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Hinoryu
12th October 2007, 03:26 AM
http://entertainment.upperdeck.com/community/forums/thread/885501.aspx

Upperdeck has finally given official rules for 2-on-2 duels.

Personally, except for the combined LP total of 8000, I rather like them. Any other opinions?

Phoenixsong
12th October 2007, 04:03 AM
Seem like standard fare to me. Not that I've ever played a tag duel, but yeah, those would have been more or less the rules I'd have made up.

...It's also not like I play in any tournaments or anything, either... or know how the boringconfusingwaytooseriousgame metagame works... or have anyone to play with period... so, eh, none of this applies to me at all. Still, interesting.

Perfect Chaos
12th October 2007, 08:47 AM
Yeah, I think those are standard rules they laid out (at least based on the TV show, that's how it worked, minus some crazy show-related moves that they used).

Besides Phoenix, you don't have to use those rules at tournaments only. I still have fun kicking the shit out of Roy every now and then using YVD (which I would recommend to a lot of you guys so we can actually get some more YGO players around here and maybe have a tournament :o)

Phoenixsong
12th October 2007, 05:39 PM
I know they're not just for tournaments. I just mean I have no one to play with.

Kind of sort of considering YVD only I don't quite understand how it works. And I doubt they'll have 2v2 support anytime soon, if I understand what little I know properly.

Alucard
16th October 2007, 11:49 AM
As I've said in many places, this has a scent of epic failure.

It's really bad rulings all over again..

starjake
24th October 2007, 12:44 PM
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages, listen up! After years of us guessing, creating and pulling random rules out of our sorry you-know-whats, UDE has finally caved in to our cries of anguish and despair, and given us official rules on how to play Tag Team duels! Here they are, taken directly from the UDE Forums:



Hello everyone -
For quite some time, many players have wanted to know if there were rules for team dueling. Until today, there weren't any, and players had to take it upon themselves to create their own rules. Undoubtedly, many sets of rules were often different. Therefore, we have decided to release a set of rules that we encourage that everyone can and should use when dueling in 2 vs 2 matches. "The Team Dueling Rules" are now available for everyone to use. They can be found at the end of this post, and also as as part of the Tournament Policy Document Appendix A: Yu-Gi-Oh! TCG, which can be found at www.ude.com/policy. They will also be available on the main Yu-Gi-Oh! website shortly.

However, it does not end there. UDE will be backing up Team Dueling with support throughout its current Organized Play structure of Yu-Gi-Oh! events. You will soon be able to play in Team Dueling matches to win prizes in your local hobby league, and also as side events at Regionals and Shonen Jump Championships. All of these events - local hobby league, Regionals side events and SJC side events - will qualify the top teams for a "Yu-Gi-Oh! Team Dueling National Championship" event to be held at US Yu-Gi-Oh! Nationals as well. There will be some prizes at that event as well, but keep in mind that Team Dueling is meant first and foremost as a fun, alternative way to play Yu-Gi-Oh!, so don't expect that the Team Dueling Championship prizes will be on par with the Individual Nationals prizes. We will make an announcement when this part of the program is ready to get under way, likely sometime in early 2008. However, you can still play in Team Dueling tournaments for fun in your local stores and maybe even as side events at some Regionals and Shonen Jump Championships until then, although there will be no "nationals qualification" until then.

Team Dueling events can already be run easily using MANTIS. When you choose the option to Create New Tournament, go to the Advanced Settings tab and you can set the "Team Structure" to "Two players per team". You will then be able to assign players to teams and pair the teams up, run the event using MANTIS, and upload the results as you normally would a regular tournament.

And now, without further adieu, The Team Dueling Rules


A-28 Team Dueling
I. Basic Rules
The match is between two teams of two players each (designated player A and player B). Teammates are seated next to each other with the other team on the opposite side of the table. For a tournament, each player’s designation (A or B) is chosen at the start of the tournament and never changes.

Each player has five Monster Card Zones and each player has five Spell & Trap Card Zones. The zones from both players on a team create one large side of the field, so there are two sides of the field: Team One’s side of the field and Team Two’s side of the field.

Each player uses their own Deck (two Decks per team). Each player has their own Graveyard (you cannot use your teammate’s Graveyard as if it was your own).

Each team has one Life Point total of 8000 (if it reaches zero, the team loses). Each team has two Fusion Decks (you cannot use your teammate’s Fusion Deck for your Fusion Summons or card effects). Each player has their own Side Deck to use only with their Deck.

There can only be one Field Spell Card in play at a time, just like a 1-on-1 Duel.

Limited Cards are counted per player, not per team. So, for any given Limited Card, each player on a team could include one copy in their Deck, making a total of two copies that team can use. However, one player cannot include two copies of a Limited Card, even if the other player doesn’t include any.

