Looking back, it's kind of a miracle that the late
Kazuo "Kazuki" Takahashi wound up being not just a successful mangaka, but created one of the most enduring trading card games of all time. His first manga one-shot was published back in 1981, he wouldn't have a serialized manga until he was picked to adapt the TV anime
Go-Q-Choji Ikkiman in 1986, and his first few series in Weekly Shonen Jump in the 90s were all (by his own admission) "total flops". In fact, even when Takahashi first debuted
Yu-Gi-Oh!/
The King of Games! in late 1996
it, too, was also on the verge of cancellation after just over a year in; according to mangaka Yasuaki Kita, it was down to either his
Makuhari or
Yu-Gi-Oh!, &
Makuhari lost. Luckily, there was reader interest in a card game Takahashi had featured on two occasions during this early run, so it was decided that Takahashi would move focus solely to that game for the manga moving forward... and the rest is history. To be fair, Toei Animation's "
Season 0" TV anime was also likely already in pre-production by the time the manga was on the verge of cancellation, so that may have played a factor in the manga being given a lifeline, too.

Regardless,
Yu-Gi-Oh! would go on to run until early 2004 for 343 chapters across 38 volumes (making it
Jump's 20th longest manga of all time), and that card game Takahashi showcased early on (first named Magic & Wizards, later renamed Duel Monsters) would go on to inspire the real life
Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game in 1999 (2002 abroad), which in 2009 was named the top selling TCG in the world & is still going strong to this day. In fact, after the finale of
the second YGO! anime produced in 2004 (the one that was done by Studio Gallop & did see international release), the franchise has continued on telling original stories, all with the direct intent to promote the TCG & the various new rules, gimmicks, & cards that each new series introduces; currently the franchise is on its seventh such spin-off (& ninth TV anime, overall), 2022's
Yu-Gi-Oh! Go Rush!!. Also, it can't be stated just how instantly popular
Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters was when 4Kids debuted its localized adaptation on Kids' WB on September 29, 2001, becoming such a smash hit that it was decided to create a theatrical anime... made for North America first.
In July of 2003
Warner Bros. announced that it got distribution rights for a movie based on Yu-Gi-Oh!, to follow up the success the first three
Pokémon movies had previously been, & on August 13, 2004
Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie debuted in American theaters, earning over $9.4 million in its first weekend alone (though that only got it 4th place in the box office), before eventually earning a total of ~$29.2 million worldwide; until
Dragon Ball Super: Broly in 2018, this was the third-highest grossing anime film in North America (with over $19.7 million). However, the movie allegedly cost ~$20 million to produce, so it was considered a box office bomb, and the critical reception wasn't any better, quickly becoming one of the worst received animated films of all time in North America. Afterwards, the film saw release in Japan, now renamed
Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters: Hikari no Pyramid/
Pyramid of Light (the subtitle is technically in the English version too, but is almost never actually referred to when the title is stated), and though English Wikipedia cites a theatrical release on November 3, 2004, Japanese Wikipedia says that such a screening was done only once via invite. Instead,
Pyramid of Light was widely shown in Japan as a TV special on January 2, 2005 (by this point
Yu-Gi-Oh! GX was airing in Japan), and to help make the film fit within the two-hour time slot it was given (including commercials) an additional 13 minutes of animation was produced exclusively for the Japanese version, bumping the run time up from 89 minutes to 102. Now, to be fair, this technically wasn't the first
Yu-Gi-Oh! movie, as "Season 0" did have a movie in 1999, but that was just a half-hour production shown as part of a triple-feature, alongside the original
Digimon Adventure movie & the 10th
Dr. Slump movie.
While
Yu-Gi-Oh! The Movie has since seen a handful of re-releases in its original English form, even getting a two-night remastered theatrical release in March of 2018 by Fathom Events, the longer
Pyramid of Light version has remained exclusive to Japan, even though the OG
Duel Monsters anime has long since been made officially available with English subtitles via streaming. So, since I'm on a bit of a toy/game-based theatrical anime kick after that
Beyblade "Double Feature", let's lay down some monster, spell, & trap cards before ending our turns & check out this now infamous entry in the
Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise. While this review will primarily be about its lesser known extended Japanese form, I'll also go over the more widely known original English form to some extent later on, mainly for comparison's sake.
"Ore no Turn! DRAW!!" (Sorry, but I couldn't help myself)