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1[[WMG:[[center: [- ''Manga/YuGiOh'' '''[[Characters/YuGiOhOriginalSeries Main Character Index]]'''\
2[[Characters/YuGiOhMainCharacters Main Characters]] ([[Characters/YuGiOhYamiYugi Yami Yugi]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhYamiBakura Yami Bakura]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhSetoKaiba Seto Kaiba]]) | [[Characters/YuGiOhDominoHighSchool Domino High School ]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhDominoCityResidents Domino City Residents]] | '''Kaiba Corp''' | [[Characters/YuGiOhIndustrialIllusions Industrial Illusions]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhGhoulsAndRareHunters Ghouls and Rare Hunters]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhDuelists Other Duelists]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhAncientEgypt Ancient Egypt]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhOtherCharacters Other Characters]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhGamingPieces Gaming Pieces]] | [[Characters/YuGiOhOriginalSeriesCards Cards]] -]]]]]
3
4Members of Kaiba Corporation or participants of Death-T from the [[Manga/YuGiOh manga]] and [[Anime/YuGiOh anime]] series ''Yu-Gi-Oh''.
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6ALL spoilers will be unmarked ahead. Beware of major spoilers.
7
8
9[[foldercontrol]]
10
11!!Kaiba Family
12
13[[folder:Seto Kaiba]]
14
15See his own page [[Characters/YuGiOhSetoKaiba here]]
16
17[[/folder]]
18
19[[folder:Mokuba Kaiba]]
20!!'''Mokuba Kaiba (海馬 モクバ; ''Kaiba Mokuba'')'''
21[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mokuba_kaiba.png]]
22--> Voiced by: Katsue Miwa (Toei anime), Creator/JunkoTakeuchi (Duel Monsters), Creator/TaraSands (English, seasons 1-4 and onwards), Creator/CarrieKeranen (English, season five), Ana Lobo (Latin American Spanish, seasons 1-3), Isabel Romo (Latin American Spanish, seasons 4-5), Chelo Molina (European Spanish)
23
24Seto Kaiba's little brother and biggest fan. In contrast to his brother's obsession with Duel Monsters, Mokuba has an obsession for Capsule Monster Chess. He is initially portrayed as a spoiled brat, with vindictive and malevolent behavior. He was named champion at Capsule Monster Chess, but cheated in many of the games he played. His negative traits are partly credit to the neglect he gets from his older brother, whom he desired to prove his worth to. Though still somewhat of a "brat", his behavior improved as he befriended Yugi Mutou and his companions and as Seto grew to love and appreciate him. In the anime, he is made to be much friendlier right off the bat.
25
26Aside from his brief unfinished stint playing Duel Monsters against Yugi in Duel Kingdom, the only games he ever played on-panel were Capsule Monster Chess and Russian Roulette Dinner. Can usually be seen either carrying his brother's briefcase or monitoring his brother's tournaments. While Kaiba is openly disdainful of Yugi and his friends, Mokuba gets along with them just fine, though he's still mostly on his brother's side when it comes to the rivalry he has with Yugi.
27
28-----
29* AdaptationalHeroism: Mokuba is much nicer in the second anime than he is in the manga with his villainous traits removed. His revenge against Yugi is minor and he gives up on it once Yugi offers to help him defeat Pegasus.
30* AdaptationalPersonalityChange: While his Canonical manga-continuity characterization is more of JerkWithAHeartOfGold, the second anime completely removes both his initial villainy and his post-FaceHeelTurn HiddenHeartOfGold moments, making him an outright NiceGuy.
31* AdaptationalWimp: In the ''Duel Monsters'' anime, his villainous characterization and being a threat to Yugi was never adapated in exchange for him purely being Kaiba's MoralityPet. While he does try and take revenge on Yugi, it is a pretty flimsy scheme that falls apart pretty quickly. He also gets kidnapped a lot more often than in the manga, where in ''[[Manga/YuGiOhR R!]]'' at the very least, he acts as TheCracker. He's also more generally obnoxious and snarky in the manga as well, making his more vulnerable moments stand out more.
32* BecauseYouWereNiceToMe: In the first anime and manga, Mokuba softens up to Yugi and co. considerably after he saves him from his brother's Penalty Game.
33* BigBrotherWorship: He adores his brother, even when he's being a jerk to the other characters. Part of the reason Mokuba starts off as such a cruel person in the first anime series and manga is because he tries to emulate his brother, thinking it will earn his love; while he eventually snaps out of this and becomes kinder, he still follows Seto through thick and thin, although he's not afraid to call him out when he's especially selfish.
34* {{Brainwashed}}: By Noah in the Virtual World arc in the anime.
35* CharacterDevelopment: Like his brother, he becomes a less devious person and goes out of his way to help Yugi and his friends. Yami Yugi saving him from his brother's Penalty Game helps solidify this as the latter made him through with it.
36* CheatersNeverProsper: Has never played a game that wasn't rigged in his favor. Yugi still beats him every time they face off.
37* CompressedHair: When he challenges Yugi during the Duelist Kingdom arc, he's wearing a disguise in which he manages to cram his three pounds or so of hair underneath a cap.
38* TheCracker: In ''R!'', he acts as this, hacking into the systems Yako took over so that he and Seto do not need to duel Card Professors to progress through the Kaiba Corporation headquarters. It also enables him to rescue Jounouchi and Honda, who had been sent down a dead-end.
39* CreepyChild: The first thing he does in the manga is challenge Yugi to a game of Capsule Monster Chess with the condition being that if Yugi lost, Mokuba would cut his fingers off. The second time, he tries to poison Yugi and succeeds in poisoning Jonouchi. It's only when his brother gets more evil and unhinged that this wears off and he starts being good.
