Dark
Paladin |
Monday
Welcome to a Noble week, brought to you by
Philosophical Psycho. Dark Paladin made a
funny...two actually. Noble Knight Gwalchavad, has a
long winded name, a mediocre (at best) effect, and
is dependent on Noble Arms Magic cards to even
function with an effect. This is common mostly
outside of Noble/Heroic XYZ Monsters, which you can
use perfectly well in Warrior and other Decks
without even having to use a Deck of Noble/Heroic.
They're easier to use than Guardian Monsters, and
most Gemini Monsters, but they function more or less
the same. Light and Warrior is good, Level 4 is too,
1500 attack is not, 1800 defense isn't bad though.
But again, his effect is dependent on an Equip Magic
card, and it's not ever that good. Target a Noble
Knight in your Graveyard and add it to your Hand.
But you have to destroy a Noble Arms Equip card to
do so. Seems pretty counter productive, even as easy
to recycle those cards as it is.
Ratings:
Traditional: 1.25/5
Advanced: 2.25/5
Art: 4.5/5 Most of the Noble Knights have
bitching artwork
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John Rocha |
This week we will be looking at the Noble Knight
or Knights of the Round Table archetype. We start
the week off with Sir Galahad or Noble Knight
Gwalchavad. The basic idea of these knights is to
give them a sward so they can slay their opponents.
By attaching a sward or Noble Arms, you will trigger
the effect of the knight and gain the effect of the
sward. Noble Knight Gwalchavad has the effect to add
a Noble Knight from your grave to your hand.
So let’s take a look at some of the plays we can
make with Noble Knight Gwalchavad. First summon
Noble Knight Medraut, attach a Noble Arms to it and
use its effect to special summon Gwalchavad from
your deck. The Noble Arms card will be destroyed and
you can then attach it to Gwalchavad. Then use
Gwalchavad’s effect to bring Noble Knight Gawayn to
you hand from the grave and then special summon
Gawayn. That gives you 3 level 4 monsters to Xyz
summon Shock Master with. Noble Knights also give
you the option of summoning strong Warrior and Light
Xyz monsters like Constellar Omega, Blade Armor
Ninja, Starliege Paladynamo, and the Heroic
Champions.
I built and play tested a Noble Knight deck and I
am here to tell you that it can not compete with
competitive decks. It has a bunch of nice tricks but
it is too slow and dependant and runs out of
resources fast. If you are going to run this deck,
you will need Noble Knight Gwalchavad and a will to
just have fun.
Traditional: 1/5
Advanced: 2/5
|
Philosophical
Psycho |
Noble Knight monsters (not counting Joan) are
based off one of the Knights of the Round Table, and
all of the currently released Noble Arms are meant
to be their swords (thankfully you can equip them to
any Noble Knight you want; if you could only equip
them to the same Knight, that would be horrible!).
They tend to have effects that let them become
Normal monsters or to benefit other monsters, and
have effects that can destroy Spell/Trap Cards,
including their own Equip Cards which will let you
re-equip them to someone else.
I’ll start with stats. 1500/1800 is pretty decent,
especially as a defender. He’s a good set in any
situation where you can’t attack (including when
summoned via Medraut), but if you’re in that sort of
situation and it’s not the first turn, it’s not that
great a sign. Most ideally, whether you can attack
or not, Noble Knights should be performing Xyz
Summons consistently (unless you were really unlucky
and can’t draw any Noble Arms), so his stats don’t
matter much at all. I’m not complaining, but he
really would be better if he had 1800 ATK.
Effect time: If Gwalchavad’s got a Noble Arms on
him, you can add any Noble Knight from your
Graveyard to hand once per turn. The part where he
destroys his Noble Arms is a benefit, since all
Noble Arms regenerate after being destroyed, so
he’ll get it back (or any other Noble Knight you
control, if you so choose) and if the Noble Arms has
a once-per-turn effect, you get to use it again
(although it is a bit annoying how you can’t have
out multiples of the same Noble Arms). A lot of
Noble Knights get effects once they get a Noble Arms
though, and the idea is that after Gwalchavad uses
his effect, he just passes it around so that
everyone can get high off it too. Hopefully you got
good card advantage after activating so many effects
and then you can Xyz Summon. Due to this utility,
you should also consider running a Foolish Burial.
Marauding Captain is one of the most iconic Yu-Gi-Oh
Warriors. He’s definitely not the most famous (all
the Normal E-HEROes and Utopia probably fit that
slot due to anime appearances) and even among all
Level 4 or lower Warriors he’s far from best. So why
do I bring up the old Captain? It’s because you see
him on the picture on a lot of simplistic support
cards for Warriors, most prominently Reinforcement
of the Army and The Warrior Returning Alive. They
add to your hand. respectively, a Level 4 or lower
Warrior from your Deck or ANY Warrior from your
Graveyard. However, RotA is considered one of the
best support cards of all time. Why? Your Deck is a
much bigger resource to collect from than from your
Grave (especially near the beginning of the game)
and also thins your Deck, while Returning Alive
gives you a Warrior you already lost, which can
usually be just summoned straight-out with Monster
Reborn of Call of the Haunted. Gwalchavad suffers
from such a complex; you either need to use the
monster he got for you right away or have it
conserved for next turn and Xyz Summon using
monsters you have right away. Otherwise, you lose a
lot of speed because while Gwalchavad can fend off
most other Level 4 monsters, he will get stomped by
an enemy Synchro or Xyz unless he’s protect by Noble
Arms of Destiny. This is why Medraut is so
significant even in an unpopular Deck such as Noble,
because he summons out of the Deck, but Gwalchavad
is still extremely flexible and you should pack a
couple of both in the Noble Deck, (just be wary of
these weaknesses).
Trad: 1.2/5 (I don’t think Noble Knights can
function at all and Gwalchavad will just slow it
down, but I guess if you really REALLY need more
Light Noble Knights…)
Adv: 3/5 (I would not use three copies and two is
kinda pushing it, but I admit he does add to card
advantage…kind of a good balance of reliability and
magnitude when compared to The Warrior Returning
Alive and Beckoning Light)
Aesthetics: 4/5 Gwalchavad is the wielder of Noble
Arms of Destiny. He is based off of Sir Galahad, the
son of Lancelot and Elaine of Corbenic. Unlike his
father, he was famous for being the only Knight that
was completely pure of heart, and was said to
represent Jesus himself. The magician Merlin
prophesized he will attain great success. Galahad
takes upon the quest for the Holy Grail, a mission
in which no other had survived. King Arthur walks
Galahad out to the river to a stone. The stone has a
sword in it and on the stone is written, “Never
shall man take me hence but only he by whose side I
ought to hang; and he shall be the best knight in
the world.” Galahad takes the sword effortlessly and
King Arthur recognizes him as the greatest knight
ever. Galahad then sets off on the search for the
Holy Grail, the cup that allegedly caught Jesus’
blood as he was dying. He ultimately finds it as he
visited another king who showed it to him, and
Galahad is instructed to deliver it to another holy
city. He makes the wish that he can die at any time
he chooses. While sailing home, he sees the saint
Joseph of Arimathea, who helped bury Jesus. He is
content with his life, and after telling his friends
good-bye, he lets angels take him up to heaven. In
the poem Le Morte d’Arthur written by Thomas Malory,
it is said he was the last knight to ever hold the
Holy Grail. What makes me really disappointed was
that Galahad’s shield was known for having a big red
cross and you can barely see it on Gwalchavad.
Philosophy Corner: None for this week, sorry.
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