While 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Yu-Gi-Oh! has gained global popularity as a children's card game, it's worth remembering that the cards themselves aren't just cardboard and plastic. The power of old gods and vengeful spirits is imbued in Yu-Gi-Oh! cards. These creatures, called Duel Spirits, exist at the core of every Monster card.

Related: The Rarest Yu-Gi-Oh! Cards And What They're Worth

A Monster card is intimately tied to the Duel Spirit it depicts. Each spinoff provides different explanations for these spirits' relationship to their cards. Some spirits are even manmade, born in the creation of the card itself. Yu-Gi-Oh! cards are haunted — this list will walk you through some of the game's most frightening cards and their chilling implications.

10 Gimmick Puppet Ter🃏ror Baby

Gimmick Puppet Terror Baby, the terrifying toddler in a stroller made of ball-jointed legs.

Gimmick Puppets are one of the m♋ost disturbing archetypes in Yu-Gi-Oh! — they embody the inhuman fear factor of ball-jointed dolls. With its stroller made of teeth and dismembered doll legs and stitched-up toddler face, Terror Baby is, well... terrifying!

In Yu-Gi-Oh! Zexal, Gimmick Puppets are used by a character named IV (Four). As a professional duelist, IV presents himself as affable to his adoring fans. In private, IV's true nature crawls out from behind the porcelain mask: he is a deeply unhinged person who will stop at nothing to succeed. Gimmick Puppets represent his two-faced nature — they also more literally represent IV's relationship with his father, in which IV feels he is being used like a puppet on a string.

9 Forbidden Art Of The Gishki ಞ

Card artwork for Forbidden Art of the Gishki in Yu-Gi-Oh!, depicting a half-woman half-fish hybrid with wild crimson hair.

In the torchlit halls of a faraway kingdom, court mages carry out rituals that fuse humans with 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:aquatic beings. Gishki ꦓis an archetype that derives its creepiness not only from𓄧 its premise, but also from the mechanical act of playing the deck. When you play each Spell card, you — the player — are forcing these rituals to take place. If you want to win, the deck demands sacrifices.

Forbidden Art of the Gishki is one such Spell card that players can activate. It depicts a red-haired woman, ဣthe princess, with fish-like eyes and ﷽teeth in the midst of her transformation from an ordinary mortal to a sinister, flesh bound fish-hybrid.

8 ♉ Orcust Knightmare

Card artwork for Orcust Knightmare, a frightening chimera of robotic and ball-jointed limbs.

Orcust Knightmare is part of the 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:World Legacy lore, a series of stories from 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Yu-Gi-Oh! Master Duel that takes place in the🐭 world of Duel Spirits. One of these stories follows a girl named Ib, who is possessed by an evil spirit named Lee. This spirit is hellbent on destroying the universe, and Ib would rather die than let it succeed. And so she does — Ib takes her own life to prevent certain doom.

Related: 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Th♉e Best Orcust Cards In Yu-Gi-Oh! Master Duel

Ib's brother, Ningirsu, cannot process the tragedy of his sister's death. He becomes desperate in his grief, and builds a mechanical doll to house Ib's departed soul (Galtea, The Orcust Automaton). Once Galtea is complete, he attempts to fuse Ib's corpse with it. What he doesn't anticipate is Lee's soul taking over the automaton instead of his sister's, creating Orcust Knightmare. It's an impressive conglomeration of horrifying ideas: the mangled corpse of a dead girl patched together with a massive robot, then possessed by a bloodthirsty ghost. Yikes!

7 🅷 Infernity Doom Dragon 𒊎

The terrifying Zombie monster, Infernity Doom Dragon, with its brains exposed and its tattered black wings spread wide.

168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Kazuki Takahashi himself once said that "anything can be a dragon" so long as it has the basic structure of one. Infernity Doom Dragon is thereby a dragon, if you're being charitable. This monster is what you'd get if a tyrannosaurus rex and a stag beetle were fused, coated in charcoal, and then had its head smashed open to reveal gushing pink brains. Its prickly black tail looks like a rotting durian, and let's be honest, it probably smells just as bad, too.

Infernity Doom Dragon is also Kiryu Kyosuke's Ace Monster in Yu-Gi-Oh! 5D's. Kiryu is a man haunted by death, paranoia, and remorse, earning him the nickname "Grim Reaper." Still, he finds eventual peace and rebirth. Infernity represents Kiryu's journey as someone who experienced great pain but always returns from even the darkest grave.