40* DecompositeCharacter: In the manga, he’s Yugi’s first Capumon opponent and gets a Penalty Game where he is sealed inside a giant capsule. The first series anime gives this storyline to CanonForeigner Warashibe.
41* DesignatedVictim[=/=]DistressedDude: In the anime, he gets kidnapped or is otherwise endangered at ''least'' once a season.
42* DidntThinkThisThrough: Rigging a game of Capsule Monsters, not once but ''twice'', was not a smart move in his part as he deliberately gives himself strong high-level monsters while Yami Yugi ends up with low level monsters, and claims to be good at it. Yami Yugi however understands how Capsule Monsters works, and intentionally sacrifices his monsters to have the weakest become a high-tier monster. And he loses both times and gets a Penalty Game from Yami Yugi and ''Seto''.
43** He challenges Yugi to duel during Duelist Kingdom with the intent to defeat him. It counts as this as A: He's using a stolen deck he's not familiar with, B: The duel demonstrates he doesn't understand how to play as he keeps attacking Yugi's monsters with clearly weaker cards, and C: He's dueling [[TheAce Yugi]] the guy who held his own against and defeated his his older Brother Kaiba who was dueling champion.
44* DisguisedInDrag: In the Legendary Heroes anime arc, he switches outfits with his virtual counterpart Princess Adena to get himself kidnapped in her place and be taken to where Seto was.
45* TheDragon: During Death-T, he is this to his older brother.
46* EasilyForgiven: Less so in the second anime since he was never villainous there, but more so in the first anime/manga, where he comes off as being almost bad as Seto was. Once Seto nearly kills Mokuba in his own version of a Penalty Game and is saved by Yugi, he comes clean that all he wanted was his brother's approval, earning sympathy from the protagonists.
47* HeelFaceTurn: Early in the series he hated Yugi just as much as Seto did, and in the manga tried to kill him three times; his intro, and twice during the Death-T arc [[note]]Russian Roulette dinner and presumbly the Experience of Death Penalty Game if he won Death-T4[[/note]]. He loosened up after the Death-T arc due to Yami Yugi saving him from the Penalty Game Kaiba tried inflicting on him and later revealing his and Seto's past.
48* HiddenHeartOfGold: In the manga after his HeelFaceTurn, he still displayed bits of a {{Jerkass}} attitude not unlike his brother, but as opposed to Seto it's clearly an act. The driving point of this is at the end of Duelist Kingdom where he mocks Yugi and the others, then almost immediately softens up when he sees that they have no ride back to Japan, asking his brother to let them come along in their helicopter.
49** He also allows Anzu, Honda, Otogi, and Shizuka to enter the Battle City blimp for the finals even though they're technically not allowed since they aren't duelists.
50* IJustWantToBeLoved: The Toei anime and the manga establish that all he wants is for his brother to love him again. It's a huge KickTheDog moment when his brother tells him that "useless things like brotherly love don't exist" and later subjects him to the ''Experience of Death'' Penalty Game. In the anime, Noah exploits this by tricking Mokuba into thinking Seto is abandoning him in order to get Mokuba under his control.
51* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Contrary to what the second anime would have you believe, this is Mokuba's Canonical personality. He is initially perceived as a spoiled brat, with vindictive and malevolent behavior. His negative traits are partly credit to the neglect he gets from his older brother, whom he desires to prove his worth to. His behavior improves as he befriends Yugi and his companions and as Seto grows to truly appreciate him.
52* KnightOfCerebus: Mokuba's first appearance in the manga caused the story to become darker and more arc-based. It's extremely jarring to people who have only seen the second anime, [[AdaptationalPersonalityChange where he's slightly arrogant at worst and is usually a sweet kid.]]
53* MeaningfulName: Although Mokuba's name is written in katakana (which is typically used for non-Japanese names/words), one of the ways Mokuba can be written in kanji is 木馬, which can mean "wooden/rocking horse". This reflects that he and Seto are part of the Kaiba Corporation, which has been converted in a toy and gaming company.
54* MoralityPet: To Kaiba. Mokuba is the only one Seto is genuinely nice to and Mokuba tends to bring out his brother’s better side.
55* MinoredInAsskicking: He's often helpless due to, well, being a little kid that is frequently threatened or kidnapped by adults. However, that doesn't mean he won't try to fight back if possible. In [[Anime/YuGiOhTheDarkSideOfDimensions DSOD]] he outright ''headbutts'' Aigami in the face to protect the Millenium Puzzle.
56* NeverRecycleYourSchemes: He loses to Yami Yugi twice in Capsule Monsters by giving himself high level monsters while Yami Yugi gets low level monsters. Both times, Yami Yugi analyzes how the game works while Mokuba brute forces his way to destroy Yami Yugi's Capsule Monster pieces, and still loses for it.
57* NiceGuy: In the second series anime, he's more or less consistently friendly to everyone he meets. [[AvertedTrope Not quite so much in the manga]] where, after his HeelFaceTurn, while he's not really malicious, he can still be very bratty and snarky in casual situations.
58* OrphanageOfFear: Along with Seto, he grew up in one, although he says it wasn't all bad.
59* OvershadowedByAwesome: Mokuba is actually pretty damn competent, displaying high intelligence, tech-savviness and even some physical prowess. But this is so overshadowed by his genius, badass of a big brother that he often looks like nothing more than a MoralityPet kindapper-bait.
60* {{Sadist}}: When Yugi asks him why he keeps touching the syrup bottle during the Russian Roulette game, he explains that "the suffering of others makes the sweetest syrup." Like most of his characterization [[CharacterizationMarchesOn at this stage]], it's forgotten after Death-T, and ignored in the second anime.
61* ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney: During the early manga and the Toei anime, he uses this to bribe a store owner to rig a Capsule Monsters machine to give him the strongest monsters.
