When this face-up card on the field is sent to the Graveyard, except by battle: You can Special Summon 1 "Gusto" monster from your Deck in face-down Defense Position.
Card Ratings
Traditional: 1.33
Advanced: 1.50
Ratings are based on a 1 to 5 scale
1 being the worst.
3 is average.
5 is the highest rating.
Date Reviewed - July 23, 2012
Welcome to Gusto week! This is an interesting idea
for a Decktype, we open with Gusto Falco. Level 2,
Wind, Winged-Beast, 600 attack and 1400 defense.
Neither of those are going to win many contests,
but Winged-Beast is a supported enough type, and
being a Tuner isn't a bad thing at all. When Falco
is sent to the Graveyard, you can Special Summon
another Gusto Monster from your Deck in face-down
Defense position. If the card read like that, it
would be good. However, Falco has to be face-up to
gain this effect. Hardly the end of the world, but
it also can't be sent to the Graveyard by Battle to
gain its effect. There are a million and one ways
to accomplish this, but likely YOU have to do it, as
your opponent won't need to waste the effect of a
card, when they can attack instead. The text really
hurts the card.
Ratings: (All ratings this week are in a Gusto
Deck)
2/5 at best, resource replenishment is good, but too
many hoops to jump through...
Art: 3/5
John Rocha
Since Hidden Arsenal #6 is coming out on Tuesday,
we are going to be looking at cards from the Gusto
archetype this week. Starting off the week is Gusto
Falco. But before we can talk about Gusto Falco, it
is important to note a few things about the Gusto
theme. Gusto’s like to search our other Gusto’s from
the deck, Synchro summon, and can be part of a host
of hybrid themes. You can combine Gusto’s with
Psychic’s, Dark Simorgh, Dragunity, Anti-Meta, and
Mist Valley to name a few, as most Gusto’s are
Winged-Beast or Psychic Wind monsters.
Now on to today’s card. Gusto Falco. The first thing
we notice is how hard it is to get Falco’s effect
off. It has to be face-up on the field and be sent
to the graveyard as the last thing that happens to
get its effect. This means that being destroyed by
battle or used as a synchro material or used as a
cost for say Icarus Attack, will do you no good.
About the only good thing that Falco has going for
it is that it can be search and special summoned
with the effects of other Gusto monster.
If you did happen to get it’s effect off, then you
could special summon Kamui, Hope of Gusto and flip
summon it on your next turn to special summon a
Gusto Tuner from your deck. Who am I kidding? Fat
chance. This is not a Gusto monster that you will
likely put in any build of a Gusto deck. You will
probably not even see any build of Gusto’s topping
at an YCS.
Traditional: 1/5
Advanced: 1/5
Philosophical
Psycho
I'm not too familiar with the Gusto archetype,
but I have friends who've used it. It's a very, very
complex gamestyle; it focuses on monsters which rely
on being sent to the Graveyard and replenish
themselves from the deck (as you can see with
Falco's effect). They have two Xyzs and four
Synchros (these monsters are called Daigustos, and
dai means big). Their ultimate goal is to use these
tutor* monsters to constantly put up a solid defence.
They then use cards like Creature Swap to steal
their opponents' monsters while giving their own
limp, search monsters so they can attack them for
themselves. The main reason Gustos are an uncommon
Deck to use is that they have an easily-exploitable
weakness in that they rely on their monsters to be
destroyed, usually by battle, and they cannot meet
the speed of more offensive decks. They have a LOT
of cards with very similar albeit different effects,
which gives me a headache for those that are
unfamiliar with each one individually.
*Pojo Dictionary: tutor (tuˇtor \'tü-tər\ noun) -
any card that can search out another card out of the
deck, usu. a monster that, when destroyed by battle,
will Special Summon another monster
Example: Reinforcement of the Army can tutor any
Level 4 or lower Warrior.
That being said, Gasuta Faruko requires to be faceup,
which means setting it from your hand is not an
option. You'd have to Normal Summon it and Creature
Swap it, or Special Summon it straight from the deck
with the help of Gusto Gulldo or Kamui, Hope of
Gusto.
I do admit Falco is powerful in that in can summon
any Gusto from the Main Deck. You have the
flexibility in summoning any of the numerous
lower-Level monsters to continue the wallfest, or go
for one of the stronger ones. This includes Windaar,
Sage of Gusto, and especially Reeze, Whirlwind of
Gusto (Reeze's effect basically steals a monster
from your opponent every single turn). The problem
is that Falco will summon the monster facedown; you
can't activate your effects when facedown nor can
you Flip Summon it the same turn it is SSet, which
gives Falco a large reliance on having to be
destroyed on the opponent's turn (and if your choice
monster is something like Reeze and not another
tutor, you need to protect it for the rest of the
turn).
Not only must Falco be faceup, the method in which
it touches the Graveyard cannot have been a result
of battle. One fact that infuriates Gusto players is
that most of their tutor monsters are CAPABLE OF
MISSING THE TIMING. This means if you use Falco
(despite being a Tuner itself) for a Synchro Summon,
you are NOT allowed to use Falco's effect. If you
use Falco for a cost or to Tribute Summon Raiza the
Storm Monarch, you are NOT allowed to use Falco's
effect. The ONLY time you can EVER use Falco's
effect if it gets blown up by Dark Hole, Smashing
Ground, etc.
Trad: 1/5 (Gustos already have a hard time dealing
with mass-destruction cards in Adv)
Adv: 1.5/5 (I can barely justify running even a
single copy)
Aesthetics: 2/5 Almost all the Gusto monsters are
either Winged Beast or Psychic. The Winged Beasts
(like Falco) have pretty boring artwork. They also
all look almost alike, which makes it even harder to
keep track of which card does what. Most Gusto
monsters have wear armour with a symbol resembling
the Field Spell crest. The Gusto archetype (along
with a bunch of other "archetypes") was released
back in February under the Duel Terminal arcade game
(later on this week, I will give you the whole story
of the "other archetypes," or you can just read all
about them on Wikipedia without me...). There is a
type of cards named "Duel Terminal" that you can buy
for the Duel Terminal machine to scan and you can
use a virtual version of those cards. The physical
Duel Terminal cards are NOT allowed to be used in
official tournaments until the "real" versions get
released. The "real" Gusto Falco (along with many
others) will be in the pack Hidden Arsenal 6: Omega
Xyz, which will be available in stores tomorrow.
Riddle:
Forwards it is heavy.
Backwards is not.
I'll tell you come Friday.
Assuming you haven't Googled it like the rest of the
lot...
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