6 ﷽ ꦓ Dark Necrofear

Dark Necrofear, a blue demon holding a baby doll with a shattered skull.

Yami Bakura's Occult deck haunted the dreams of many a child when the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters anime aired. Dark Necrofear in particular is pretty scary — clutching a doll with a shattered skull, you might imagine Dark Necrofear as a demonic spirit mourning the loss of a child.

Yami Bakura is a reincarnation of both the dark god Zorc and Thief King Bakura, seeking vengeance for crimes against his people in the crea𒁃tion of the Millennium Items. His focus on Fiend and Zombie-type monsters makes perfect sense; he haunts those who wronged him even 4,000 years later, and will never let them forget it.

5 Frigh♛tfur Leo

Card artwork for Frightfur Leo, a grotesque lion plush doll ripped apart by saw blades.

Frightfurs are a toy maker's nightmare: cute plush dolls torn apart and refitted with scissors, chains, and sawblades. A Frightfur is born when an ordinary Fluffal (an archetype of cute stuffed animals) is used as Fusion Material alongside a scarier creature, such as Edge-Imp Saw. Leo in particular has the most unsettling combination of these traits; it's hard to imagine what he once looked like as an ordinary Fluffal monster, but just enough of his former self remains to be extremely creepy.

Related: Yu-Gi-O🃏h!: Cutest-Looking Archetypes That Are Surprisingly Strong

Perhaps more harrowing is what these cards mean in relati♏on to Sora from Yu-Gi-Oh! Arc-V. Sora was raised as a child soldier — combining th🌠e childlike softness of stuffed animals with bloody surgical tools paints a very grim picture of his childhood.

4 🦩 Amorphage Lysis

A metal dragon fused with a wolf melts away and reveals its own skeleton in the trap card artwork for Amorphage Lysis.

Amorphages are dragons fused with other living creatures in horrific experiments that would give bioethics teachers nightmares. The artwork for Trap card Amorphage Lysis depicts it best: a dragon fused with what appears to be a canine creature of some🍨 kind is shown 🍬with its face melting away, revealing the bone underneath.

While creating these beasts, perhaps the scientists were too preoccupied with whether or not they could that they neglected to consider whether or not they should.

3 ꧃ El-Shadoll Constru💦ct

El-Shadoll Construct, a terrifying ball-jointed mechanical doll with the power to corrupt the minds of other monsters.

An entꦡity called the Shadoll Core exists in the heart of a warzone between varying tribes of Duel Spirits. Upon contact with the Core, monsters are duplicated into puppet-like copies, becoming subsumed into the Shadoll archetype.

The horror of Shadolls is in the corruption of an ordinary monster's image into a fractured facsimile of what they once were. The puppets are an uncanny valley to its furthest extreme: looking at monsters like Gusto Falco, you can see where their once organic bodies have been twisted into more mechanical abstractions. In Gusto's case, Shadoll Falcon is eerily similar to him, but the friendliness seems to have vanished from his eyes.

2 Skull-Dog Ma🔜r♊ron

Skull Dog Marron, a card depicting a skeleton-dog surrounded by an ominous blue aura.

Remember Outstanding Dog Marron? This is him nไow... feel old yet?

Yu-Gi-Oh! is a series where the dog does, in fact, die. However, Marron's journey from a missing pup in Where Arf Thou? to the Wight family's beloved pet is surprisingly heartwarming. Though Marron is never reunited with his owner in the land of the living, he seems quite happy living with the skeletal Wights in the card artwork for Monster Rebone. They say all dogs go to heaven, and a world full of bones for the chewing sounds about right!

1 Worm Zero

A massive egg full of writhing alien worms descends upon a city in the card artwork for Worm Zero.

The Worm archetype is about worm-like aliens coming to Earth after the death of their queen. Their only goal is to consume, tearing apart cities and burrowing into the oceans. The terror in Worm Zero specifically is that it depicts a massive, swollen egg that signals the coming of the Worms; this egg can also reconstruct itself with hardened sludge harvested from the corpses of Worms who died in battle with Earth's denizens.

Imagine standing on the sidewalk when a massive shadow engulfs your city — it's like the moon has dropped from the sky, hovering above a frightened crowd. The egg cracks; writhing bodies bulge from inside the cocoon of filth. At that moment, you realize this is only the beginning.

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