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* After being presumed dead for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.

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* After being presumed dead for two years, with rush duels Rush Duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel Rush Duel mode.
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* As the final duel resumes, Yuuga is forced to resume the attack that will cause his loss (the attack is forced and he will take the damage instead of his opponent due to a trap). Only for him to pull out a trap ''foreshadowed in the beginning of the first intro'' that takes advantage of everyone's ace being in the graveyard to survive the hit and get another attack that will not be redirected and allows him to win.

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* As the final duel resumes, Yuuga is forced to resume the attack that will cause his loss (the attack is forced and he will take the damage instead of his opponent due to a trap). Only for him to pull out a trap card ''foreshadowed in the beginning of the first intro'' that takes advantage of everyone's ace monsters being in the graveyard to survive the hit and get another attack that will not be redirected and allows him to win.win. The card in question? [[spoiler:'''Perfect Sevens''']]
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* Luke interfering and exposing Arai's cheating with his [[WalkingTechbane Pauli Effect]] [[{{LampshadeHanging}} (which Gakuto notes he hasn't used in quite some time)]] [[CheatersNeverProsper to short-circuit the cheating function in Arai's duel disk]], allowing Romin to have a fair duel while declaring one of the most badass MagicalIncantation{{s}} that doesn't involve summoning a card. Even after getting interrupted, he gets one more punny jab at Arai's dueling before letting Romin resume the duel.

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* Luke interfering and exposing Arai's cheating with his [[WalkingTechbane Pauli Effect]] [[{{LampshadeHanging}} (which Gakuto notes he hasn't used in quite some time)]] [[CheatersNeverProsper to short-circuit the cheating function in Arai's duel disk]], allowing Romin to have a fair duel while declaring one of the most badass MagicalIncantation{{s}} {{Magical Incantation}}s that doesn't involve summoning a card. Even after getting interrupted, he gets one more punny jab at Arai's dueling before letting Romin resume the duel.
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No meta moment, see this query.


** Meta example: Romin is now the first Yu-Gi-Oh girl to have two wins before episode 20, the previous record being held by [[{{Anime/YuGiOh5Ds}} Akiza Isinski/Aki Izayoi]] at 22 episodes. It must also be noted that her one loss so far involved her both [[WorfHadtheFlu not using her own deck and pretending to know less about dueling than she actually did.]]



* In a meta sense, the fact that the number of cards in a deck become relevant with Goha Yuga revealing he's playing a 60 card deck to support his playstyle revolving about dumping cards in the graveyard. The anime also manages to put in a concise explanation about the rules about the number of cards in a deck and why is usually a good idea to have as few as possible in them.
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Up To Eleven is a defunct trope


* Everything about the titular The☆Lukeman. He takes Luke's bombastic persona and duel skills, and takes them UpToEleven. And to top it off, he can use ''Fusion'' and uses it to defeat Yuo.

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* Everything about the titular The☆Lukeman. He takes Luke's bombastic persona and duel skills, and takes them UpToEleven.up a notch. And to top it off, he can use ''Fusion'' and uses it to defeat Yuo.
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* The last duel between Luke and Yuuga, both without their ace monsters in their decks. [[spoiler: Both manage to summon them, Luke through sheer determination just like he created Miragias, Yuuga by using his ID card to get another copy in his deck. And Yuuga ''wins''.]]
* As the final duel resumes, Yuuga is forced to resume the attack that will cause his loss (the attack is forced and he will take the damage instead of his opponent due to a trap). [[spoiler: Only for him to pull out a trap ''foreshadowed in the beginning of the first intro'' that takes advantage of everyone's ace being in the graveyard to survive the hit and get another attack that will not be redirected and allows him to win.]]
* After being [[spoiler: presumed dead]] for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.

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* The last duel between Luke and Yuuga, both without their ace monsters in their decks. [[spoiler: Both manage to summon them, Luke through sheer determination just like he created Miragias, Yuuga by using his ID card to get another copy in his deck. And Yuuga ''wins''.]]
''wins''.
* As the final duel resumes, Yuuga is forced to resume the attack that will cause his loss (the attack is forced and he will take the damage instead of his opponent due to a trap). [[spoiler: Only for him to pull out a trap ''foreshadowed in the beginning of the first intro'' that takes advantage of everyone's ace being in the graveyard to survive the hit and get another attack that will not be redirected and allows him to win.]]
win.
* After being [[spoiler: presumed dead]] dead for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.
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* After being [spoiler: presumed dead]] for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.

