Yu-Gi-Oh! proxy guides
Everything we know about printing and playing with Yu-Gi-Oh! proxies, from exact card size and legality to the game's most iconic, most expensive and forever-banned cards
Everything we know about printing and playing with Yu-Gi-Oh! proxies, from exact card size and legality to the game's most iconic, most expensive and forever-banned cards
Learn how to print and make Yu-Gi-Oh! proxy cards at home at the exact, actual size, with no margins or scaling issues. Best print settings for Chrome and Firefox
Make Yu-Gi-Oh! proxies feel like real cards with Japanese-size sleeves, weight backing, and DIY color-coding for the best playtesting
Release notes and behind-the-scenes notes from the developers (English only)
Are Yu-Gi-Oh! proxies legal? How proxies differ from counterfeits, when you can use them in casual play, and why they aren't allowed in official tournaments
Exact Yu-Gi-Oh! card size: 59 × 86 mm (2.32 × 3.39 in). Dimensions in mm, cm, inches and pixels, which sleeves fit, and how to print proxies at actual size
Real measurements of ink usage, explained clearly and backed by data, along with a full overview of all the other benefits offered by YGO print
The most iconic Yu-Gi-Oh! cards ever, from Blue-Eyes White Dragon and Dark Magician to Exodia, and why they defined the game
The most expensive Yu-Gi-Oh! cards ever sold, from the $2M stainless-steel Black Luster Soldier to Tyler the Great Warrior, and why they cost so much
Yu-Gi-Oh! cards forbidden for almost their entire history, like Pot of Greed and Change of Heart, why they stay banned, and whether they could return