Seto Kaiba: Difference between revisions
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== Notable Dueling Cards == |
== Notable Dueling Cards == |
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Although Kaiba's best known cards are his three ''[[Blue-Eyes White Dragon]]s'' and the fusion monster formed from the three dragons, the ''[[Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon]]'', other Duel Monsters Cards have been utilized in his deck. Kaiba appears to favor the Beatdown type of strategy, meaning |
Although Kaiba's best known cards are his three signature ''[[Blue-Eyes White Dragon]]s'' and the fusion monster formed from the three dragons, the ''[[Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon]]'', other Duel Monsters Cards have been utilized in his deck. Kaiba appears to favor the Beatdown type of strategy, meaning that he focuses on cards and monsters that completely overpower his opponents. His deck has often been referred to as a "Power Deck," and in the earier episodes, most of the cards in his deck are high attack power monsters. As the series goes on, his deck evloves to showcase many bizarre yet effective stratgies. From [[Battle City]] onward, his deck mostly is dominated with high attack power dragon-type monsters, although a handful of his original cards make appearances. His deck also includes many support cards for his Blue Eyes-White Dragons (Such as Lord of Dragons, Flute of the Summoning Dragon and Paladin of White Dragon), making summoning them an easy task. Towards the end of the series and in the second Yu-Gi-Oh! movie, his deck becomes more focused on removing his monsters to the out-of-play zone and then returning them to the field to overwhelm his oppenents, but throughout he remains consistant with his Beatdown strategy. |
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===Monster Cards=== |
===Monster Cards=== |
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* Versago the Destroyer |
* Versago the Destroyer |
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* Pitch-Dark Dragon |
* Pitch-Dark Dragon |
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* Doom Virus Dragon(only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
* Doom Virus Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
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* Tyrant Burst Dragon(only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
* Tyrant Burst Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
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* Blue Eyes Tyrant Dragon(only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
* Blue Eyes Tyrant Dragon( only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
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* Mirror Force Dragon(only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
* Mirror Force Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons') |
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* Clone Dragon |
* Clone Dragon |
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* Cave Dragon |
* Cave Dragon |
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===Magic Cards=== |
===Magic Cards=== |
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* Fang of Critias(only in the 'Waking the Dragons' season) |
* Fang of Critias (only in the 'Waking the Dragons' season) |
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* Negative Energy Generator |
* Negative Energy Generator |
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* Polymerization |
* Polymerization |
Revision as of 13:37, 23 January 2006
Seto Kaiba (海馬 瀬人 Kaiba Seto), in the manga and anime series Yu-Gi-Oh!, is the main rival of Yugi Mutou (Yugi Muto in the English anime) in the trading card game Duel Monsters (originally Magic and Wizards). In the English Yu-Gi-Oh! Eternal Duelist's Soul video game, Kaiba's name is given in surname first order, and rendered Kaiba Seto. In all versions of Yu-Gi-Oh!, Kaiba is called by his family name, Kaiba, by most of the characters.
Kaiba is the majority shareholder and President of his own multi-national company, KaibaCorp. Arrogant, single-minded, and self-centered, Kaiba aims to become the world's greatest duelist; to do so he must defeat Yugi, who to his humiliation, defeats him numerous times.
One of Seto's recurring traits is his absolute refusal to believe in the powers of magic often used in the series; he convinces himself where necessary that it is all tricks and illusion. This is often very exaggerated in the English version of the anime; later on during sagas like Waking the Dragons, he openly admits to believing in all the supernatural events occuring around him instead of just ignorantly saying they don't exist as he does in the English anime. He also has a certain contempt for Yugi's group of friends: he refers to them constantly with derisive nicknames such as, in the English anime, "the dweeb patrol".
In the first series anime, Kaiba has neon green hair and orange eyes, while in the manga, Toei's Yu-Gi-Oh! movie, and the second series, Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, Kaiba has brown hair and blue eyes. The first series, by Toei, has not as of yet been translated into English and therefore not shown on TV in English-speaking nations.
