Card Game
Card of the Day
TCG Fan Tips
Top 10 Lists
Banned/Restricted List
Yu-Gi-Oh News
Tourney Reports
Duelist Interviews
Featured Writers
Baneful's Column
Anteaus on YGO
General Zorpa
Dark Paladin's Dimension
Retired Writers
Releases + Spoilers
Booster Sets (Original Series)
LOB |
MRD |
MRL |
PSV
LON |
LOD |
PGD |
MFC
DCR |
IOC |
AST |
SOD
RDS |
FET
Booster Sets (GX Series)
TLM |
CRV |
EEN |
SOI
EOJ |
POTD |
CDIP |
STON
FOTB |
TAEV |
GLAS |
PTDN
LODT
Booster Sets (5D Series)
TDGS |
CSOC |
CRMS |
RBGT
ANPR |
SOVR |
ABPF |
TSHD
STBL |
STOR |
EXVC
Booster Sets (Zexal Series)
GENF |
PHSW |
ORCS |
GAOV
REDU |
ABYR |
CBLZ |
LTGY
NUMH |
JOTL |
SHSP |
LVAL
PRIO
Starter Decks
Yugi |
Kaiba
Joey |
Pegasus
Yugi 2004 |
Kaiba 2004
GX: 2006 |
Jaden | Syrus
5D: 1 | 2 | Toolbox
Zexal: 2011 | 2012 | 2013
Yugi 2013 | Kaiba 2013
Structure Decks
Dragons Roar &
Zombie Madness
Blaze of Destruction &
Fury from the Deep
Warrior's Triumph
Spellcaster's Judgment
Lord of the Storm
Invincible Fortress
Dinosaurs Rage
Machine Revolt
Rise of Dragon Lords
Dark Emperor
Zombie World
Spellcaster Command
Warrior Strike
Machina Mayhem
Marik
Dragunity Legion
Lost Sanctuary
Underworld Gates
Samurai Warlord
Sea Emperor
Fire Kings
Saga of Blue-Eyes
Cyber Dragon
Promo Cards:
Promos Spoiler
Coll. Tins Spoiler
MP1 Spoiler
EP1 Spoiler
Tournament Packs:
TP1 /
TP2 /
TP3 /
TP4
TP5 /
TP6 /
TP7 /
TP8
Duelist Packs
Jaden |
Chazz
Jaden #2 | Zane
Aster | Jaden #3
Jesse | Yusei
Yugi | Yusei #2
Kaiba | Yusei #3
Crow
Reprint Sets
Dark Beginnings
1
| 2
Dark Revelations
1 |
2 |
3 | 4
Gold Series
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
Dark Legends
DLG1
Retro Pack
1 | 2
Champion Pack
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
5 | 6 | 7 | 8
Turbo Pack
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
5 | 6 | 7
Hidden Arsenal:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4
5 | 6 | 7
Checklists
Brawlermatrix 08
Evan T 08
X-Ref List
X-Ref List w/ Passcodes
Anime
Episode Guide
Character Bios
GX Character Bios
Video Games
Millennium Duels (2014)
Nighmare Troubadour (2005)
Destiny Board Traveler (2004)
Power of Chaos (2004)
Worldwide Edition (2003)
Dungeon Dice Monsters (2003)
Falsebound Kingdom (2003)
Eternal Duelist Soul (2002)
Forbidden Memories (2002)
Dark Duel Stories (2002)
Other
About Yu-Gi-Oh
Yu-Gi-Oh! Timeline
Pojo's YuGiOh Books
Apprentice Stuff
Life Point Calculators
DDM Starter Spoiler
DDM Dragonflame Spoiler
The DungeonMaster
Millennium Board Game
Magic
DBZ
Pokemon
Yu Yu Hakusho
NeoPets
HeroClix
Harry Potter
Anime
Vs. System
Megaman
This Space
For Rent
|
|
Pojo's Yu-Gi-Oh! Card of the Day
Daily Since 2002!
|
|
Raigeki
- #LOB 053 Destroy all monsters your opponent controls.
Card Ratings
Traditional: 3.40
Advanced:
3.60
Date Reviewed:
Oct. 8, 2014
Back to the main COTD
Page
|
Baneful |
Raigeki
We only reviewed this card once, all the way back in
2002.
http://www.pojo.com/yu-gi-oh/cotd/2002/May2002/5-30-02.shtml
It was given a 5/5 by everyone, on and off Pojo.
It was banned at around 2003, making it not
feasible to review.
But now it's legal at 1.
Which is totally fine by me.
If you check the forums, I totally called it
months ago.
:)
I've said many times that spell-based removal isn't
good, and Raigeki sure has a bunch of a new
weaknesses since it had been long resting in the
Forbidden list.
1) It's destruction based removal.
So many monsters today are immune to
destruction or they benefit from being destroyed.
You want to send monsters, return them to the
hand/deck and such, but not destroy them.
2) Decks have been getting solipsistic.
Most deck's engines contain destruction.
Why run a card for monster removal when you
can use a card to speed up your archetype so your
archetype cards can clear out threats for you?
3) Spell-based removal is slow.
Back then monsters didn't float like they did
now.
When you cleared out Jinzo and D.D. Warrior Lady,
you were actually taking out threats.
Now you're just destroying empty husks of
monsters that already used their effect.
Torrential Tribute > Raigeki.
Torrential stops monsters before they can use their
ignition effects and attack.
Raigeki does not do that.
Still a good card to side or for aggro/OTK, but it's
not the staple it used to be.