62* SmugSnake: During his time as villain, he was an even bigger example of this then Kaiba. He had all of his arrogance, but none of his skills.
63* ThickerThanWater: He's very loyal to his brother, to the point where he seems outright blind to some moments of Seto's being a completely selfish jerkass, but he'll also become deeply hurt when he's pushed too far by recollections of Seto being mean to ''him''.
64* TookALevelInKindness: In the Toei anime and manga, Mokuba was a ''jerk'' that was only surpassed by his brother Seto, believing being more like his brother would get him to love him again. Once Seto nearly kills him in Death-T 4's Penalty Game and he's saved by Yugi, Mokuba realizes he was wrong and tries to become a better person, imploring Yugi to help his maddened brother like he helped him.
65* TraumaSwing: Spent his first day in the orphanage on a playground swing, where only Seto regarded him.
66* UndyingLoyalty: To his brother, even after finding out that Seto manipulated and used him for his own gains in the past.
67* YoungAndInCharge: As Battle City Commissioner. He's also Vice President of his brother's company. The former serves as a slight deconstruction. When Mokuba comes across a duelist who is trying to force his losing opponent to hand over two rare cards instead of one and calls him on his cheating, the cheater does not take him seriously until Seto shows up and uses him as a test for Obelisk the Tormentor. His emotions also get the better of him, as he allowed the duel between Joey and Espa Roba to continue instead of calling it off despite having caught Roba's brothers helping him cheat. Why? Roba reminded him of Seto.
68* {{Yubitsume}}: Would have done this to Yugi had Yugi lost the first Capsule Monsters Chess game. The kid ran a frickin’ gang!
69[[/folder]]
70
71
72[[folder:Gozaburo Kaiba]]
73!!'''Gozaburo Kaiba''' (海馬剛三郎)
74[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gozaburo_kaiba_better_quality_6562.png]]
75--> Voiced by: Creator/UnshoIshizuka (Toei anime), Tetsuo Komura (Duel Monsters), Creator/DavidWills (English), Armando Réndiz (Latin American Spanish), Víctor Valverde (European Spanish)
76
77The former head of Kaiba Corporation and Seto Kaiba's adopted father. When Kaiba took over the company, Gozaburo either fled in shame, committed suicide or experienced a heart attack, depending on the adaptation. In the anime, he is the mastermind of the Virtual World arc and Noah's father.
78
79He uses an Exodia deck, focusing on Exodia Necross.
80-----
81* AbusiveDad: To his ''three'' sons.
82* AdaptationalJerkass: While Gozaburo was always evil, the Virtual Nightmare arc made him much worse by turning him into a OmnicidalManiac intent on launching missles all over the world; killing most of Humanity and ruling over the survivors as a digital ghost.
83* ArcVillain: He and Noah, as the ArcVillain and TheHeavy respectively, share this role in the "Virtual Nightmare" arc.
84* ArchnemesisDad: Has reached this status with regards to Seto Kaiba by the time of the Virtual World Arc.
85* ArmsDealer: Under his leadership, Kaiba Corporation was a major producer of military arms.
86* AscendedExtra: In the manga he was just a part of Kaiba's backstory and commits suicide by jumping off the Kaiba Corp building within said backstory. The anime turns his death into a fake one and makes him the ArcVillain of a FillerArc, devoting a lot of screentime in it to fleshing out his past with the Kaiba brothers.
87* AttackAttackAttack: His entire Exodia Necross deck revolves around this. With Exodia Necross constantly attacking and battling monsters even when they have higher ATK points, and gaining 1000 ATK points each time it engages in battle. Lampshaded by Seto as this is the major weakness of his deck, ultimately bringing Gozaburo to his demise.
88* BackFromTheDead: A Variation in the Virtual World arc. While they make it clear his body was long dead, his mind and soul were transferred into the same digital world as Noah.
89* TheChessmaster: Not only is he good at setting up overarching plans in advance, but this trope is a recurring motif for him -- he's a master chess player forced to adopt Seto when Seto beats him, he uses a chessboard and pieces to summon monsters in the virtual world, and snickers he'll call out "checkmate" when he beats Seto in their duel.
90* ChildHater: Implied in the dub at least. When he arrives to give toys at the orphanage Kaiba and Mokuba are, he complains about the smell and asks one of the employees if they "bathe these urchins". Later, when talking to Kaiba and the Big Five about voting him out of power and Kaiba in using the company stocks they bought, he fires the Big Five and tells Kaiba he's going back to the orphanage where "ungrateful brats" like him belong.
91* CripplingOverspecialization: Relies entirely on the power of Exodia Necross once he summons it, at the expense of the rest of ''his entire Deck''. Apparently, he thought by doing some research on [[TheAce Seto Kaiba]]'s past Duels he could beat him with the power of a single monster during his first Duel. [[ForegoneConclusion It does not go well for Gozaburo.]]
92* DeathByIrony: He tries to pull this on Kaiba, intending to defeat him in duel monsters the same way Kaiba defeated him in chess, even using an undead version of Exodia, the card that handed Kaiba his first defeat in Duel Monsters, to do it. It didn't work out.
93* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation:
94** In the manga, he just plain kills himself after being ousted by Seto.
95** In the Toei anime (which puts the scene in present-day instead of years ago), he keels over from a heart attack, and his ultimate fate is ambiguous.
96** In the second-series anime, he ''supposedly'' kills himself ([[NeverSayDie "ran away"]] in the dub), but digitized his brain into the same virtual world as Noah. Then he dies for good after the entire server blows up.
97* DrivenToSuicide: In the manga, he jumps from a window after Kaiba took control of the company in order to show him the fate of a loser.
98* EvilCannotComprehendGood: He assumed Mokuba would turn Kaiba after their nasty fight, and would hand him his 2% of the company. He failed because he underestimated family ties, something that Kaiba counted on.
