The game of Yu-Gi-Oh! has had many different metas, Decks, and cards that have shaped the game's history. The game is over twenty years old and shows no signs of stopping. As such, many different Decks have risen above the rest to leave their marks on Yu-Gi-Oh! history.
There have been many playstyles and archetypes through the years, and some were by far the strongest Deck in their format. This list will be ranking the best Decks based on their peak in their respective format, rather than how they would all fare in the current metagame. From first-turn kills to completely locking your opponent out of the game, these Decks are the best that Yu-Gi-Oh! has ever seen.
Updated December 6, 2021, by Johnny Garcia: Yu-Gi-Oh! has seen a giant shake-up in the metagame since the release of Burst Of Destiny. Destiny HERO - Destroy Phoenix Enforcer is warping the way decks are built, taking even the powerful Red-Eyes Dark Dragoon out of the limelight. In addition to that, new Archetypes like Swordsoul and Floowandereeze have entered the metagame and have helped to make it as diverse as it's been in years. With paper Yu-Gi-Oh! so active, a new digital way to play is still on the horizon, with Master Duel still pending release. Master Duel will be one of the first official simulators that are dedicated to the TCG as opposed to being anime-focused.
15 Qliphort
Key Cards: Apoqli🙈phort Towers, Qliphort Scout, Qliphort Genu♍is
Qliphort was one of the few meta Pendulum-based Archetypes Yu-Gi-Oh! has introduced. During its time, Qliphort was such a good Deck due to how easy it cꦗould bring back its entire Field after i𒊎t was destroyed by Pendulum Summoning them back.
Its Boss Monster, Apoqliphort Towers was so infamously powerful that a Monster that's unaffected by card effects is referred to as a Towers. The recursion Qliphort had access to made it incredibly strong against other Decks at the time and was part of the reason many people had grown a hatred for the Pendulum mechanic.
Qliphort had originally fallen off after the banning of Apoqliphort Towers and limiting of Qliphort Scout and Saqlifice. However, Qliphort's restrictions have been completely taken away recently, and are able to be played at full power. While they are nerfed due to the changes to Pendulum Summoning, they are still a solid Rouge option.
14 Sky St🎐riker
Key Cards: Sky Striker Ace - Raye, Sky Striker Mobilize - Engage!, Sky Strik⛄er Ace - Kagari
Sky Striker immediately set its place in the meta upon its release, turning into one of the strongest Control Decks ever. Sky Striker only had one Main Deck Monster in Sky Striker Ace - Raye at release. The card was easily recycled any 💙time a Sky Striker Link Monster was taken off the Field, which could then be used to Link Summon again.
The Sky Striker Spell Cards have incredibly powerful effects, most notably Sky Striker Mobilize ♕- Engage which not only drew a card but searched out any Sky Striker card at the same time. Sky Striker has gotten new cards in Sky Striker Ace - Zeke and Sky Striker Ace - Roze to power up the Deck even more with their restricted cards freed off the banlist.
While Sky Strikers have fallen off recently due to better Control Decks coming up, it's more than likely Sky Striker will make a comeback once those leave the metagame. Sky Striker was the best Yu-Gi-Oh! Deck that focused on Spell cards to control the field, and due to how hard it is to interact with Spells, it's due for a metagame comeback.
13 ▨ Six Samurai
Key Cards: Legendary Six Samurai - Shi En, Gateway Of Th🐻e Six, Battle Shogun of the Si▨x Samurai
Six Samurai was an incredibly powerful Deck in its prime thanks to Gateway Of The Six. The Spell Card broke the Deck, being able to loop Six Samurai cards that could Special Summon themselves to get an 𝓰infinite amount of counters.
This allowed Six Samurai to set up just about any kind of Board they wanted to. Legendary Six Samurai - Shi En and Great Shogun Shien were both fantastic cards to shut down the opponent's Spell and Trap card usage. Six Samurai could flood the Field easily which made for absoluteꦍly devastating end boards.