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* After being [spoiler: [[spoiler: presumed dead]] for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.
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[[AC: Episode 92: King of Duels]]
* The last duel between Luke and Yuuga, both without their ace monsters in their decks. [[spoiler: Both manage to summon them, Luke through sheer determination just like he created Miragias, Yuuga by using his ID card to get another copy in his deck. And Yuuga ''wins''.]]
* As the final duel resumes, Yuuga is forced to resume the attack that will cause his loss (the attack is forced and he will take the damage instead of his opponent due to a trap). [[spoiler: Only for him to pull out a trap ''foreshadowed in the beginning of the first intro'' that takes advantage of everyone's ace being in the graveyard to survive the hit and get another attack that will not be redirected and allows him to win.]]
* After being [spoiler: presumed dead]] for two years, with rush duels having disappeared with him, Yuuga triumphantly returns. We see the whole cast happily waiting for his return, and duel disks globally switch back to rush duel mode.
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[[AC: Episode 90: To Space]]
* In order to get to space, nearly every character involved throughout the series comes to help the seven main characters get their spaceship up and running.
* Of course for a series as crazy as Sevens has been, the only way the climactic duel against [[FinalBoss Otes]] could possibly be done is by docking their Curry Powered Spaceship into the Rush Duel Robot, the structure that makes Rush Duels possible, and use that to Rush Duel against Otes in his own robot of his image. And yes, it's as amazingly absurd as it is.
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** Galient, Chevelle, Trapigeon, and Caterpillo reciting Wyrm Excavator's summoning chant together.
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[[AC: Episode 86: The Romin Affair]]
* Luke completely obliterating Bakuro in their rematch, with an OTK after he had set up his three ace monsters.
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* To say Yuga pulled out all the stops in his long-awaited rematch with Roa is an understatement. It puts his performance in the Rush Duel Tournament Finals to shame. And Roa ''still'' won, making him the first character to defeat a main protagonist with less than 10 episodes left in a series. And you don't actually think they're going to have Yuga lose. He pulls out a new Fusion monster, the '''Ultimate''' "Sevens Road" for god's sake. There's just no way. Then Roa survives "Master of Sevens Road's" attack, and Miniscape starts playing. At that point, you know Roa has this in the bag. What a send-off for a character who was starting to achieve MemeticLoser status towards the end of Season 1. Oh and as a reminder, he does not own a Maximum Monster or a Fusion card, but in no way was the lack of these kinds of cards ever going to stop him.

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* To say Yuga pulled out all the stops in his long-awaited rematch with Roa is an understatement. It puts his performance in the Rush Duel Tournament Finals to shame. And Roa ''still'' won, making him the first character to defeat a main protagonist with less than 10 episodes left in a series. And you don't actually think they're going to have Yuga lose. He pulls out a new Fusion monster, the '''Ultimate''' "Sevens Road" for god's sake. There's just no way. Then Roa survives "Master of Sevens Road's" attack, and Miniscape starts playing. At that point, you know Roa has this in the bag. What a send-off for a character who was starting to achieve MemeticLoser status towards the end of Season 1. Oh and as a reminder, he does not own a Maximum Monster or a Fusion card, but in no way was the lack of these kinds of cards ever going to stop him. He also boasts that he doesn't have them ''because he doesn't need them''. And then Roa closes his arc by conceding the title of king of the duels to Yuga, saying that he will take that of ''god'' of duels instead, and that it's Yuga's time to chase after him.
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* To say Yuga pulled out all the stops in his long-awaited rematch with Roa is an understatement. It puts his performance in the Rush Duel Tournament Finals to shame. And Roa ''still'' won, making him the first character to defeat a main protagonist with less than 10 episodes left in a series. And you don't actually think they're going to have Yuga lose. He pulls out a new Fusion monster, the '''Ultimate''' "Sevens Road" for god's sake. There's just no way. Then Roa survives "Master of Sevens Road's" attack, and Miniscape starts playing. At that point, you know Roa has this in the bag. What a send-off for a character who was starting to achieve MemeticLoser status towards the end of Season 1.

