Gi-Oh ... yes, ALL YGO cards are banned in Duel Masters.
^_^
@@RubberyCat No, you're thinking Duel Masters. He said Duel Monsters, which is what the YGO series calls the game we call 'Yu-gi-oh'.
@@Snipergod1024
o.0
....
Ok, thanks for correcting me, it was quite some time since i watched either.
@@RubberyCat no duel masters and duel monsters are different games duel monsters is yo-gi-oh
Clarification? Tzeentch and the other Chaos Gods pulled some time travel shenanigans to snatch the gestating Primarchs into the Warp and sent them careening into their 'home planets' before adopting them again during/after the Horus Heresy.
Well...4 of the 9 Traitor Primarchs at least.
@@emperorconstantine1.361 Lorgar and Perturabo are Chaos Undivided, so the Chaos Gods get joint custody. Horus would be too, but...
Brutalyte616 I was mostly referring to the ones specific to a single Chaos god.
I remember the few Deamon Princes that are Undivided, I hadn’t forgotten.
@@emperorconstantine1.361 It's also 10 Primarchs if you count Alpharius and Omegon as separate Primarchs.
Brutalyte616 SSSSSSHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!! First rule of 40k: we do not Speak about the Alpha Legion!
Second rule:...refer to first rule!
This episode had also a subtle and not so subtle tribute to the Master of Eldritch Horrors, H. P. Lovecraft. As Tzeentch is basically based off of an Eldritch Horror and one that is a schemer and cheat. On top of that Lovecraft was a cat owner and well...he named his cat after a word that I know many would truly find offensive. That also being TH-cam...even though it is Historical Fact. So won't say anything. Will just say later in life Lovecraft did apologize for this known information and other stuff he said that was rather spicy. Even for the time, he lived in. BUT, of course, those who try to pick apart history will omit that kind of information. All to push their equally politically racist ideals.
So Kitten, a Dark Skinned Human (Earlier in the series shown), beating Tzeentch, Eldritch Horror, with CATS is that nod.
So... Kitten is now silvery… like he was in the Tau short… HMMMMMMM.
HORRIOR "NOT CANNON." Would be what kitten would be screaming right about now
*Canon, cannon is what you shoot heretics with.
HORRIOR my bad. The auto-correct on my phone sucks
@@infinityknightrev5150 Episode 27 refutes that claim.
J. Louie Dinorog talking about the Lock-warden?
In a magic the gathering game I played once, my opponent just went through some long drawn out play which eventually led to the summoning of some 6/6 black monster, and he planned on using it, and other cards to lower my health points to 13 and using some weird card that would kill me instantly if that were the case, after he summoned said monster, he ended his turn gloating, assured of his victory, I then immediately killed the monster with the card Smite the Monstrous, in which he yelled FUCK in a room full of random people. I later won the game, because I had a white deck completely geared to destroying anything red or black.
The best thing is Kiwi the one who voices Tzeentch commented that he doesn't belive that it's a real thing when someone else commented that yes it's real and explained all the moves. Kiwi preceded to say that while he was scared he still couldn't beilve it was real than that same person preceded to point out all the flaws on how the cards where used and the legality of them that Kiwi finally realized that it was an actual thing.
Btw Airier, I suggest watching the duel part again, and this time solely concentrating on the background.
Funny story. Mystical Space Typhoon can destroy spell and trap cards, and it can even be played on the opponent's turn because it's a quick-play spell, but because of the card text it _doesn't_ actually negate the effects of the cards it destroys, so Magical Explosion's effect would have gone through and won the game for Tzeentch anyways. *BUT!* Tzeentch fucked himself by activating Exchange of the Spirit, which would go into effect first since it was the last card played in the chain and swap his grave with his deck, thus causing Magical Explosion to do almost no damage. _And,_ because nobody called it out during the duel, Kitten's win is still totally legal. Tzeentch's deck however is not, as damn near every card in his deck that's shown is on the Forbidden list, or at least they _were_ at the time of the video's release, and many of them have been banned for over a decade. Pot of Greed is one of the most egregious offenders in that regard since it's been on the banlist practically since the start of the TCG. Same goes for the Monster Reborn card Kitten used.
Monster reborn is currently at one
Hell, he cheated in order to activate Exchange of the Spirit while Cup of Ace was still resolving.
@@LordTyph To my knowledge, there is no clearly defined restriction as to whether or not cards can be chained after a coin flip has occurred, and trap cards themselves can be activated basically at any time provided the conditions of the card are met.
@@Brutalyte616 That's not the point. The point was that it was mid-chain. Cup of Ace was activated first, then Magical Explosion, then Mystical Space Typhoon. Any activation would have to happen before starting to resolve Cup of Ace's effect.
@@LordTyph Unless Exchange of the Spirit has a lower spell-speed than a quick-play spell(which I doubt), it would resolve first, followed by Mystical Space Typhoon, then Magical Explosion(which again, wouldn't do much, even if someone remembered it would actually still go through Mystical Space Typhoon), then Cup of Ace. They fucked up the order of operations, but that's common, and unless someone calls it out during the game, it's perfectly legal.
i don't even care that mystical space typhoon doesn't negate. i loved this duel.