In the original Japanese version of Yu-Gi-Oh!, Kaiba omits honorifics and has a "rude" pattern of speech. Kaiba uses the word ore to mean "I" instead of the usual boku; ore is a boastful way to say "I" in Japanese. (See Wikibooks:Japanese:Pronouns) Kaiba usually calls Katsuya Jonouchi (Joey Wheeler) names, such as bonkotsu (mediocre), make inu (pathetic dog, loser), and zako (small fry, weakling). This name calling was carried over to the English anime.
Certain cards that come into Kaiba's possession play a significant role in the series. Kaiba acquires 3 of the 4 Blue-Eyes White Dragons in the world (the fourth belonging to Sugoroku Mutou (Solomon Muto in the English anime), which Kaiba later destroys). Later, in the Battle City Tournament, he is given the Egyptian God Card, called The God of the Obelisk in the English manga, and Obelisk the Tormentor in the English anime (the card is known in Japan as Obelisk no Kyoshinhei).
In the manga, the four Blue-Eyes White Dragon cards were possessed by an American, a German, a Hong Konger, and Sugoroku Mutou (Solomon Moto in the English anime) of Japan, Yugi's grandfather. Kaiba took the cards belonging to the former three using force: by either forcing the person into bankruptcy, by making deals with the mafia, or by forcing the person to commit suicide.
In the case of the fourth, Kaiba replaces the actual card with a copy after he asks Yugi to see it again. Yugi figures out that the card he received is a counterfeit, and Kaiba whacks him with his metal briefcase upon finding out that Yugi isn't fooled by the copy. Dark Yugi wins a game of Duel Monsters and places a penalty game on Seto, causing Seto to feel the sensation of dying while he isn't really dying; Yugi gives his grandfather the real card back. Several chapters later, Kaiba kidnaps Mr. Mutou and forced him into a duel. When Sugoroku Mutou loses, Kaiba tears up the fourth card and forces him into a virtual reality torture. Sugoroku Mutou barely survives. Yugi agreed to go through the theme park of death, Death-T. Dark Yugi (Yami Yugi) later duels Seto and wins. In revenge, Yugi places a penalty game on Kaiba, destroying the part of his heart with evil in it. The first and second series anime have similar plots at Death T. Death-T has many traps that are meant to kill Yugi, his friends, and a stubborn baby named Johji; the traps included a serial killer known as the Chopman, giant falling cubes, tazers and toy guns (which were actually real stun guns with 100,000 volts) and virtual-simulated replicas of Dark Yugi's penalty games, where the loser would die, as the pro-Kaiba audience cheered and Yugi's friends were held at gunpoint.
The first series has Jonouchi and Honda beaten up by Kaiba's suits when the two figure out that the card is a fake, and Kaiba manages to pull a draw against Dark Yugi instead of a loss, yet he still throws a fit over the draw. Kaiba then orders the four Gamemasters, Ledolly Sheldal, Ryuichi Fuha, Ailean Rao, and Daimon to defeat Dark Yugi, but they all fail, prompting Kaiba to activate the Death-T plans.
At a young age, Kaiba and his younger brother Mokuba were orphaned (their original surnames are unknown). Seto's mother died after Mokuba was born, and their father died in an accident when Seto was eight. Their relatives used up their inheritance and left them at the orphanage. When the former head of KaibaCorp, Gozaburo Kaiba, arrived at the orphanage to perform a publicity stunt, Kaiba saw the chance to challenge him to a game of chess, with Gozaburo forced to adopt Seto and Mokuba should he win. The different versions of the story differ on Seto's age: the manga and Japanese animated series states that Seto was ten years old, while the English animated series states that Seto was twelve.
Seto had won by studying Gozaburo's chess methods(cheating in the manga). But Gozaburo forced Seto into a rigorous accelerated school program, forcing him to study several subjects, including economics, social studies, foreign languages, and game strategy. Six years later, Seto Kaiba took over his step-father's company by gaining the 51% that he needed to be in control. In the manga, Gozaburo, provoked by Seto taking over and becoming CEO, committed suicide by jumping out of his office window. Gozaburo's death occurred six months before Seto dueled Sugoroku Mutou.