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* To say Yuga pulled out all the stops in his long-awaited rematch with Roa is an understatement. It puts his performance in the Rush Duel Tournament Finals to shame. And Roa ''still'' won, making him the first character to defeat a main protagonist with less than 10 episodes left in a series. And you don't actually think they're going to have Yuga lose. He pulls out a new Fusion monster, the '''Ultimate''' "Sevens Road" for god's sake. There's just no way. Then Roa survives "Master of Sevens Road's" attack, and Miniscape starts playing. At that point, you know Roa has this in the bag. What a send-off for a character who was starting to achieve MemeticLoser status towards the end of Season 1. Oh and as a reminder, he does not own a Maximum Monster or a Fusion card, but in no way was the lack of these kinds of cards ever going to stop him.
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[[AC: Episode 85: Return of the King]]
* To say Yuga pulled out all the stops in his long-awaited rematch with Roa is an understatement. It puts his performance in the Rush Duel Tournament Finals to shame. And Roa ''still'' won, making him the first character to defeat a main protagonist with less than 10 episodes left in a series. And you don't actually think they're going to have Yuga lose. He pulls out a new Fusion monster, the '''Ultimate''' "Sevens Road" for god's sake. There's just no way. Then Roa survives "Master of Sevens Road's" attack, and Miniscape starts playing. At that point, you know Roa has this in the bag. What a send-off for a character who was starting to achieve MemeticLoser status towards the end of Season 1.

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* Luke's victory. Yuga has merely 100 LP, but also a monster with 6100 ATK, gaining power from the 41 cards in his graveyard, and then activates a trap that prevents monster with 3000 ATK or more from attacking. Luke then uses a card that allows him to send card from Yuga's graveyard back into his deck, three at a time. He doesn't have a loop, but he still manages to recycle it over and over again, sending **33** cards back to the deck, dropping the monter's ATK to 2800 and winning the duel.

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* Luke's victory. Yuga has merely 100 LP, but also a monster with 6100 ATK, gaining power from the 41 cards in his graveyard, and then activates a trap that prevents monster with 3000 ATK or more from attacking. Luke then uses a card that allows him to send card from Yuga's graveyard back into his deck, three at a time. He doesn't have a loop, but he still manages to recycle it over and over again, sending **33** ''33'' cards back to the deck, dropping the monter's ATK to 2800 and winning the duel.


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** We sadly don't see how Sebastian gets the card, but Rinnosuke and Galient both draw the card for their summons in a way similar to how a protagonist would. Galient sends his hand back to the deck and draws the three cards one after the other, showing the ID cards turning into the three pieces just like Yuga's first summon. Rinnosuke (and Ranze, who joined the duel) need a normal monster to activate the effect of their monster, but have no card in hand, so activate an effect to draw one. They lament how the deck did not respond to their feelings and send the right card...just to reveal they were kidding and show the card they drew: ''fusion''.

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* In a meta sense, the fact that the number of cards in a deck become relevant with Goha Yuga revealing he's playing a 60 card deck to support his playstile revolving about dumping cards in the graveyard. The anime also manages to put in a concise explanation about the rules about the number of cards in a deck and why is usually a good idea to have as few as possible in them.

to:

* In a meta sense, the fact that the number of cards in a deck become relevant with Goha Yuga revealing he's playing a 60 card deck to support his playstile playstyle revolving about dumping cards in the graveyard. The anime also manages to put in a concise explanation about the rules about the number of cards in a deck and why is usually a good idea to have as few as possible in them.