99* EvenEvilHasLovedOnes: Played straight, then subverted. It seems Gozaburo really ''did'' love Noah when he was alive, spending time with him, making sure he had the best education his influence could get, and resorting to making him a VirtualGhost to save his life when he died. After that though, Gozaburo realized that Noah could not be the heir he needed in his current state, and left him to wander the datascape while he turned his time to Seto.
100* EvilMentor: His grooming of Kaiba to be his heir in the anime was intended to make him a vessel for Noah's mind. In the dub he comes to decide why bother, when Seto is just as smart and capable as Noah, while in the Japanese he decided to take Seto's body for himself when he died.
101* EvilVirtues: Despite his disdain for the man, Kaiba acknowledges that Gozaburo understood the value of hard work.
102* FatalFlaw: His arrogance and {{pride}} -- he thinks he's always in control of the situation and has thought everything out so there's no way he can lose. Kaiba beats him this way twice, first by manipulating Mokuba into spending time with Gozaburo so Gozaburo thinks Mokuba will support his control of [=KaibaCorp=] over Kaiba; he thus allows Kaiba and the Big Five to buy up 49% of the company, ignorant to the idea that maybe Mokuba won't support him after all. Second, he believes Exodia Necross is completely invincible and will win him the duel to the point he never plays any other cards, never anticipating Kaiba might find a way to banish the Exodia parts in his graveyard and strip Exodia Necross of its powers.
103* FauxAffablyEvil: He shows up at Seto and Mokuba's orphanage to give out toys and donating a substantial amount of money to it, which is part of what makes Seto think he'd be a great parent for them. Gozaburo showed his true colors as an emotionally abusive and manipulative monster once they were home with him.
104* FillerVillain: In the anime he's the final villain of the Noah arc, though he has a legitimate reason for showing up, being a major part of Kaiba's backstory.
105* FinalBoss: Of the "Virtual Nightmare" arc, dueling Kaiba moments before the virtual world itself goes into meltdown.
106* GlassCannon: Ironically for a guy who relies heavily on an indestructible monster, his own strategy burns through his LP extremely quickly, between the hefty cost of his Contract and the multiple turns Necross needs to become properly unstoppable. This turns out to be a major weakness, as for a lot of the Duel, Kaiba is actually ahead of him in LP, and only really needs to get in one solid hit with Blue-Eyes to bring him down.
107* GodhoodSeeker: In the anime dub, his goal is to digitize the minds of everyone on the planet and rule humanity as the all-powerful king of the virtual world.
108* GrandTheftMe: Tries it on Kaiba, attempting to resume control of his company through Seto's body.
109* GreaterScopeVillain: He is the reason for Seto's harsh and mean character, and in the manga, the major reason why Seto's such a psycho before Yami Yugi's "Mind Crush" and why he takes games so seriously.
110* HateSink: It's pretty clear with his abuse on Seto that he was not meant to be liked at all.
111* HonestCorporateExecutive: Despite his awful personality and treatment of his family, he seems to have been an honest and competent businessman, if in the morally dubious market of arms dealing. In-universe some believe he was double-dealing, but it was actually Dartz disguised as him.
112* HotbloodedSideburns: His chops complete the trifecta that include his 'stash and his 'brows.
113* {{Jerkass}}: Gozaburo is up there with Yami Bakura and Yami Marik for one of the most unpleasant human beings of the original series. He's cruel, ruthless, manipulative, pulls YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness on his own blood son, and plans to blow up the world's major cities with missiles for no real reason. However, unlike Yami Bakura and Yami Marik, Gozaburo has no FreudianExcuse or other justification for why he is the way he is. He's just a bastard, plain and simple.
114* KilledOffForReal: In the anime, it was shown that he committed suicide after losing [=KaibaCorp=] to Kaiba, and was thought to be dead. But he then shows up near the end to reveal that he is still alive as he uploaded his mind into the virtual world like he did with Noah. As the cast escapes back to the real world and tries to escape in the [=KaibaCorp=] blimp, Gozaburo appears as a beast of flame and attempts to [[TakingYouWithMe destroy the blimp along with the cast as one last attempt to get revenge on Kaiba]], but then Kaiba activates the blimp's thrusters to escape Gozaburo, leaving him to die with no way to return.
115* KnightTemplarParent: About the nicest way to interpret his personality is that he's so harsh and strict to temper Noah and Seto into strong, capable businessmen. This is part of why he adopts Seto, he sees another intelligent and capable boy Noah's age and tells Noah the two will compete to see who is worthy to take over Kaiba Corp. This is pre-death though; by the time of the Virtual World he finds all three of his sons are failures or have turned on him, so he tells Noah YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness, decides to get rid of Kaiba, and has no interest in Mokuba at all.
116* KnowNothingKnowItAll: The man never dueled before. And he thinks that just by doing a little research before now he knows everything about duels, on top of that he's gonna defeat frigging ''Seto Kaiba''. Yeah dude, surely you'll be able to beat the [[TheAce second-best duelist in-universe]] [[TooDumbToLive just by researching him in advance]]... His lack of experience also shows heavily in his Duel, as his strategy is entirely one-dimensional, consisting of summoning Exodia Necross and then attacking with it until Kaiba runs out of monsters--he doesn't even play any cards to back it up or cover its weaknesses, merely assuming that the card's protective effects made him invincible.
117* LackOfEmpathy: He's an AbusiveDad who considers his biological son expendable, and later returns to try and trap Kaiba and his allies in the Virtual World. He tells Kaiba that you can trust no one, including him, neglects Mokuba, abandoned Noah before using him for his own ends, and generally doesn't care about anyone beyond himself and his own legacy. He's not as over the top about it as Yami Bakura and Yami Marik, but yeah--there's no empathy there.