My Man Magnus, Red/Blue for life
red/blue is a type of deck from magic specifically a deck consisting of red/blue cards also tzeentch uses multiple banned cards but considering he is a warp god its to be expected
Magnus saying he plays Red/Blue is a reference to *Magic: The Gathering*, I thought you said you played, or at least was more familiar with it relative to Yu-Gi-Oh
Playing a children's card game.
What a way to pass the time. In the 41st Millennium.
Card Games on Fighter Ships! In the 42nd Millennium, that would be a thing.
wings on magnus is his current design in the current lore AKA the dark imperium
so... kitten uses kittens in his deck... WHO WOULDA THOUGHT??? XD
The Emperor designed the 'perfect' deck for him, from reading his psych, or he was just mocking him.
I believe kitten is an emperor clone. He was born from a tube in Mount Everest.
the strange form of Tzeentch is its original form from the first edition of Warhammer fantasy
If the immaterium has a court of law, it's likely run by kangaroos.
I love how Kitten flipped the table on Tzeentch there
btw airier, you should prop watch the eldar video after part 1 of episode 26, as it contains quite some spoilery material for episode 26 part 1
it's your choice, just saying that, you will prop get a bigger surprise if you see them out of the video upload order.
Magnus comment about red blue is a reference to magic the gathering. He is also currently red and blue
"Mark the target" deck: :)
Etrata the silencer & Strionic Resonator & Mimic Vat (to avoid re-decking) & Winds Zendikon to animate their lands for Etrata and Eradicate targets.
kirra/spellskite/Padeem & Grand Architect for the shell.
2 things one kittens actor is actually English.
And 2 kittens name and deck is a reference to a line in the horse heresy books specifically while space marines fight like a pack of wolves or dogs the custodies fight like tigers. Not completely relevant but he commands a deck full of cats as well
I feel like the babies part was a reference to Babyraging, it's too perfect not to be
The Red/Blue coment from Magnus was refering to Magnuses favourite style of Magic the Gethering deck.
Red is basicaly everything fire related. The spells usualy cause damage to monsters or livepoints and the monsters focus on atack over defense wich leads mor often than not to the destruction of both monsters involved.
Blue on the other hand represents trickery. The monsters tend to have the ability to fly or avoid enemied monsters completely. The spells are also based on whays to avoid actual monster to monster combat.
It's been years sinc i played so that's just a very general description. But jea, Red/Blue is one of the more anoying kombos to play against, because there is alwhays the posibility that you die in the next round for some stupid reason.
Yep, mono Red removal is, deal damage; mono Blue removal is, counter spells before they resolve, or return objects to their owner's hands.
Loved this, and I’m waiting eagerly on the next episode cause I can’t wait for you to catch up with the series
I gona be honest. This one is better than the last one AND better than the actual show just because all of these plays are posible to do. No asspulls here.
MST, cough, cough.
Doesn’t negate
I love zegram's nerd shrieks
Yeah, next time Kitten sees the Emperor indeed...
Also, I haven't played Yugioh for around a decade but, I have 90% of Kitten's cards.
In regards to the part saying he was technically his first dad since all four of the chaos gods scattered all the primarchs to different planets
7:50 is that the tyranid hivemind?
Yes.
Oh hey another MTG player who loves combos
You’ll love EDH
Before you do episode 26 part 2, you should watch Behemoth 1/3 and 2/3 (3/3 was never made). Scenes from Behemoth were used in Text To Speech Device, same voices, and there is one character that has certain... nuances you haven't seen yet.Might also want to see Fate of the Alfa Legion first as well, but less important. Other videos are Terran Drift and Vostroyan Charge by Karl the Deranged, Farsight Enclaves by Eliphas, and from 40k Theories are The True Identity Of Kitten and Do Tau Women Prefer Human Men.
Awesome! Kittens! Adorable!
man you need to see the video "Farsight Enclaves". Your gonna roll laughing
Are you ever going to react to the emperors podcast
Anybody ever notice how kitten's deck is compromised of individually weak monsters that do tremendous damage when teamed up (humanity in a nutshell in wh40k), emperor's deck is all about buffing a single unstoppable monster (the imperium, and tszeentch is random and unpredictable attack combos (his realm of chaos)?
MST Negates, ya heard it hear first
Red/Blue. I presume it's Magic the Gathering.
You play magic? You should know what Red/blue means.
... I actually feel bad that I missed that.
red blue is a magic the gathering deck type.
The podcasts on his channel are great too. But their 30min +. Pad out the series as much as possible!.
I think the baby backgrounds also means babyrage
the ones on Kitten's Side are looking pretty smug also I never noticed that image of the Tyranid Hive Mind in the background
Nah, still not pronouncing it right. It's not Broo-vuh, it's Bruh-vuh. Like someone trying to say "Brother" with a thick accent. Ya got the Alfabusa part correctly, though.
Rap tap tap
Red/blue is pokemon.
Red/blue meant magic the gathering
This is very familiar.....
Cof Cof finale battle of yu gio Cof Cof
Please react to the Helsreach adaptation by Richard Boyland
Pretty sure he said he would do it after TTS
I have been playing yugioh for 6 years now (im 22) and this duel pains me so lol. Along with that, Red/Blue is Magic haha. I have played over 10 different kind of card games so I get around. I would honestly like to teach you some. That would be fun.
MST DOESN'T NEGATE LOL
YESSS!!!
Stop blueballing us with the main episodes! :p
THE FASTEST NOTIFICATION CLICK IN THE WEST
Mst negates........