Digimon card games

Digimon card games

The logo of the Digimon Card Game
Publisher(s) Bandai
Players 2
Skill(s) required Card playing
Arithmetic
Basic Reading Ability

The Digimon series has had a number of popular collectible card games, the first of which was introduced in Japan in 1997. They are all published by Bandai.

Contents

General concepts

Battle type

Similar to the Digimon fiction, the cards are sorted into a set of three "Battle Types", usually analogous to virus, data and vaccine types. The three types work in a Rock, Paper, Scissors system where virus beats data, data beats vaccine and vaccine beats virus. The main tactical element of the game is deciding which type to digivolve your cards into.

Digimon families

Digimon families are the different classifications that Digimon belonging to the Digimon CCG are placed into. Digimon can belong to more than one grouping, and these groupings have little actual bearing on gameplay. Each different family has its own special background featured on the backgrounds of cards from the old CCG.

The different Digimon families are as follows:

Not all Digimon belong to a single family. Most actually do not. In many instances, different cards list a given Digimon in different families.

Problems

Bandai of America decided to cancel the Digimon Card Game indefinitely, outside of Japan, for lack of interest. But the Japanese card quality is often more standard than America version. Some cards in America also had the wrong name, such as Ebonwumon's card printed as Zhuqiaomon, and vice-versa.

There have been many card games in Japan, the most recent being the Alpha Evolve and the Data Carddass, which had cards similar to the Alpha Evolve, but which could be played and obtained in Battle Terminals in Japanese Arcades. These terminals were fighting game arcade machine compatible with the cards and the Digimon iC, a virtual pet released in Japan. A cheaper and less sophisticated version of the v-pet, called Digimon Data Link, was released in the United States.

References

External links