During a turn, a player only can control his or her cards, not his or her teammate’s. Teammates may talk, compare hands, and share information freely with each other. They should make their decisions in a timely manner as to not delay the game.

A team loses if either player on that team cannot draw a card from the player’s Deck when required to.


II. Turn Procedure
Players on the same team sit next to each other, player A sits to the right of player B. Team 1 is players 1A & 1B and Team 2 is players 2A & 2B. The turn order starts with player A of the team that is chosen to go first and then alternates between teams.

The first player who can make an attack is the player who goes fourth. (In the example below, player 2B)

Turn Turn Player
----------------------------------------------------
1: Team 1 Player 1A
2: Team 2 Player 2A
3: Team 1 Player 1B
4: Team 2 Player 2B
5: Team 1 Player 1A

Continue until one team wins.


III. Card Effects
If any part of a card affects your opponent’s hand, Deck, Fusion Deck, Graveyard, or Removed Zone, then the player activating the card effect must choose one of their opponents to apply the entire effect of the card to.
Examples: “Confiscation”, “Memory Crusher”, “Soul Release”, “Secret Barrel”, “Crush Card Virus”

If a card affects only your opponent’s side of the field, it affects the entire side, or both your opponents.
Example: Player 2A activates “Lightning Vortex”. It destroys player 1A and player 1B’s face-up monsters.

If a card affects “both players”, all four players are affected.
Example: “Dark World Dealings” is activated. All four players will each draw a card, then each discard a card.

Cards Set by a player can be viewed by the teammate, but they must be activated by the player who Set them.

A player can allow their teammate to use monsters they control as Tributes, Fusion Materials, or to pay the cost of a card or effect.
Example: It is player 1A’s turn, and player 1B controls a “Gravekeeper’s Spy”. With permission, player 1A Tributes that “Gravekeeper’s Spy” to Tribute Summon his “Jinzo”.

“Owner” and “controller” mean the same thing as a standard Duel. The “owner” is the player who’s Deck the card started in. “Controller” is the player who currently has the card in one of their zones.
Example: Player 1A Summons “Dark Magician”. Player 2B activates “Brain Control” and selects the “Dark Magician”. He moves it to one of his Monster Card Zones. Player 1A is the owner of “Dark Magician” and Player 2B is the controller of “Dark Magician”.


IV. Attacking
You can only attack with monsters you control (in your 5 zones) during your turn. You cannot attack with your teammate’s Attack Position monsters. If there is a monster on the opponent’s side of the field (controlled by either player) then you must attack it before attacking their Life Points directly.
Example: Player A has “Elemental Hero Sparkman” in Attack Position. Player C has no monsters, but Player D has “Dark Magician” in Attack Position. Player A cannot attack directly, because the opponents have “Dark Magician” on the field.


V. Additional Rules
During a player’s turn, either opponent may activate Spell Speed 2 or higher effects (just as they could in a standard Duel). The teammate may also activate Spell Speed 2 or higher effects (as if it was an opponent’s turn).

When a player activates an effect, each other player must be given the opportunity to add an effect to the chain before it is resolved (starting with an opponent and then alternating between teams).

If multiple trigger effects activate at the same time, the turn player’s effects will be added to the chain first, followed by their teammate’s effects, and finally the opponents’ effects (in an order of their choosing).

Card effects that count turns count all appropriate turns.
Example: “Swords of Revealing Light” is activated by Player A of Team 1. Team 2 cannot attack on Player C’s next turn (1 turn), Player D’s next turn (2 turns), and Player C’s turn after that (3 turns). “Swords of Revealing Light” will be destroyed at the end of that turn, because three opponents’ turns have passed.


VI. End of Match Procedure
When time is up at the end of a round, complete the current turn of each game that is still in progress. If a winner is not determined by the end of that turn, play continues for three additional turns. After the three additional turns, if a winner still has not been determined, play stops and the match winner is determined using the following process:

1. The team with greater Life Points wins the game. If both teams’ Life Points are equal, continue playing until the first change in Life Points. If Life Points change during a resolving chain, always resolve all effects on that chain before comparing the teams’ Life Points.

2. After the winner of the game in progress is determined, a team wins the match if it has more game wins than the opposing team. If both teams have an equal number of game wins, they will start a new game. This game will last for a maximum of eight turns, two for each player. Side Decks may not be used before starting this game. At the end of the eight turn, the team with greater Life Points wins the match. If Life Points are equal, continue playing until the first change in Life Points. If Life Points change during a resolving chain, always resolve all effects on that chain before comparing the teams’ Life Points.

3. If players are between games when time is called, and one team has a greater number of game wins, that team wins the match.

EDIT: Hmm. Didn't realize this had already been posted. Insert anticlimatic music here.

Roarkiller
25th October 2007, 07:40 AM
Thread merged for efficiency.