Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Yu-Gi-Oh Manga: 038 Terror of the Blue Eyes!!

You know, up until now, I've been avoiding shortening the name of the Blue Eyes White Dragon to simply "Blue Eyes" because I would feel too tempted to make Frank Sinatra jokes with it. The parallels between Kaiba's personality and that of Sinatra made those jokes seem a little too easy, to be honest. But, seeing this chapter's title, I'm gonna say fuck it, that's license to make all the Sinatra jokes my little heart desires. Suck it.

Let's get ourselves back to Ol' Blue Eyes, shall we?

Yeah? Well you're awful!

Wait, no, that was a love song.

I got nothing.

Yami is freaking out, asking Sugoroku's spirit deck what he can do to beat Kaiba now. The crowd is convinced the match is over just like Kaiba, with someone saying that nothing can beat the Blue Eyes. Nor its compilation album "Nothing But The Best." Jonouchi and Anzu are calling out Yuugi's name like it's helping.

Kaiba points at Yami, telling him to draw a card and summon another monster for his dragon to beat up. Yami hesitates at first, but draws a card. It turns out to be an "Imp" which has no chance against the Blue Eyes White Dragon, but he summons it in defense. Kaiba commands an attack on the imp, describing its death as crushing, honorable and booming all at once. I don't even know what he's talking about most of the time.

Yami flinches at the attack. Kaiba lectures him, stating that if Yami continues to summon monsters in defense position, he won't be able to get to Yami's life points, but Yami won't be able to hold out either. Yami thinks that Kaiba's regrettably right, and that he needs to attack at some point. Kaiba demands that Yami summon another monster, and it doesn't matter which one it is. Still, Yami can't find one that's strong enough. He puts another down in defense position.

Kaiba calls an attack, but immediately takes it back as just a joke. He wants Yami to summon more monsters for his dragon to have some fun with. Yami thought correctly; if he doesn't have more than one monster on his side as well, then when Kaiba summons another powerful monster, he won't have enough to stop an attack.

Kaiba looks at the card he just drew and he's strangely frowning as he says the goddess of victory is smiling on him. I think the goddess of victory isn't really as invested in your relationship as you think she is, Kaiba. That's why she won't return your phone calls. He lays down his card with relish and Yami blanches.

Yeah, see, that one on the right is Sinatra, and the one on the left is Sinatra Jr. They're not roaring either; they're just crooning "Luck Be A Lady" and "My Way" respectively.

Kaiba lets Yami know that on his next turn, the two dragons will attack him with their tunes, and mocks him by reminding him how desperate the situation is for him. Yami is looking at his cards for something he can do, but he has to admit to himself that any monster he summons will just be destroyed on the next turn. He wonders if he's lost, just as Kaiba is convinced he's won on the other side of the table. The crowd are an extension of his thoughts, saying that he's got Yami in a corner. Jonouchi begs Yami silently not to give up no matter what.

Yami closes his eyes and a picture of Sugoroku in his oxygen mask pops into his head. His eyes snap open at the reminder of what he's fighting for. He can't give up when he's not the only one fighting this battle! He announces he's drawing another card.

The dragons let out some sad notes as they're trapped behind the swords, and Yami thinks he's in the clear for the next three turns. Kaiba growls, saying that his totally legal card is somehow unfair to play right now. Whatever, you little whiner. Jonouchi is ecstatic that the match isn't over yet and congratulates Yami on his play.

After a moment, Kaiba stops thinking like a toddler and smiles again. He says Yami is only delaying the inevitable, because what can Yami possibly do to turn the situation around in three turns? Yami acknowledges, at least in his head, that he can only avoid attack by the sealed dragons for three turns and that Kaiba is right.

Kaiba draws a card for his turn and puts the monster he drew down in attack position. He says the Blue Eyes White Dragons will still destroy Yami and encourages him to envision the spectacular defeat he's going to be dealt. Kaiba also starts the countdown to when the Blue Eyes White Dragons will have their gaming licenses returned be released from their prison, telling Yami to draw his last cards.

Yami stares at the dragons as they hiss at him, then looks at his hand. He only has one playable monster card out of the four he he's holding.