In the first series, Seto electrocutes Gozaburo after Seto takes over the company.
Kaiba's Past Life
Kaiba's given name, Seto, is the Japanese phonetic equivalent of the ancient Egyptian deity Set, the god of chaos, war and storms in Egyptian mythology. That is for whom he is named. Kaiba is the reincarnation of Priest Seto (a.k.a. Set), the ancient Egyptian Priest from the reign of the Pharaoh Atem (Dark Yugi a.k.a. Yami Yugi or Yu-Gi-Oh or Yami). In his past life, Seto loved Kisara, a girl with the legendary Blue Eyes White Dragon as a Ka, who died due to his father sealing her Ka into a stone tablet. This explains his fascination with the Blue Eyes in the present.
Kaiba in the second series anime
In the second series anime, previous to Seto's control, KaibaCorp was a company specializing in the manufacture of weapons of mass destruction, but when Seto took control of KaibaCorp, he converted it into a company that manufactured game equipment. One of Kaiba's dreams was to build an amusement park for orphaned and underprivileged children called KaibaLand. At the start of the series, only one KaibaLand had been built, in Domino (in the English anime, none of the parks had been built, and KaibaLand was touted as the KaibaCorp headquarters).
Among one of the recurring plots in Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters is Seto Kaiba being forced to deal with either people adversely affected by Gozaburo Kaiba's actions wanting to take their revenge on Seto Kaiba, or people from within KaibaCorp attempting to take over the corporation.
Kaiba's past in the second series anime
In the second series, Kaiba was bright and intelligent, which led to many prospective parents wanting to adopt him, Kaiba swore to protect his brother at all costs, and wanted Mokuba adopted with him, which all had refused. Gozaburo also had an ulterior motive: he wanted to adopt Seto because he was bright enough to be motivation for his own son, Noah Kaiba, to do better so that Noah could inherit KaibaCorp. With Noah's untimely death (his mind was placed into a virtual world), however, Gozaburo focused his energies to Seto Kaiba. On Seto's birthday, he was given a 2% share of KaibaCorp (in the English anime, ten million dollars) and was told that although he could spend the money any way he wished, he must return one hundred times (in the English anime, ten times) the amount in one year. Not only did Seto accomplish this feat, but he did so in one day, and such ruthless business skills led to Kaiba's takeover of his father's company. Gozaburo tried to use Mokuba but that plan went down the drain too due to Mokuba's loyalty to his brother. Gozaburo gave up on life and succumbed to death, but not before he downloaded his mind into Noah's virtual world. In the manga, Gozaburo committed suicide. In the English Duel Monsters anime, Gozaburo ran away and was never heard from again.
Notable Dueling Cards
Although Kaiba's best known cards are his three signature Blue-Eyes White Dragons and the fusion monster formed from the three dragons, the Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon, other Duel Monsters Cards have been utilized in his deck. Kaiba appears to favor the Beatdown type of strategy, meaning that he focuses on cards and monsters that completely overpower his opponents. His deck has often been referred to as a "Power Deck," and in the earier episodes, most of the cards in his deck are high attack power monsters. As the series goes on, his deck evloves to showcase many bizarre yet effective stratgies. From Battle City onward, his deck mostly is dominated with high attack power dragon-type monsters, although a handful of his original cards make appearances. His deck also includes many support cards for his Blue Eyes-White Dragons (Such as Lord of Dragons, Flute of the Summoning Dragon and Paladin of White Dragon), making summoning them an easy task. Towards the end of the series and in the second Yu-Gi-Oh! movie, his deck becomes more focused on removing his monsters to the out-of-play zone and then returning them to the field to overwhelm his oppenents, but throughout he remains consistant with his Beatdown strategy.