118* TheManBehindTheMan: The dub included foreshadowing of his appearance, most notably that Noah acts all along as if he knows Gozaburo is watching. In the original though his arrival is completely unexpected and Noah is shocked to see him, thinking he was dead like everyone else.
119* NotQuiteDead: Sure, he did die in the manga. But, in the anime, not before uploading his memory into the virtual realm.
120* OffingTheOffspring: His objective by the time of the Virtual Nightmare arc.
121* OneWingedAngel: Transforms into a corrupted virus after his defeat, and tries to first possess Kaiba, and then take the group with him.
122* ParentalAbandonment: Of Noah, he initially showed some manner of affection towards his natural-born son. However, after being digitized after his physical death, Gozaburo gradually gives up on Noah to focus on Seto.
123* ParentalNeglect: He focuses all his attention on Seto's development with Mokuba only being taken in as a condition by Seto himself. Mokuba was ignored at best and abused at worse when he tried to spare Seto of any further bad treatment. It is really telling how awful that Mokuba, the kid Gozaburo neglected, turned out more well-adjusted than the child whose attention he sunk his time into.
124* PosthumousCharacter: In the manga. Subverted in the anime, when he turns up alive in the virtual world.
125* SelfMadeMan: According to Kaiba, he rose up from nothing to become the leader of a powerful company. However, given his character, it was likely through some underhanded and morally questionable means.
126* SinkOrSwimMentor: A totally evil one. While the details vary between English and Japanese versions, he gives Kaiba ten million dollars and one year to pay Gozaburo back ten times that in order to prove he's worthy to take over [=KaibaCorp=]. If he blows it, he and Mokuba are going back to the orphanage.
127* SmugSnake: In spite of raising Seto to be his heir, [[GrandTheftMe either as a potential host for Noah before giving up on the idea when Seto proved superior on his own merits]]; he thought that as a child, Seto was nothing, but a thrall to continue in his footsteps. He underestimates Seto's intelligence when he beats him in a chess match and he later regrets it when Seto utilizes the man's own ruthless ideology on himself to usurp control of the company.
128** It also surfaces in his dueling style. He banks everything into summoning Exodia Necross on its power alone, convinced that his strategy is invincible and not having a backup plan. When Seto manages to remove the monster from the game, Gozaburo decides to deny the results and attempt to steal Seto's body for himself, regardless of whether he won or not.
129* SocialDarwinist: In the manga, this even applies to himself.
130-->"Seto! I lost my game with you! Burn this into your brain! '''[[DrivenToSuicide This]]''' is what a loser deserves! [[LaughingMad Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha!]]"
131* SoreLoser: Doesn't take both of his defeats well.
132* TakingYouWithMe: Tried it on the cast at the end in the anime as he attacks their blimp when he appears momentarily as a beast of flame, but failed when Kaiba activates the blimp's thrusters to escape, leaving Gozaburo to fade away in defeat.
133* TrueFinalBoss: Of the "Virtual World" arc. At first it appears that Noah is the ArcVillain and the guy that Kaiba and Yugi have to beat in order to escape. Then Gozaburo shows up, and Kaiba has to fight one last duel against him in order to make good his getaway.
134* VicariouslyAmbitious: His relationship with his children is defined by only how he can use them.
135** He groomed Noah just so he could take over Kaiba Corp, and pretty much gave up on him when he saw Noah was too immature.
136** He initially only decided to adopt Kaiba to serve as a vessel for Noah, but in the dub, he decided Kaiba was already smart enough and so he ditched Noah.
137** He is totally apathetic to Mokuba... until he thinks he can use him to take control of Kaiba Corp from Seto.
138* VillainousLegacy: Even after his suicide[=/=]disappearance, his poisonous treatment of his adopted son is what turned Kaiba and Mokuba into the rotten people who would kill Yugi and friends just to win. Even after they loosen up somewhat, his shadow hung over Kaiba and his desire to be better.
139* VillainBall: When he learns that the virtual world is set to be destroyed, he decides to take Kaiba's body by force and escape, but Kaiba convinces him to back off and finish the duel, since he was so intent on proving himself superior.
140* VirtualGhost: His physical body is technically dead, having transferred his consciousness to the virtual world and either wants to convert the world to a virtual kingdom for himself or steal Seto's body so his mind/soul can resume control of his company in the real world.
141* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: His Deck doesn't seem to have any usable cards at all in it, aside from Exodia Necross, its requirements, and Painful Choice. After playing Contract with Exodia, he doesn't use a single card for the entire rest of the Duel, despite having a pretty full hand (in fact, he'd have to discard something on his last turn). Of course, in his eyes, Exodia Necross is so powerful he doesn't need anything else.
142%%* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Pulls it on Noah.
143[[/folder]]
144
145!!The Big Five
146
147[[folder:In General]]
148!!The Big Five
149[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/big_5_1184.png]]
150[[caption-width-right:300:Left to right: Oota/Nezbitt, Otaki/Crump, Oshita/Gansley, Ooka/Johnson, and Daimon/Leichter]]
151
152The Kaiba Corp board of directors, consisting of Oshita ([[DubNameChange Gansley]]), Otaki ([[DubNameChange Crump]]), Ooka ([[DubNameChange Johnson]]), Ota ([[DubNameChange Nezbitt]]) and Daimon ([[DubNameChange Leichter]]). Played a part in Seto Kaiba's takeover of the company when Gozaburo ran things, but once Seto Kaiba took over he stripped them of their power and left them as figureheads. They've since tried various schemes to take the company for themselves, such as when Yugi Mutou beat Kaiba in his Death-T final game, which left him in a coma and without his title of best gamer. Thus, they attempted to work with Pegasus to take control of the company.