Yami, without any inkling that maybe these cards might be combined, closes his eyes and wonders if he's lost. An image of Yuugi emerges to give him a look of pity. He's standing in darkness feeling bad for that other personality of his when another apparition, this time his grandfather, fades into the picture behind him. Yuugi turns around to greet him, and Sugoroku asks what's got him so down. Grandpa says it's not like Yuugi to give up, and Yuugi admits that he doesn't know what to do.

This is another moment when I'm confused about what to think of Yami/Yuugi. They're clearly not the same person, because Yami can have experiences that Yuugi can't and vice versa. However, this interaction is treating Yuugi as though he's the one playing the game, when it looks like Yami has been making all the executive decisions. Yuugi also seems to be aware of this game in a way he hasn't with any of the others, like he's an equal participant. I'm not sure if I should read this as discontinuity or as a sign that Yuugi and Yami are connected on a more complex level than just sharing a body. After all, Yuugi said before that he beat Kaiba at the beginning of all this, and that could swing either way.

I guess only time will tell.

Anyway, Grandpa asks Yuugi what he did the last time he felt backed into a corner. At first, Yuugi is confused, but then he holds the Millennium Puzzle as he recalls completing it in a situation where he wasn't sure of the solution to his external problems. Sugoroku elaborates, saying he put together those pieces until it was finished. According to Sugoroku, everything in the world is connected, whether it's puzzle pieces or cards. Then he fades away again, leaving Yuugi to ponder this seemingly incomprehensible message. He looks down at his puzzle and wonders what the connection between it and cards could be.

Yami suddenly opens his eyes, deducing amidst the cheers of the crowd that the deck he's using must contain Exodia. Kaiba has grown impatient with Yami's inner reflection and demands that he draw a card already. Yami ignores him as he remembers that Sugoroku said meaningless cards don't exist, and that lesson should apply the arm and two legs that he holds in his hand.

Duh. I don't know much about this game, but even if I knew nothing, it wouldn't take a meditative talk with my grandfather to figure out that those cards were for the same monster. Slow as molasses that boy.

A flashback further elaborates that Sugoroku once told Yuugi that no one, not even him, has ever seen Exodia actually summoned before. Still the cards are in his deck, so that must mean that he has the rest of them somewhere in the deck too. Yami blurts out that he has the legs and an arm, already three of the five that exist.

Kaiba tells Yami he's had enough time to "beg for his life," which is a weird way to interpret his dialogue about already having three pieces, but okay. Kaiba commands him to draw a card again, and Yami looks a little out of sorts as he agrees. He draws his next card, which turns out to be the other arm of Exodia. He now has four out of five parts of the monster.

Kaiba notes that Yami is acting a little differently now, but he brushes it off as the flickering light before a candle sputters out, because nothing can possibly beat the Blue Eyes White Dragons he has. See, this is where that empathy and understanding thing I was talking about at the end of last chapter would have come in handy for Kaiba, but he's too far gone now. His next draw produces a Judge Man, which he puts on the field to attack Yami's defending monster and increase that "cornered" feeling Yami/Yuugi already addressed panels ago. Get with the program, Kaiba.

After Judge Man takes out "Louise," Yami sweatdrops and Kaiba reminds him that he has two turns left before the Blue Eyes White Dragons are released. Yami draws another card, the Black Magician, but its points don't match Kaiba's dragons. It can still attack Judge Man, though, and that's just what Yami summons it to do. Kaiba calls it useless struggling, but his Judge Man still falls to a bit of black magic, leaving him with 1000 points.

Yami tells Kaiba that he's not going to give up until the end of the game, no matter how desperate his situation may look. Kaiba just resumes the countdown, reminding him that it's the final turn before his dragons are free to sing again, and Yami's chances for victory are gone.

Crap, I didn't think about who the third Blue Eyes would be after Sinatra and Sinatra Jr. Uh.... Michael Buble?

Kaiba announces that the other two are also unsealed, so on his next turn all three of them will attack. While he's laughing maniacally, Yami thinks that it all depends on what he draws on this final turn.

