Yugi activates the card he gave to Rick, Heart of the Underdog, to power up his Spirit Ryu and restore the computer to normal. Transcription: " The Start of a Conspiracy" ( Japanese: 動きだした陰謀)ĭue to Rick stacking his deck with Dragons and only one magic card, Yugi is backed into a corner by the Expert-difficulty duel computer who forces Yugi to discard his hand.
Yugi duels instead, but he uses Rick's deck: full of Dragons and next-to-no magic and trap cards! However, an enigmatic hacker locks all the guests in and sets the difficulty to Expert, leaving the amateur duelist Rick facing an immensely difficult task. One of the attractions is a duel computer that allows novices to refine their duelling skills. Stranded following the events of the Orichalcos, the Kaibas extend to Joey and Yugi an invitation for the Kaiba Grand Championship (KC Grand Prix in Japan) in exchange for tickets back home. Transcription: " KC Grand Prix Opens" ( Japanese: KCグランプリ開幕) The rest of the season focuses on The Pharaoh battling Yami Bakura, while Yugi and his friends travel the memory world to discover the Pharaoh's real name. The first fourteen episodes follow an original story arc in-which Kaiba hosts a new tournament that is secretly being sabotaged by a skilled duelist named Zigfried, who uses his hacking skills in an attempt to enact revenge against Kaiba. It is now licensed and distributed by 4K Media, Inc. Television Animation on US television when it aired on Kids’ WB!, also in North America. The season was formerly licensed by 4Kids Entertainment in North America and other English-speaking countries and territories, and was formerly distributed by Funimation on Region 1 home video, and also distributed by Warner Bros. In the United States, the season aired from Augto Jon Kids' WB and broadcast under the Grand Championship (episodes 1-14) and Dawn of the Duel subtitles.
Also, I'd be shocked if I was the first to discover this, but a brief Google search revealed nothing, so.The fifth and final season of Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters, created by Kazuki Takahashi, aired in Japan on TV Tokyo from Decemto September 29, 2004. I know it's just a coincidence, unfortunately. It does have a S5E14 "Saving for Arraignment Day" got a 6.9 on IMDb, the worst rating of the whole series. One big show I haven't mentioned is Arrested Development. Rick and Morty, Community, Game of Thrones, The Wire, Mad Men, The Sopranos, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Better Call Saul, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Good Place, Bojack Horseman, Veep, Twin Peaks, Orange is the New Black, Battlestar Galactica In my "research" I wrote down all the shows I checked that didn't have one: Now, you may be thinking, "Well, only seven nine shows? That's not that many." And that's true, except for the fact that most shows don't even have a S5E14. Legends of Tommorow S5E14, "The One Where We're Trapped on TV": 9.0, also tie for second highest Seinfeld S5E14, "The Marine Biologist": 9.3, fifth highest in the show's run.įrasier S5E14, "The Ski Lodge": 9.6, highest in the show's run.Īngel S5E14, "Smile Time": 9.4, tie for second highest
The episode with the marriage of the show's protagonist.įriends S5E14, "The One Where Everyone Finds Out": 9.7, tied for highest rating with the series finale.īrooklyn Nine-Nine S5E14, "The Box": 9.5, highest in the show's run. Parks and Rec S5E14, "Leslie and Ben": 9.3, fourth highest in the show's run. Considered by many to be the greatest episode of TV, ever. The Office S5E14, "Stress Relief": 9.7 on IMDb, only behind the series finale.īreaking Bad S5E14, "Ozymandias": 10.0 on IMDb. I have discovered something miraculous: Season 5, Episode 14 is consistently, across a number of different shows, an outstanding, highly rated episode.