The first monster summoned by Kaiba in his first duel with Yugi
This comic relief archetype, used by Chazz, derives its name from a Japanese phrase associated with unwanted house guests.
Ojama
This series introduced Turbo Duels, which were fought atop the series' iconic Duel Runners and mandated the use of this Field Spell.
Speed World/Speed World 2
Ironically, due to some poor TCG release timing, the Blue-Eyes Shining Dragon was released before this card, which is needed to summon it.
Blue-Eyes Ultimate Dragon
This Yu-Gi-Oh! spin-off game featured in a short series of episodes after the Duelist Kingdom arc, created in-universe by Duke Devlin.
Dungeon Dice Monsters
Out of respect for his character, this Battle City opponent gave Joey two prize cards instead of one.
Mako Tsunami
This staple of Jaden's early decks had to be heavily nerfed when brought to the physical card game, requiring its controller to also have no cards in hand to make use of its powerful draw effect.
In a series of Season 3 episodes cut from the English dub, Jack travels to the land of Nazca and does battle with the progenitor of the Earthbound Immortals, earning this boss monster that bears its namesake.
Red Nova Dragon
Introduced in the Dark Side of Dimensions movie, this eponymous summoning mechanic allowed players to normal summon any monster without tribute, at the cost of substantial burn damage if it gets destroyed.
Dimension Summoning
This boss monster, used by the Big Five, has been depicted as either a Fusion or a Ritual monster, depending on the duel.
Five-Headed Dragon
Shadi, the keeper of the Millenium Items, held these two for most of the series, before giving them to the Pharaoh in Season 5.
The Millenium Key and the Millenium Scale
Following in the narrative footsteps of Bakura in DM, this Season 1 Shadow Rider served as the final antagonist of GX.
Nightshroud
These three mythological monsters share a DIVINE attribute and Divine-Beast typing with the Egyptian Gods, but only in the anime.
The Aesir
Returning from the afterlife, Atem saves the day at the end of Dark Side of Dimensions by drawing, and subsequently summoning, this incarnation of his most loyal servant.
Palladium Oracle Mahad
Alexander the Great
While he never obtained an Egyptian God Card, Joey made use of this monster, which could also be summoned with three tributes, during the Battle City Finals.
Gilford the Lighting
Nurse Reficule the Fallen One/Darklord Nurse Reficule
Along with Yusei, Jack, Akiza, and Luna, this individual was the last of the original 5 Signers chosen by the Crimson Dragon.
Roman Goodwin
The villain of the Bonds Beyond Time movie, Paradox, is affiliated with this antagonist group from the final season of 5Ds.
Iliaster
This core Yu-Gi-Oh! mechanic is first explained in the anime during the KC Cup arc, during a duel between Rebecca Hawkins and Vivian Wong.
Chaining
Despite being the final season of the original Yu-Gi-Oh! anime, season 5 only included this many honest-to-God duels.
3
As one of the 12 components of the unsuccessful summoning of the Super Fusion God, Yubel used this monster as its level 11 material. To be fair, there weren't really any better options.
Gate Guardian
In a special non-canon episode, Yusei and Jack duel each other while making use of this series of cards, which powers up iconic Synchro Monsters.
/Assault Mode
Yugi's overshadowed counterpart to the Blue-Eyes Shining Dragon, this level 9 Spellcaster can negate and destroy any Trap Card that activates. Too bad it can miss timing.
Sorcerer of Dark Magic
The final monster faced in the Capsule Monsters spin-off, this Ritual monster was also the namesake of an early Yu-Gi-Oh! game for the Game Boy Advance
Reshef the Dark Being