Monster Cards
- Blue Eyes White Dragon
- Blue Eyes Ultimate Dragon
- Obelisk the Tormentor(only in Battle City)
- Hitotsu-me Giant
- Saggi the Dark Clown
- Judge Man
- Grappler
- Battle Ox
- Mystic Horseman
- Rabid Horseman
- Gyakutenno Megami
- Ryu-Kishin Powered
- Swordstalker
- La Jinn the Mystical Genie of the Lamp
- Rude Kaiser
- Master of Dragon Soldier
- Cyber Jar
- Maha Vailo
- Dark Zebra
- Boar Soldier
- Aqua Madoor
- Wall of Illusion
- Dragon Seeker
- Lord of Dragons
- Hyozanryu
- Vorse Raider
- Kaiser Glider
- Des Feral Imp
- Gadget Soldier
- Spear Dragon
- Giant Germ
- Twin-Headed Behemoth
- Wicked Worm Beast
- Spirit Ryu
- Possessed Dark Soul
- Kaiser Seahorse
- Vampire Lord
- Slate Warrior
- Different Dimension Dragon
- Thunder Dragon
- Twin-Headed Thunder Dragon
- Luster Dragon #2
- Ancient Lamp
- Masked Beast Des Guardius
- Blade Knight
- X-Head Cannon
- Y-Dragon Head
- Z-Metal Tank
- XY-Dragon Cannon
- XYZ-Dragon Cannon
- Sword of Soul
- Familiar Knight
- Rare Metal Dragon
- Peten the Dark Clown
- Paladin of White Dragon
- Blue Eyes Shining Dragon
- Versago the Destroyer
- Pitch-Dark Dragon
- Doom Virus Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons')
- Tyrant Burst Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons')
- Blue Eyes Tyrant Dragon( only in 'Waking the Dragons')
- Mirror Force Dragon (only in 'Waking the Dragons')
- Clone Dragon
- Cave Dragon
- Chaos Emperor Dragon - Envoy of the End
Magic Cards
- Fang of Critias (only in the 'Waking the Dragons' season)
- Negative Energy Generator
- Polymerization
- De-Spell
- Monster Reborn
- Mesmeric Control
- Flute of Summoning Dragon
- Ring of Defense
- Soul Exchange
- Shrink
- Silent Doom
- Heavy Storm
- Pot of Greed
- Spell Sanctuary
- Enemy Controller
- Lullaby of Obedience
- Thirst for Compensation
- Cost Down
- Card of Demise
- Absorb Spell
- Stop Defense
- Quick Attack
- Fiend Sanctuary
- Obligatory Summon
- Mystical Space Typhoon
- White Dragon Ritual
- Charm of Lamentation
- A Wingbeat of Giant Dragon
- Reflect Energy
- Dimension Fusion
- Soul Absorption
- Emergency Provisions
- Graceful Charity
- Soul Release
- Spell Reproduction
- De-Fusion
Trap Cards
- Shadow Spell
- Negate Attack
- Crush Card
- Gift of the Mystical Elf
- Ring of Destruction
- Virus Cannon
- Dragon's Rage
- Last Turn
- Burst Breath
- Soul Demolition
- Attack Guidance Armor
- Interdimensional Matter Transporter
- Command Silencer
- Card Guard
- Power Balance
- Clone
- Magical Trick Mirror
- Final Attack Orders
- Pyramid of Light
- Return From the Diffrent Dimension
- Tyrant Wing
- Attack Guidance Barrier
- Wish of Final Effort
- Flat Level 4
Trivia
- In the Japanese version, the book Kaiba is reading in the first episode of Duel Monsters is Friedrich Nietzsche's Also Sprach Zarathustra.
- Although 'kai' means sea in Japanese, and 'ba' means horse, 'Kaiba' does not mean seahorse. The Japanese word for seahorse is 'tatsu no otoshigo'. In myth, a seahorse turns in to a dragon after a hundred years.
Reference
- Kazuki Takahashi (2002). Yu-Gi-Oh! Characters Guide Book - The Gospel of Truth (遊戯王キャラクターズガイドブック―真理の福音―). Shueisha. ISBN 4-08-873363-0
- Janime - Cards