So, what did I think about this chapter overall? It wasn't as chock-full of potential for Sinatra jokes as I thought, which is disappointing. That aside, the only part I can really comment on is the part where Yuugi is talking to his brain's version of Sugoroku, and I've done most of my commenting above already. I like to THINK these are hints that Yuugi and Yami aren't simply two people occupying the same body, that they're more intimately connected than that, because discontinuity is so dull. Also, Shadi himself speculated that perhaps Yami was a part of Yuugi all along, only awakened by the Millennium Puzzle, so that could be an explanation as to how Yami wouldn't be just a spirit possessing Yuugi occasionally. However, I've learned to be a little skeptical of the complexities this manga could offer. It would be nice if they were really complexities, but my gut tells me that maybe I shouldn't get my hopes up.

I did like what mind!Sugoroku had to say about how there's meaning in things one might not expect. Things that might look useless at first glance may not have been combined with the right elements to bring out their full potential.

I think this message was a little obvious next to Yami's inexplicable head-scratching around those limbs though. I don't understand how anyone over the age of two couldn't have understood that they all went together once you had all the parts. Oh well.

13 comments:

  1. I'm not sure why Beaver Warrior is named Louise!

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    1. Would have been more fitting if a monster with rabbit ears were named Louise...

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  2. This is going to be a long comment, but I want a clear answer about the topic that interests and excites me the most in this manga! Every time I read this particular chapter, I'm confused because it gives me a strange impression of Yugi and Yami's relationship.

    As you mentioned, Mrs Yami is the one dueling Seto. However, this chapter treats Yugi as if he's the one playing the game, with his grandfather urging him not to give up and advising him to use the Exodia cards.

    While they don't share the same experiences, Yami has definitely been exposed to Yugi's memories, to the point that for about half the story, Yami mistakenly thinks he's Yugi. Yugi even calls him " my other self / other me " instead of a nickname like "Yami."

    Yami treats his relationships before discovering his original identity as the Pharaoh the same way Yugi treats his relationships with the people he loves .

    (Yami considers Yugi's grandfather his grandfather. In early chapters, he had crush on Anzu, just like Yugi, and doesn't call her by her Japanese honorific because she's very close to him, just as Yugi sees her.) Yami calls Katsuya and Hiroto "kun," an honorific that signifies respect. It's affectionate, but not as close as Anzu.

    As for Seto, he doesn't call him by his honorific, indicating that he doesn't respect him as a stranger who should be treated politely. This indicates Regular Yugi's true feelings for him, but Yugi only shows respect because he's polite.

    However, after discovering his identity, he begins to treat them both in a formal and different way. This explains why Yami now sees Anzu as just Yugi's colleague.

    Chapters in which Shadi appears and then challenges Yami also hint at their significance:

    1. Yugi gives his Millennium Puzzle to the museum, and when Shadi enters Yugi's mind, he finds Yami there, even though Yugi isn't wearing the Puzzle!

    2. Shadi is supposed to know that the Pharaoh's spirit is trapped inside the puzzle.

    However, (in Chapter 17), Shadi states that he doesn't know how Yami managed to obtain the puzzle, let alone SOLVE it. He also tells him that he was the one chosen to solve it! When he says all this, Shadi knows that the one he's addressing is "the other Yugi," not the regular Yugi!!!

    3. When the imaginary Katsuya (whom Shadi created) bullies Yami,

    Yami is so affected by his words that two statues are smashed! Yugi appears beside him, even though the Millennium Puzzle wasn't with Yami, but with the imaginary Katsuya!

    4. Why does Yami act like he knows that Katsuya had bullied him before, even though Yugi only solved the puzzle after befriending Katsuya (he defended himself against the bully)?!

    The strangest thing about this is that Sugoroku himself brought the Millennium Puzzle after he nearly died had it not been for Atem's rescue, gave it to Yugi, and told him ( in Chapter 280 ) that the Pharaoh's spirit had inhabited his grandson. Well, why didn't he tell his grandson that beforehand?!

    And why did Sugoroku treat Yami in Duelist Kingdom as if he were Yugi, while his grandfather advised Yugi of the importance of balancing with his "other self," instead of directly telling him that his "other self" was the Pharaoh? (Chapter 114)

    So I think the author intended to make Yami simply Yugi's split personality, but later changed his mind.

    Honestly, I can't explain this huge, strange discrepancy other than that Yugi is three people: the regular Yugi, Yami, and Atem. Yugi and Yami are the same person, and Atem is a separate person, hahahahaha lol! 😂😂🤣🤣

    Thank you for pointing out this strange issue , Mrs. Writch!