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[[AC: Episode 83: Journey's Companions]]
* During their duels to get Gakuto, Asana, and Nail's memories back, Rinnosuke uses Fusion against Gakuto summoning his own Fusion Monster, Galient uses Asana's Maximum Monster with the remainder of the Heavy Cavalry Duel Club's ID cards to form it, and finally Sebastian uses Neil's Maximum Monster. All three of them don't defeat their respective opponents, but you rarely ever see side characters like these pull off these kinds of summons that are usually confined to the main characters and the villains. Most importantly, upon summoning and attacking them with said monsters, that was the trigger that unlocked their memories, which was the goal they were hoping to achieve.
* Speaking of which, Gakuto, Asana, and Nail were all able to overcome each of their respective threats, Gakuto went Fusion against Rinnosuke's Fusion, Asana was able to overcome Wyrm Excavator, and Nail was able to defeat Yggdrasil. Asana and Nail's were impressive as they defeated their own Maximum Monster without using another Maximum Monster.
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Spoilers shouldn't be marked on Awesome subpages.


* Everything about the titular The☆Lukeman. He takes Luke's bombastic persona and duel skills, and takes them UpToEleven. And to top it off, [[spoiler: he can use ''Fusion'' and uses it to defeat Yuo.]]

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* Everything about the titular The☆Lukeman. He takes Luke's bombastic persona and duel skills, and takes them UpToEleven. And to top it off, [[spoiler: he can use ''Fusion'' and uses it to defeat Yuo.]]
Yuo.

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\n[[AC: Episode 79: Rush Duel Sealed Away]]
* In a meta sense, the fact that the number of cards in a deck become relevant with Goha Yuga revealing he's playing a 60 card deck to support his playstile revolving about dumping cards in the graveyard. The anime also manages to put in a concise explanation about the rules about the number of cards in a deck and why is usually a good idea to have as few as possible in them.
* Luke's victory. Yuga has merely 100 LP, but also a monster with 6100 ATK, gaining power from the 41 cards in his graveyard, and then activates a trap that prevents monster with 3000 ATK or more from attacking. Luke then uses a card that allows him to send card from Yuga's graveyard back into his deck, three at a time. He doesn't have a loop, but he still manages to recycle it over and over again, sending **33** cards back to the deck, dropping the monter's ATK to 2800 and winning the duel.
** Luke had taken over the duel from Yuga, who was too tired to continue, and realized he could use this strategy piecing together clues from Yuga's words. Meaning Yuga had already figured out Goha Yuga's strategy AND developed a countermeasure.

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* Neiru manages to reverse engineer the programming of Rush Duels through Kaizo's data and Yuga's actions & behavior, which allows him to discover something unknown to even Yuga himself.
* Neiru showing off what he discovered by Maximum Summoning Yggdrago the Heavenly Emperor Dragon Tree, a monster so large that by comparison Sevens Road Magician is nothing more than a mere bug. He then uses its effect to destroy Yuga's ace and then attack him directly dropping his LP to 0 in one hit!

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* Neiru Nail manages to reverse engineer the programming of Rush Duels through Kaizo's data and Yuga's actions & behavior, which allows him to discover something unknown to even Yuga himself.
* Neiru Nail showing off what he discovered by Maximum Summoning Yggdrago the Heavenly Emperor Dragon Tree, a monster so large that by comparison Sevens Road Magician is nothing more than a mere bug. He then uses its effect to destroy Yuga's ace and then attack him directly dropping his LP to 0 in one hit!



* It's finally revealed how Neiru discovered Maximum summon: he noticed that Yuga let the program open to allow more people to develop new rule, so he took advantage of it, effectively turning Yuga's methods against him.

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* It's finally revealed how Neiru Nail discovered Maximum summon: he noticed that Yuga let the program open to allow more people to develop new rule, so he took advantage of it, effectively turning Yuga's methods against him.



* During the rematch with Neiru, Yuga reveals he has his own Maximum Monster now. Then with a flashback it's shown that Gakuto, Romin and Luke gave away their duel account cards so that it could be reprogrammed. And when Yuga's duel disk couldn't handle the reprogramming [=BicycleSeat=]!Kaizo jumps in and lets Yuga sacrifice itself for additional power, trusting that he will win and get back its original code. Then with the 3 Maximum Cards in his hand, the episode ends with Yuga Maximum Summoning Super Magitek Deity Magnum Over Road. The mech he was designing since the first episode of the show to rival Neiru's Yggdrago.

