![]() ![]() You can move through each match pretty fluidly, just as you were able to in Tag Force 1, 2 and 3 from '06, '07 and '08. The interface here is slick and easy to navigate, with a full view of the Duel Monsters playing field taking up the right side of the screen while the complete text for the card your cursor is currently hovering over shows up over on the left. It's a formula we've seen three times before on the PSP, as Tag Force has become a once-a-year sub-franchise for the greater Yu-Gi-Oh brand - and it works well enough. ![]() You then take up your garbage stack of discards and begin the Yu-Gi-Oh routine in earnest - walking around challenging everyone you meet to Duel Monsters duels, earning notoriety, cash and more cards every step of the way. It's an odd start to a storyline, but it's where Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's Tag Force 4 begins - and, conveniently enough, all those random cards your hero acquires through his selfless streetcleaning just so happen to come together to form a cohesive, well-balanced starting deck. So the message I get, from that, is that Konami just wants you not to litter. Instead, he busies himself with picking up the various Duel Monsters cards scattered about on the ground around them, then walks away without a word. That's the message that comes across in the opening minutes of this latest Yu-Gi-Oh game, at least, as your speechless, anonymous hero meets up with all the major characters of the most recent Yu-Gi-Oh cartoon series - but doesn't talk to any of them.
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