The limiting of Gateway Of The Six killed the viability in the metagame, becoming too inconsistent to rely on. Luckily, its newer Link Monster Battle Shogun of the Six Samurai adds much-needed consistency by allowing you to search out Gateway from your Deck. While it hasn't reclaimed its metagame glory, with a new card Six Samurai has the potential to become one of the strongest Yu-Gi-Oh! Decks in the meta once more.
12 Burning Abysꦕs
Key Cards: Dante,❀ Traveler Of The Burning Abyss, Tour Guide From The Underworld, B𒈔eatrice, Lady Of The Eternal
Burning Abyss was a Deck that was released in the incredibly popular Duelist Alliance set. The Deck had incredible lasting power through the metagame, thanks to its powerful Monsters that could Special Summon themselves. Dante, Traveler Of The Burning Abyss is an incredibly strong card that dumped Burning Abyss cards into the Graveyard as a෴ Cost, meaning it was guaranteed to do so even if it was negated.
All Burning Abyss cards had powerful Graveyard effects, which could be triggered on the opponent's turn thanks to Beatrice, Lady Of The Eternal. Many cards in the Burning Abyss Archetype were put on different parts on the banlist due to how powerful it was.
Burning Abyss isn't at the top of the metagame like it was in its prime, however, it maintains a good Yu-Gi-Oh! deck that can stand on its own in the modern game. In recent banlists, all Burning Abyss Monsters except for Beatrice, Lady Of The Eternal have been unlimited, allowing it to be played at near full power.
11 Sp𒀰ellbooks
Key Cards: Spellbook Of Judgement,🃏 Spellbook Of Knowle🀅dge, Spellbook Of Secrets
Spellbooks were so strong, they were the single thing that prevented Dragon Rulers from being a Tier Zero Deck. This was thanks to Spellbook Of Judgement which provided the Deck with an insane amount of card advantage, being able to add multiple Spellꦰbook cards to the Hand.
The Deck utilized Jowgen The Spiritualist to completely lock the opponent out of Special Summoning while destroying all Special Summoned Monsters on the Field. Spellbooks were incredible at building up resources that were then used to dismantle the opponent's Field.
ܫThe banning of Spellbook Of Judgement would kill the dedicated Deck, though a Spellbook engine still sees play today. Namely, a small engine featuring Magician of Prophecy and Crowley, the First Propheseer in order to thin out your deck and draw ಌcards.
10 Monarchs
Key Cards: The Monarchs Stormforth, Pantheism Of The Monar𓆉chs,𝕴 Eidos The Underworld Squire
The winning Deck from the 2007 World Championship, Monarchs was when Yu-Gi-Oh! started to make the shift from a mix-mash of cards to focusing on Monsters apart of Archetypes (meaning they share a💞 theme, as well as a naming convention). Monarchs were all about tribute summoning which would then allow them to use their powerfu🍰l effects when they were summoned.
Monarch Decks utilized cards that could special summon themselves, such as Treeborn Frog and Cyber Dragon to then use 📖their normal summon for the tri🤪bute of a Monarch card. It was one of the first Archetypes in all of Yu-Gi-Oh, and for good reason. It was the best Yu-Gi-Oh! Archetype at the time and remains one of the most powerful Decks for its meta.
Monarchs dominated the early days of Yu-Gi-Oh! However, they've become far too slow to be a consistent threat, despite their banned cards becoming fully restricted. Their effects are still solid, but tribute summoning is not something a Deck can handle as their main gimmick anymore.
9 Shaddoll
Key Cards: El Sh♏ꦛaddoll Winda, Shaddoll Fusion, Shaddoll Hedgehog
The Duelist Alliance set of Yu-Gi-Oh! was a game-changer in 2014, and Shaddoll Decks were at the forefront. The Deck had access to two of the most powerful Fusion cards in the game in the way of Shaddoll Fusion and Super Polymerization. Shaddo𝐆ll Fusion alღlows its user to use materials from the Deck if the opponent had a Monster special summoned from the Extra Deck (which is very common). Super Polymerization fuses from either side of the field, and no card in the game can react to it.