153
154In the anime, the Big Five are promoted to significant filler villains. Their betrayal is what ultimately result in them being locked in a virtual world; they must each defeat a member of the main cast in a duel in order to escape. They fail, and are either trapped in cyberspace forever or deleted from existence depending on the version.
155-----
156!!In general
157* AllForNothing: In the Japanese version, before Noah deletes them, he reveals that, since the virtual world is simulated, [[ILied they wouldn't have received their opponents' bodies even if they won their Duels]]. They spend their final moments furious at Noah for deceiving them. This information is omitted from the dub.
158* AllYourPowersCombined: Twice. The first time is when they all possess Honda's body, the second is when they sacrifice all of their Deck Masters to summon Five-Headed Dragon.
159* ArcVillain: In the "Virtual World" and "Virtual Nightmare" arcs, though in the latter they're subordinate to Noah and Gozaburo.
160* AscendedExtra: Went from a minor faceless group in the manga to recurring foes each with a distinct personality in the anime.
161* AssholeVictim: While it wasn't right for Kaiba to betray them and screw them over the way he did, it's difficult to feel sorry for them considering they were each a greedy CorruptCorporateExecutive and proud of it.
162* BoringButPractical: Aside from Daimon/Leichter, the group clearly has only a beginner's understanding of Duel Monsters. Thus they use straightforward and simple strategies, but they're good enough to work. Oshita/Gansley uses self-replacing monsters with effects to limit the opponent's card advantage, Otaki/Crump uses a Water-themed beatdown deck, Ooka/Johnson uses a Fusion-monster Life Point recovery combo that lets him abuse his Deck Master ability, and Oota/Nezbitt uses a Machine-themed beatdown deck focused on Machine King. Nezbitt even comments on this due to repeatedly using his Robotic Knight's special ability to pile damage onto his opponents, Serenity, Duke, and Tristan, after which Tristan complains about his tactics. His response:
163-->'''Nezbitt:''' Why change a good thing?
164* BusmansVocabulary: They all use terminology related to their professions and/or passions:
165** Gansley uses business related terminology.
166** Crump often uses number, bird, and ice puns in his speech.
167** Johnson uses courtroom based puns and terminology.
168** Nezbitt likes to speak like a robot, using words like "negative".
169** Leichter regularly addresses people as "mister".
170* ChronicBackstabbingDisorder: They betrayed Gozaburo to Kaiba, and Kaiba to Pegasus before (in the anime only) trapping him in a virtual world. After they themselves were trapped there, they join up with Noah, but have no problems flouting his rules and going behind his back in their desperation to get out of there. Finally, they violate the terms of their duel with Yugi and Joey, refusing to return Honda's body despite having promised to.
171* CorruptCorporateExecutive: They worked for [[{{Jerkass}} Gozaburo]] after all. They are all quite corrupt themselves. Johnson in particular was an AmoralAttorney who once convinced a jury that a man with aquaphobia stole a boat.
172* DealWithTheDevil: They cut deals with Pegasus and then Noah in hopes of gaining control of [=KaibaCorp=]. Leichter's "A Deal With Dark Ruler" card simulates this, summoning Berserk Dragon in exchange for half his lifepoints.
173* DeathByAdaptation: They were simply fired in the manga, and never seen again. In the anime, Noah deletes them for their failures (or imprisons them in the dub, though it doesn't make a difference in the end, since the base they're in is destroyed).
174* DeathByIrony: All of them lose in ironic fashions:
175** Oshita/Gansley spends the duel insulting Kuriboh and loses due to its ability.
176** Otaki/Crump declares Dark Magician Girl to be useless without the Dark Magician, so Téa summons Yugi's and the tag team wins her the duel.
177** Ooka/Johnson loses because he can't tell if Joey's telling the truth about what cards he's drawn.
178** Oota/Nesbitt picks Serenity as an opponent because she's inexperienced and it's her monster that finishes him off. He also defeats Honda/Tristan by destroying his deck master. Serenity defeats him the same way.
179** Daimon/Leichter considers himself superior to Kaiba and loses when Kaiba pulls out a monster with a higher level than his.
180** In their combined duel with Yugi and Joey, they allowed Joey to duel with Yugi because they thought he would be weaker and hold Yugi back. Ultimately, the two combined proved to be more than they could handle (in fact, based on the cards they drew, they would have beaten Yugi quite handily if they'd fought him on his own), and several key moments of the Duel (including the final move) were the result of Joey's handiwork.
181* DefeatingTheUndefeatable: Their Five-Headed Dragon is supposed to be unbeatable, having the highest attack of any monster in the game at that time, and an immunity to Trap Cards, Spell Cards, and attacks by any monster that doesn't have the Light attribute. Yugi and Kaiba take it down with Master of Dragon Soldier in their first confrontation with it, while Yugi and Jonouchi/Joey use a Dark Flare Knight/Mirage Knight combination the second time.
182* DiesDifferentlyInAdaptation: In the original Japanese version, Noah deletes them. In the dub, he seals them in virtual cells and they later die offscreen when the virtual world is destroyed.
183* DivergentCharacterEvolution: Initially they're an OmniscientCouncilOfVagueness, with the collective goal of taking over [=KaibaCorp=] for unspecified, but undoubtedly sinister intentions. In the "Virtual Nightmare" arc, they're all given separate personalities, and objectives, and while they all share the goal of defeating Kaiba and escaping into the real world, their reasons for hating him are fleshed out, with them gaining separate backstories and motivations. Gansley and Johnson are just greedy, Crump's mad at Kaiba for mocking his penguin obsession, Nezbitt's angry about his work being disposed of, and Leichter's TheResenter par excellence.
184* FauxAffablyEvil: Johnson and especially Leichter, who in the English dub at least, is incapable of addressing anyone informally, despite being the biggest bastard of the entire group. Also Crump for being LaughablyEvil.
