No. It is a toy. All it does is rip up the edges of the card and make you look stupid if you try and play Yu-Gi-Oh in public. Also if the cards have protective sleeves they wont fit into the duel disk.
no
"Duel" (1971) was a made for television film. Directed by Steven Spielberg. Stars Dennis Weaver.
Pete Duel.
Minuet in G major by Johann Sebastian Bach, adapted for the movie by Giorgio Moroder under the name "Duel"
you tube
no
Duel Project was created in 2003.
The duration of Duel Project is 1.9 hours.
how much is this duel disc
You can find most duel disks in toy stores such as Toy R' Us.
Probably.
a single layer disc has a capacity of 4.7 GB, a duel layer disc 8.54 GB. 1 GB = 1024 MB 1 MB =1024 KB It depends on your film size, you do the math.
One is the classic one, with pointy edges, and looks more square. The second is the GX version, which is more rounded and looks more circular. The last is the GX Chaos Duel Disc, which is a darker shade and tint than the GX regular duel disc.
The homophone for "duel" is "dual."
"No. At least, not yet. Unfortunately science has not advanced enough to create real world 3D holograms, and even if it had, I doubt they would use this expensive technology to enhance a children's card game." Actually that's not true at all! Yes it's true that there isn't a 'real' 3d hologram duel disk but it would be entirely possible to create one. The holograms are actually pretty low tech. You can create a 3d hologram with a special curved mirror. They do it with lots of stuff like novelty items or collectors items such as the ring from lord of the rings. Now actually getting the duel disk to display the character from a card is the tricky part and yes would be very expensive to make and hence would end up costing the consumer a small to medium sized fortune. If I had a link on hand to prove the lord of the rings hologram then i'd post it but I don't, you'll just have to Google it. Now getting the hologram to be life sized and able to move presents an even bigger problem and a much more costly one and would probably require a large arena like in the yugioh show. if you visit veoh.com and visit a Japanese version of yugioh gx ep 180 at the end of the episode they show a new production to the duel disk but the duel disk is connected to a arcade machine and when you summon monsters they appear on the field in the game in 3D. both players stand at both ends and duel each other. the disk is made differently becasue the disk has to read the number at the bottom of the card when you insert it. but if you want to be sure then check yourself now there are some holograms that can move just saying we they could use the same tech. they used in 4 the duel terminal machine to get the duel disk to reconize which cards are which expanded answer: Currently creating holograms isn't an issue. building the duel rings seen in duelist kingdom wouldn't be hard. Encoding and/or recognizing cards is the real issue as would be keying out all the attacks (although i supposed you could use the generic ones from any of the ps2 games). An image recognizer could be used to read the cards, but any marked or damaged cards wouldn't work/work well, and decent fakes would fool the system. Duel Disks and Duel Runners would require a great deal of enginuity to work without a ring, unless in a tournament hall with projectors lined above/around the ring with a wireless connection to the disk, like the emitters launched during Battle City 1. In short: The cost outweighs the benefits, and no company would take up this project in the near future, and if they did, you'd be looking at a sticker price of well over 2k for the disks. Dueling rings on the otherhand might be plausable in an arcade/tournament hall setting. or the holograms could be just a hologram of the card that way the opponent could see it's attack, defense and effect(if have effect) of the monster. now they are saying they will make one in 2011 (diffrent typer) but they are making a game for the wii were you scan your cards and play it its coming out dec 9 2010
Reduced greenhouse gas, A later date set for installation, Test results that determine the efficiency, The finding that it's necessary for duel-fuel capability
In real life you don't need a duel disk to duel.