El Shaddoll Construct and El Shaddoll Winda are both incredibly powerful Fusion Monsters, both of which can be easily made. Shaddoll still sees play even to this day, with recent support in the Shaddoll Showdown 🃏Structure Deck with the Invoked engine.
Shaddoll cards had a history bouncing on and off the banlist, with all of them now unlimited. They offer a ton of consistency, and thanks to how splashable they are as an engine, they are one of the best Yu-Gi-Oh! archetypes. They can handle their own in the current meta, and while cu꧒rrently Rouge, can just as easily become fully meta once again.
8 Frog FTK
Key Cards: Substitoad, Mass Driver, Ronintoadin
Frog FTK was one of the most consistent FTKs in all of Yu-Gi-Oh! An FTK (first turn kill) is a Deck that defeats the opponent before they have a chance to play (hence the name). Substitoad and Ronintoadin made it incredibly easy to loop Frog cards to get them onto the field. Once there, cards like Mass Driver were used to do Burn damage to your opponent's Life Points until they had no more.
Hand Traps weren't quite in the game either, making the FTK near impossible to stop. While Frogs themselves still see some play with Paleozoic cards, the FTK version would be taken out of the game with the banning of Substitoad and Mass Driver.
Due to how uninteractive FTKs are, they were incrediblꦍy powerful, which is why the Frog FTK was one of the best Yu-Gi-Oh! Decks ever releas🐼ed. The likelihood of either Substitoad or Mass Driver getting unbanned is zero, as the Frog FTK would dominate even in the much faster metagame.
7 Nekroz
Key Cards: N☂ekroz of Brionac, Shurit, Strategist of the Nekroz, Nekroz Kaleidoscope
Nekroz is without a doubt the most powerful Ritual Deck in all of Yu-Gi-Oh, and dominated the early ✨2015 metagame. Unlike many Ritual cards before it, Nekroz had effects that could be activated by discarding them to search for other key pieces to the strategy while still being amazing cards if they were ritual summoned.
They also had Shurit, Strategist Of The Nekroz, which could be used for the entire material needed for a ritual summon, as well as add a Warrior-Type Nekroz card to the hand when used this way. It also made use of the incredibly powerful Djinn Releaser Of Rituals which if used for a ritual s𒊎ummon, the opponent could not special summon Monsters as long as the Monster ritual summoned when Djinn was on the field.
Many Nekroz cards found themselves on the banlist which is why the Deck fell off in the first place. With the exception of Djinn Releaser Of Rituals, every other Nekroz card has become unlimit🌜ed. It remains a Rouge deck, but a good Yu-Gi-Oh! deck for the metagame. It can🐬 still shut down entire strategies with its Floodgate-like effects.
6 Yata Lock
Key Cards: Yata-Garasu, Chaos Emperor Dragon - Envoy Of The End, Sang𒁃an/Witch Of The Black Forest
Yata Lock was one of the earliest decks in the game and is also directly responsible for the introduction of the Yu-Gi-Oh! banlist (before cards were only limited). It was focused around Yata-Garasu and Chaos Emperor Dragon - Envoy Of The End" The Yata Lock was obtained by having Chaos Emperor Dragon and either Sangan or Witch Of The Black Forest on the field. Chaos Emperor Dragon would activate its effect, which sends all cards on the field and both players' hands to the graveyard. This would trigger the floating effects Sangan or Witch Of The Black Forst to add Yata-Garasu to the hand. The player would then attack directly with Yata-Garasu, forcing the opponent to skip their next Draw Phase.
This meant that the victim of the Yata Lock would be unable to draw and have no cards in their hand to play with. 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Yata-Garasu woulওd continue being summoned and attacking to keep the lock going. These lead to Yata-Garasu being 🍨banned and still is to this day.
The Yata Lock Deck died with the banning of its namesake. The cards that were used all received erratas making it impossible to perform in the way it once did. Even if all the cards were unbanned, it's still too slow to compete in the current meta. However, it's not to be understated just how phenomenal the Deck was and is by far one of the strongest Yu-Gi-Oh! Decks to ever be in the spotlight.