185* EvilSoundsDeep: In the dub, they all have fairly low voices, with Gansley and Nezbitt hitting the lowest notes.
186* GenderBender: They aren't against using the bodies of Téa or Serenity to escape the virtual world. Crump in particular states in the Japanese version that he would prefer a female body, since he's a pervert.
187* GrandTheftMe: What they try to do.
188* {{Greed}}: A motivating factor for all of them, but especially Oshita/Gansley and Ooka/Johnson.
189* JerkAss: While they do have their reasons for wanting revenge on Kaiba, none of them are nice people. Gansley stole a neighbor's lemonade stand to profit from it, Johnson is a shameless AmoralAttorney who once convinced a jury that an innocent man with aquaphobia stole a boat, Nezbitt is a sexist MisanthropeSupreme, and Crump is a DirtyOldMan. Even Leichter is shown to be unwilling to keep his word when he refuses to return Tristan's body.
190* LastNameBasis: In the English dub, only Crump's first name has been revealed, and they are all addressed by their last names.
191* TheManBehindTheMan: They think they're this to Pegasus; in reality he's just using them.
192* TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness: In their initial appearances.
193* OneSteveLimit: Averted in the Japanese version. Daimon shares his name with Kaiba's butler, who uses the same name from the Toei anime.
194* OurDragonsAreDifferent: Their Five-Headed Dragon is quite overpowered with 5000/5000, that destroys all cards on the field through the act of being summoned and can only be harmed by a monster with the Light Attribute. After it's destruction in their duel with Yugi and Jonouchi/Joey, Leichter summons the Berserk Dragon, a freaky [[TheUndead undead]] monster with 3500/0 that can attack the entire field at once (but fortunately loses 500 ATK points every turn).
195* PungeonMaster: All of them in the English dub--Gansley makes business puns, Crump accounting ones, Johnson legal ones, and Nezbitt machine related ones, while Leichter makes most of his at Kaiba's expense.
196* TheResenter: They all resent Kaiba for his control of the company, but Daimon/Leichter is the most classic example, feeling control of the company should have come to him due to his status as Gozaburo's right-hand man.
197* RewardedAsATraitorDeserves: As revealed in Daimon/Leichter's flashbacks, the Big Five betrayed Gozaburo Kaiba by helping Seto take over Kaiba Corp and Seto rewarded them by demoting them to powerless figureheads.
198* SinisterSilhouettes: In their initial appearances.
199* SoreLoser: A result of their desperation to escape from the virtual world. All of them except for Nezbitt (who had defeated one of his opponents and secured a body) attack Joey, Serenity, and Duke in a bid to take their bodies by force, a stunt the full group attempts again following their 5-on-2 duel with Yugi & Joey. Both times, they are stopped by Noah, who has no patience for their underhanded tactics.
200* SmugSnake: All of them. They range from very low-functioning (Crump and Nezbitt) to the far more high-functioning Gansley and Leichter. Johnson may be the most classic of them, with his condescending attitude, arrogance, and smarmy personality.
201* SnarkToSnarkCombat: In the English dub, Gansley vs Yugi and Leichter vs Kaiba.
202* SpikesOfVillainy: Their deck masters have this to varying degrees, most prominently [[http://images.wikia.com/yugioh/images/2/23/DeepseaWarriorPSV-EN-C.jpg Deepsea Warrior]] and [[http://images.wikia.com/yugioh/images/2/2a/JinzoPSV-EN-ScR.jpg Jinzo]].
203* SplitMindSplitPowers: During their duel against Yugi and Joey, they switch which of the three is controlling Tristan, which has the effect of changing which Deck Master is in control.
204* TeethClenchedTeamWork: They frequently argue while working together in the five on two duel against Yugi and Joey.
205* ThemeNaming: In the original Japanese. Their surnames all begin with the character for 'big,' romanized as 'O.' The exception is Daimon, who uses the more Chinese 'dai' pronunciation. In the English dub, they are named after [[Creator/FourKidsEntertainment 4Kids]] executives. Yes, the Abridged joke about them being 4Kids didn't come from nowhere.
206* TookALevelInBadass: Between their original appearances in the manga and the anime's Virtual Nightmare FillerArc, to the anime's Virtual World FillerArc. Oshita/Gansley and Daimon/Leichter in particular have become capable duelists who can give the likes of Yugi and Kaiba, both world champions, a run for their money.
207* {{Tuckerization}}: In the dub, with the exception of Johnson, they are named after 4Kids employees.
208** Gansley is named after John Gansley, the Vice President of Human Resources.
209** Crump is named after Melanie Crump, executive assistant to John Gansley.
210** Nezbitt is named after Sarah C. Nesbitt, who worked as a producer for ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003''.
211** Leichter is named after Jamie Leichter, a marketing director.
212* VillainousCheekbones: All of them but Otaki/Crump, who has chubby cheeks. Special points to Daimon/Leichter, who has cheekbones that could cut sheet metal.
213* VillainBall: They tend to have some nasty run-ins with this. Justified in that they're all {{sadist}}s that, with the exception of Leichter, have only a rudimentary understanding of how the game is played.
214** Oshita/Gansley could have beaten Yugi[[note]]Tribute Ruklamba to summon Ashingray and another Ruklamba in attack position, Tribute Summon Rainbow Snake Eingana and attack Celtic Guardian; even if Yugi summons Kuriboh to negate the attack, Ruklamba can attack it and Yugi loses since Kuriboh is in his Deck Master[[/note]], but he decided to drag the duel out to watch him squirm.