Ratings
Power -- 3
Versatility -- 3
Dependability -- 4
Advantage -- 4
Speed -- 2
Traditional – 2
Advanced – 3
|
T-REX |
Raigeki
Wow! I
truly did not expect to see this card return… Ever!
This has always been Dark Hole’s bigger and badder
brother, and once was considered to be in the group
of the most powerful cards in the game, sadly times
do change and as such it has allowed this card to
return, even though it could be considered to be a
questionable return.
While it is more powerful than Dark Hole, Dark Hole
itself is seeing less play even to the extent of not
even being included in many Decks, as a result I
would not expect to see Raigeki in every Deck
either. Although there will be an initial rush to
include it and try it out.
What it will see play in is Decks that require ways
to clear the opponent’s side of the field of
monsters, in which case, both Dark Hole and Raigeki
will be played alongside each other. And any Deck
that is OTK orientated, such as Hieratics I’d expect
to do this.
For those Decks that play Dark Hole, Raigeki may end
up being simply a straight swap, and for those that
are not playing it, because of it’s single sided
removal have more incentive to play it.
I’m not expecting this to make that much of an
impact, Dark Hole already isn’t.
Still expect to see this see quite a bit of play, at
least early on.
Traditional: 2. Clearing your opponents side of the
field while useful, doesn’t define this format.
Advanced: 3. It’ll have an average effect on the
game, hence an average score!
|
Leo
Kearon |
RaigekiNormal Spell
A surprise from the recent banlist is the return of
one of the game’s most powerful cards; Raigeki. Ever
since the banlist came into being this card has been
banned, however now it is back to one.
Raigeki’s effect is simply, it destroys all monsters
your opponent controls, no cost, no condition, just
the ability to destroy. This is what got Raigeki
onto the banlist in the first place. Of course the
question is; is one of the most powerful cards in
the game still a viable card to play.
On one hand, of course the ability to destroy all of
your opponent’s monsters with no cost is way too
good to ignore. Of course as with Dark Hole, the
game has changed. First of a lot of decks love
having monsters in the graveyard, so you could end
up helping your opponent. Also there are a lot of
monsters that benefit from going to the graveyard,
in the past when Raigeki was playable, the main
cards you had to be careful of where Sangan and
Witch of the Black Forest, now they are a lot more
monsters that have effects that activate when sent
to the graveyard via card effect; in fact there is a
whole archetype.
Also these days there are a lot more cards that stop
Raigeki: destruction negation effects, Destruction
Protection effects, card that are immune to
destruction and of course the legion of spell
negation cards. These all weaken Raigeki’s
effectiveness but it is a chance you will have to
take.
Overall, despite all the ways of fighting it, this
card is still extremely powerful but it is going to
need to be played a lot smarter.
Traditional: 3.75/5
Advanced: 3.75/5
|
Kingof
Lullaby |
Hello Pojo Fans,
Raigeki...the Thunderbolt from the heavens that
strikes down almost everything it comes in contact
with on your opponents side of the field. Destroying
all your opponents monsters regardless of position
while leaving yours intact is a step up from Dark
Hole. Draw it, play it when the time is right. Set
up an OTK with it, or clear your opponents field
right away and attack. There is rarely a negative to
playing this card. If your opponent has searchers
they will have to leave the field sometime. The only
negative to playing this card would be if you were
to top-deck this card when you need a monster, or if
its effect will somehow not work (Imperial Order in
Traditional and monsters immune to Spell cards).
Regardless of players saying they aren't playing
Torrential Tribute or Dark Hole, it's pretty hard
not to play this card. This article could've been
two words: PLAY THIS! “It's good against bad players
and bad against good players” was the dumbest thing
I've heard someone say in a long time in regards to
Raigeki. Play this. Swap out Torrential Tribute or
Dark Hole if you don't have a slot open, but play
this while you can.
Traditional-5/5
Advanced-5/5
Art-5/5
|
Rikothe
FoxKid
YouTube |
In October 2004, several cards were added to the
first ever Forbidden List. Four of these cards
(possibly more; sources differ on this fact) have
stayed on the list since then: Yata-Garasu, Harpie’s
Feather Duster, Raigeki, and Imperial Order.
This changed when what is probably the most shocking
(no pun intended) change of all on the October 2014
list occurred: Raigeki went from Forbidden to
Limited. This card has not seen competitive play in
ten years.
Raigeki needs absolutely no introduction: it is a
one-sided Dark Hole. It has all of the positive
aspects of Dark Hole (such as being able to mount a
comeback after an opposing swarm) with the added
benefit of also being able to be used when you’re
ahead to push further for game.
So, why is a card like this allowed to come back?
Well, look at Dark Hole: nobody uses it. Everything
in the current metagame floats: Shaddoll and Burning
Abyss get effects when they go to the Graveyard by
card effects, and Satellarknight gets a +1 on every
summon, making the destruction by Raigeki only a
minor concern. Is there even a point in running this
once broken card?
Well, I think so. At first glance, Raigeki is just a
glorified Dark Hole, but what sets it apart from the
latter is the fact that it is usable whether you are
winning or you are losing. Dark Hole doesn’t have
this benefit, as if you are winning you don’t want
to wipe out the board. But if you have Raigeki in
said situation you can use it to win faster.
Should the card have come back? I would argue no.
But it will be interesting to see how it plays out;
it’s not the monstrosity it was ten years ago, but I
certainly think the card will see some use.
Traditional: 4/5
Advanced: 4/5
|
|