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* During the rematch with Neiru, Nail, Yuga reveals he has his own Maximum Monster now. Then with a flashback it's shown that Gakuto, Romin and Luke gave away their duel account cards so that it could be reprogrammed. And when Yuga's duel disk couldn't handle the reprogramming [=BicycleSeat=]!Kaizo jumps in and lets Yuga sacrifice itself for additional power, trusting that he will win and get back its original code. Then with the 3 Maximum Cards in his hand, the episode ends with Yuga Maximum Summoning Super Magitek Deity Magnum Over Road. The mech he was designing since the first episode of the show to rival Neiru's Nail’s Yggdrago.



** First, Neiru uses a trap to stop Yuga's ''newly created'' Maximum monster from performing a one-hit kill, and manages to diminish Yuga's life point in the process.
** When Neiru counterattacks, Yuga manages to save himself ''and'' Magnum Over Road by sending it back to his hand and ending the battle phase.
** Neiru then has Yuga shuffle his hand back into his deck so that he won't Maximum Summon again the next turn. Yes, he had a way to counter Maximum Summoning even if he was supposed to be the only one having it.

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** First, Neiru Nail uses a trap to stop Yuga's ''newly created'' Maximum monster from performing a one-hit kill, and manages to diminish Yuga's life point in the process.
** When Neiru Nail counterattacks, Yuga manages to save himself ''and'' Magnum Over Road by sending it back to his hand and ending the battle phase.
** Neiru Nail then has Yuga shuffle his hand back into his deck so that he won't Maximum Summon again the next turn. Yes, he had a way to counter Maximum Summoning even if he was supposed to be the only one having it.



** Neiru doesn't just save himself, but manages to use the attack to replenish his life points, and then almost wins the duel, with Yuga barely holding on with just 100 LP.
** Yuga almost manages to Maximum Summon a second time, but Neiru has him ''once again'' shuffle his hand in his deck.
** Yuga then just breaks the MagicPokerEquation to get the cards needed to Maximum Summon a third time, finally managing to get Magnum Over Road back on the field. Knowing that Neiru had a trap that would have ended the duel in a draw if Yuga managed to destroy Yggdrago, Yuga reveals the last effect of Magnum Over Road, taking advantage of the 3900 LP disparity between them to boost Magnum Over Road's attack to 9400, wiping out Neiru's Life Points before he can activate his trap and finally winning the duel.

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** Neiru Nail doesn't just save himself, but manages to use the attack to replenish his life points, and then almost wins the duel, with Yuga barely holding on with just 100 LP.
** Yuga almost manages to Maximum Summon a second time, but Neiru Nail has him ''once again'' shuffle his hand in his deck.
** Yuga then just breaks the MagicPokerEquation to get the cards needed to Maximum Summon a third time, finally managing to get Magnum Over Road back on the field. Knowing that Neiru had a trap that would have ended the duel in a draw if Yuga managed to destroy Yggdrago, Yuga reveals the last effect of Magnum Over Road, taking advantage of the 3900 LP disparity between them to boost Magnum Over Road's attack to 9400, wiping out Neiru's Nail’s Life Points before he can activate his trap and finally winning the duel.



* The insane level of CrazyPrepared Yuga goes to to get a Maximum in his deck. Already aware of the cache of prototype Duel Disks he can potentially use to rewrite old Duel ID cards, he ''also'' sent Kaizo to ask Neiru to borrow Yggdrago just in case he couldn't regain Magnum Over Road.

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* The insane level of CrazyPrepared Yuga goes to to get a Maximum in his deck. Already aware of the cache of prototype Duel Disks he can potentially use to rewrite old Duel ID cards, he ''also'' sent Kaizo to ask Neiru Nail to borrow Yggdrago just in case he couldn't regain Magnum Over Road.



* Yuga does then upstage Hunt thanks to his friendly rivalries with Roa, Neiru, and Asana, assembling enough Maximum cards to summon his second Maximum monster, Hyper Engine Vast Vulcan.

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* Yuga does then upstage Hunt thanks to his friendly rivalries with Roa, Neiru, Nail, and Asana, assembling enough Maximum cards to summon his second Maximum monster, Hyper Engine Vast Vulcan.