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    1. I think it's entirely probable that KT changed his mind later in the series as to the nature of Yami's identity, and having a separate identity apart from Yuugi. All the things you mentioned seem really difficult to reconcile with each other, especially when the Puzzle is taken from the equation and Yami wouldn't be able to manifest like in some later chapters where it was a plot point where Yuugi can't access him because of the absence of the puzzle. I imagine that over a long serialization of over 300 chapters, it's likely that an author makes little changes here and there and their ideas about their characters evolve some, and it takes a little time to develop a consistency of mechanics. They can also be influenced by the public/friends/family/colleagues as time go by. It's pretty clear that the story and its trajectory changed in MANY different ways during its development regardless!

      Of course, there are also ways people rationalize these apparent contradictions. It's been discussed before how one can assume that Yami, not having memories of his own and having been removed from the surrounding world for thousands of years, substituted Yuugi's identity for his own just to fill those gaps in himself. It doesn't explain how he can SOMETIMES manifest without the puzzle and SOMETIMES can't, but I've heard it argued.

      There's also my pet theory that Yami's manifestation is partly dependent not just Yuugi, but also his friends, like Jonouchi and Anzu. Yes, Yami is mostly getting his power of manifestation and general identity from Yuugi, but perhaps he's getting a little bit of himself from Jonouchi and others too, which sometimes helps to explain those points at which Yami cannot come out because Yuugi is ALONE or his friends or not mentally there, and why he NEEDS the puzzle to manifest, as opposed to the points where he can manifest without the puzzle, because his friends are nearby and lending their strength.

      Of course, when Shadi was facing off with Yami on the museum roof, Anzu was mentally absent, and Jonouchi was only nearby in the sense that he IN THE BUILDING, so my idea is by no means a perfect one, but it's fun to think about. When we like a story, we tend to rationalize away its inconsistencies in whatever ways make sense to us, lol!

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    2. I like your theory Mrs, the chapter 21 seems to assure your theory , and the fact the millennium puzzle 's power is Unity

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    3. Thank you! There seem to be some things supporting it, and some things going against it, but that seems to go for most every theory that can be made about the mechanics of this manga. There's no shortage of contradictions in this story, lol!

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    4. Good morning Mrs Writch, How are you ? I am fine

      I want to expand our previous conservation regarding this chapter :
      1- This is an interview of the author in 2002 :
      https://web.archive.org/web/20020702174238/http://www.time.com:80/time/interactive/multimedia/takahashi_int/frameset.exclude.html

      He said that Yugi is a weak boy but when he plays games he becomes a hero and Yami is Yugi's henshin (heroic transformation like Clark Kent and Superman) and he created Yami to appeal children as they want to become a stronger person

      So if the author himself sometimes mixes between Yugi and Yami no wonder some people treat Yami and Yugi as the same person !

      My opinion on this interview: First, Yugi ( Dark Yugi and Regular Yugi ) is not a hero but he is a neutral character and he shouldn't be a role model for children ( It is like to said that Hulk is children's hero when he was basically from a horror non kids- friendly comics!!)

      And Second , why will the children want to be possessed by a scary spirit who steals their lives and violates their privacy ?!! This creepy statement doesn't work unless we consider Yugi and Yami are the same person!!!!


      2- He LITERALLY SAID in YU-GI-OH manga volume 9 ( Duelist Kingdom section)this:
      "I BELIEVE THAT EVERYONE HAS AN "OTHER SELF" INSIDE THEM. IT MAY BE YOUR IDEAL SELF, SOMEONE WHO IT'S YOUR GOAL TO BECOME. BUT WHEN YOU'RE PRESSURED TO BE A CERTAIN WAY BY THE EXPECTATIONS OF YOUR PARENTS OR THE WORLD, THE BURDEN MAY BE TOO MUCH TO BEAR, AND YOU MAY LOSE SIGHT OF YOURSELF. IN OTHER WORDS, YOUR "OTHER SELF" IS SOMETHING YOU YOURSELF HAVE TO CREATE, NOT THAT OTHER PEOPLE CAN FORCE UPON YOU. I THINK IT'S BEST TO TAKE IT EASY, KEEP AN EYE ON YOUR "OTHER SELF," AND AIM FOR THAT GOAL...BUT DON'T STRESS OUT ABOUT REACHING IT RIGHT AWAY."
      -KAZUKI TAKAHASHI, 1998

      So does that mean that Yami was originally Yugi's dark repressed traits?

      3- the Toei animation version/ Season Zero considered that Yami is just Yugi powered up by the millennium puzzle and this is a proof :
      https://yugioh.fandom.com/wiki/Yugi_Muto_(Yami_Bandai)

      4- Does the duel against Seto consider Yugi's duel or Yami's? I think it is Yugi's but I have a headcanon for this specific duel

      I think Yami is the one who takes over physically and the executor while Yugi has the mental and emotional ( inner control ) and he seems to guide Yami and makes him draw the right card and play it well ( Yugi is the strategist)

      So it is like a teamwork and it seems that Regular Yugi has the more control in this duel like you said that Yugi said he had already beaten Seto before , even though Yami did that not him !!! And this in a time when Yugi didn't remember anything when Yami takes over him !!

      And in the English dub of Yu-Gi-Oh they made every duel like this except few ones !! When Yami appears he duels but his inner monologues,ideas and feelings are all in Yugi's voice and with his soft spoken way of talking unlike Yami's more aggressive speech

      So for an example: in Yami and Mai's duel in the original/ the manga Yami duels Mai , but in the English dub While Yami takes over physically, Yugi is the actual one who duels Mai , Yugi is worried about Yami hurting Mai so he makes sure that Yami will not take the lead seat so he doesn't focus on the duel and this Why he was almost losing the duel !!!

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    5. Mrs , sorry I forget to recommend you this video for more information of Yugi and Yami's complex relationship ( you can watch the first five minutes of this video and you will understand it )

      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=0-AUcH6oUN4&pp=ygUhVGhlIG1hbmdhIHRoYXQgaW5zcGlyZWQgWXUtR2ktT2gg

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    6. This all seems to be further evidence that KT had one idea about Yuugi/Yami's identity at the start of the story, and it evolved into something completely different by the end, lol! I like this notion of the other self being dark if it's FORCED upon you by an outside force, and that one should always keep sight of one's self to protect it from manipulation by others. It might actually line up with the end of the story too, in a way, because though Yuugi and Yami are two separate identities, Yuugi's gentle nature and more thoughtful idealism did pull Yami back from being the worst version of both of them over the course of the story to the point where they've both been tempered and evolved each other so they became their more ideal selves. Still a bit off that original idea, though.

      It was perhaps necessary to tweak that original idea by making Yami his own person with a separate identity BECAUSE he appeared so cool and the readers were idolizing him a little too much. If Yami was seen AS the stronger version of Yuugi that he would eventually become, then the more toxic traits of Yami would be accepted as strength rather than a bad reaction to the cruelty of the world. Later, when Yuugi starts to worry that Yami is going to hurt people he cares about, there appears to be a little commentary there about how Yami is LESS than ideal, and that Yami's drive to win and visit punishment upon those who challenge him and his sense of "justice" should be questioned and controlled. I don't think it was nearly ENOUGH to get folks to question Yami and his bad actions, but it appears to be present at least.

      I like your headcanon, because it does mostly synthesize some of the more contradictory parts of who's in control of these duels. Of course, it seems obvious to me that Yami is the one in control when these penalties are dished out, though, which might be part of the problem. I maintain he REALLY messed Kaiba up in that first duel with him, and I just don't think sweet Yuugi could do such a thing!

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    7. Oh, BTW, thanks for all the links! I appreciate you providing them so I can see what you're referring to!

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    8. Yes maybe separating Yami from Yugi is a good idea as you explained it Mrs

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    9. Welcome , That is not really a big thing compared to all of your reviews , Thank you for making your amazing reviews .

      And I agree Yugi is just a cute cinnamon roll and for me he is my little angel ! , he is very sweet even in DSOD , in the anime they even made him nicer and more innocent that already he was !! So when I read the manga and discovered that Yugi was a bit of pervert and not too kind I was surprised lol !!

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    10. And even when Yugi is adult and looks like Yami , he is still cute Yugi to me , no matter what!

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