* Gakuto manages to score a tie against Neiru of all people. What started off as an absolute curb stomp turned into an episode that shows off Gakuto's willpower and strength in the face of absolute adversity, culminating in a last ditch effort to stop Neiru from walking out with a win, even if Gakuto has to go down with him. Even Neiru was impressed with his fortitude.
** Gakuto accomplished it without a Maximum Summon of his own. He didn't win, but he is the first one not to be defeated by a Maximum. Remember that Yuga himself could only face Maximum Summons with a Maximum of his own, and he lost on the turn both Neiru and Asuna brought out their Maximum Monster. Gakuto survives Neiru's and tied against it, and from behind at that.

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* Gakuto manages to score a tie against Neiru Nail of all people. What started off as an absolute curb stomp turned into an episode that shows off Gakuto's willpower and strength in the face of absolute adversity, culminating in a last ditch effort to stop Neiru from walking out with a win, even if Gakuto has to go down with him. Even Neiru Nail was impressed with his fortitude.
** Gakuto accomplished it without a Maximum Summon of his own. He didn't win, but he is the first one not to be defeated by a Maximum. Remember that Yuga himself could only face Maximum Summons with a Maximum of his own, and he lost on the turn both Neiru Nail and Asuna brought out their Maximum Monster. Gakuto survives Neiru's and tied against it, and from behind at that.



* Asana's duel against Neiru. Instead of using her friends' ID cards to Maximum summon, she asks to borrow their ace monsters for the duel despite, how Neiru points out, not fitting into her archetype. They end up being instrumental in her victory. And it isn't due to extremely specific circumstances requiring their effects either: Asana modified her deck to take advantage of them being three level seven or higher monsters, sending them to the grave and back to her deck/hand to activate effects more beneficial to her deck.

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* Asana's duel against Neiru. Nail. Instead of using her friends' ID cards to Maximum summon, she asks to borrow their ace monsters for the duel despite, how Neiru Nail points out, not fitting into her archetype. They end up being instrumental in her victory. And it isn't due to extremely specific circumstances requiring their effects either: Asana modified her deck to take advantage of them being three level seven or higher monsters, sending them to the grave and back to her deck/hand to activate effects more beneficial to her deck.
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[[AC: Episode 76: The Merciless Tiger]]
* Tiger ''beats'' Yuga, and not just that. She beats him with a trap card on his turn.

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[[AC: Episode 76: The Merciless Tiger]]
* Tiger ''beats'' Yuga, and not just that. She beats him with a trap card on his turn.

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[[AC: Episode 76: The Merciless Tiger]]
* Tiger ''beats'' Yuga, and not just that. She beats him with a trap card on his turn.
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[[AC: Episode 33: Goha 6th Elementary School]]
* Gakuto, seemingly on the verge of a HeroicBSOD, surprises his opponent by stopping Shield Bowling Kong's attack using a trap card that switches the attacking monster to defense position. He then switches Bowling Kong to defense position a second time, draining its defense points.
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** Not to be understated: Yuga ''blocks a falling meteor with his fist and duel disk''.
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[[AC: Episode 67: Space Warrior The☆Lukeman]]
* The☆Yugaman manages to destroy Superstrike Dragon Dragiastar F. However on the next turn The☆Lukeman comes back stronger with 2 fusion monsters.
* The☆Yugaman has to draw the same card as The☆Lukeman or lose. Which in itself is a low chance but it's made worse when he draws Fusion. Yuo now gloats that The☆Yugaman's chances of winning and saving Rush Duels is 0! However The☆Yugaman comments that's still better odds than dueling a living manga character. At this moment a burning Goha satellite falls onto him who blocks it with his Duel Disk then retrieves its Fusion card onto the top of his deck. Drawing it and performing his Fusion Summon.
--> '''The☆Yugaman''': No matter if it's common sense, probability, or the Earth's atmosphere! The☆Yugaman's draw will carve right through! Miraculous Meteoric Draw!\\
'''The☆Yugaman''': Witness and tremble as you see it! This is The☆Yugaman's Fusion Summon! Now, with the new power bestowed by the meteor! The hero of miracles bearing the name Sevens comes into existence! Wield your demonic blade! Sevens Paladin the Magical Knight!

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