215** Johnson's duel with Joey. After [[CheatersNeverProsper rigging the effect of Joey's dice cards]], he could have attacked Joey's Swordsman of Landstar with one of his strengthened Fusion monsters and won the duel. Instead, he inexplicably uses his Deck Master ability to destroy it and deal far less damage than an attack would have, and then Joey uses Scapegoat to protect himself long enough to draw the cards he needs and ultimately win.
216** Johnson and Nezbitt get hit with this hard in the combined duel. Twice, once for each of them, they could have easily finished off Joey, who had no monsters out and there were no facedown cards to protect themselves. Instead Johnson settles for taking Joey down to 300 Life Points, while Nezbitt flat ignores Joey and attacks Yugi. In the latter case, Yugi metagames Nezbitt into attacking him using a double bluff, knowing that Joey was vulnerable and that Nezbitt was stupid enough to take the bait. Leichter immediately points this out and promptly replaces Nezbitt in the duel in frustration.
217* VirtualGhost: Their fates after the Virtual Game arc, which is why they need to do GrandTheftMe on the heroes to get human bodies again.
218* WouldHitAGirl: Otaki/Crump and Oota/Nezbitt would both trap a girl in the virtual world, and even specifically choose Shizuka and Anzu as their opponents because they think they'll be easier to beat.
219* YourPrincessIsInAnotherCastle: In the group duel, Yugi and Joey manage to do the [[DefeatingTheUndefeatable near impossible]] and take down the Five-Headed Dragon, which served as the group's collective Deck Master and is all but undefeatable. They celebrate, they cheer--and then Daimon/Leichter activates [[DealWithTheDevil A Deal With Dark Ruler]] to summon [[TheUndead Berserk Dragon]] as their new Deck Master, even as Yugi and Joey's all powerful Mirage Knight splits back into the Black Magician and Flame Swordsman that were used to summon it. [[OhCrap Uh-oh]].
220[[/folder]]
221
222[[folder:Konosuke Oshita]]
223!!Konosuke Oshita (大下 幸之助) (Gansley)
224[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/freakyfish.png]]
225-> Voiced by: Nobuyuki Saito (JP, Legendary Heroes), Creator/EricStuart (EN, Match of the Millennium, Legendary Heroes); Shintaro Sonooka (JP, Virtual World), Creator/MarcThompson (EN, Virtual World), Carlos Kaniowski (European Spanish)
226
227The former vice president of business strategy at [=KaibaCorp=]. He uses a control deck focused on monsters with effects that increase his card advantage by letting him draw more cards, summon more monsters, or reduce the opponent's hand. While they individually have poor stats, he doesn't need them to be strong to defend himself: using his Deck Master Deep Sea Warrior, he can change any monster attack against him into a direct attack on his opponent by tributing two of his own monsters.
228----
229* AuthorityInNameOnly: While he's the official leader of the Big Five being its eldest member, he's still inferior to Leichter, both in his superior position as the assistant to the company and in terms of dueling skills with Leichter being the most skilled out of the Five.
230* BaldOfEvil: In his real body.
231* BondVillainStupidity: He could have beaten Yugi[[note]]Tribute Ruklamba to summon Ashingray and another Ruklamba in attack position, Tribute Summon Rainbow Snake Eingana and attack Obnoxious Celtic Guardian; even if Yugi summons Kuriboh to negate the attack, Ruklamba can attack it and Yugi loses since Kuriboh is his Deck Master[[/note]], but he decided to drag the duel out to watch him squirm.
232* BoringButPractical: In his duel with Yugi, he doesn't make many major dramatic plays, and his "boss" monster has a measly 2200 ATK and is more useful for its effect (which he never gets to activate). His focus is on low-level, low-powered monsters that have effects to let him maintain card advantage and field presence, like letting him draw cards or summon additional monsters to the field. Given that he got himself to a point where he could've beaten ''Yugi'' fair and square were it not for sudden BondVillainStupidity, his tactics were certainly effective.
233* CoolMask: Has one as Deepsea Warrior.
234* CorruptCorporateExecutive: All the Big Five are this, but Oshita/Gansley stands out in particular. In the dub, he recounts in his childhood that he stole a lemonade stand from a neighbor, before expanding it into a canned juice distributor. In the original, he instead talks about his reputation as a corporate raider for Kaiba Corp.
235* CrazyPrepared: In the Japanese dub, he's done extensive research on Yugi's method of dueling. It's so comprehensive that he's one of the few people who knows that Yugi has two personalities, and is able to choose his Deck Master and deck specifically to combat Yami Yugi's style.
236* DeadpanSnarker: Somewhat surprisingly in the English dub, he keeps up a pretty constant barrage of understated sarcasm in the initial part of his duel with Yugi.
237* DeathByIrony: He spends his duel against Yugi insulting Kuriboh, and loses due to its ability.
238* DelusionsOfEloquence: His tendency to use quotes from famous warlords and conquerors to make a successful army is stated by Yami Yugi to be this as he relies on utilizing quotes to make himself seem more profound. [[SmallNameBigEgo Even though he's merely a business strategist for an admirably powerful company]].
239* DemotedToExtra: Gets forced out after just one turn in control in the 5-on-2 duel against Yugi and Joey despite his competence.
240* EvilOldFolks: He's the oldest of the Big Five and needs a cane to support himself.
241* FatBastard: Is noticeably portly.
242* FatalFlaw: He enjoys watching people squirm. He could have beaten Yugi quickly, but instead decided to drag the duel out, leading to his defeat.
243* IronicEcho: He recites a quote to rub his presumed victory in Yugi's face. Yugi throws it right back at him while delivering the finishing blow.
244* TheLeader: He was the highest in authority of the five at Kaiba Corp.
245* PerpetualFrowner: He's a scowler.
246* ProngsOfPoseidon: Wields one as Deepsea Warrior.
247* ReptilesAreAbhorrent: His deck is made up almost exclusively of reptile cards.
248* {{Sadist}}: He drags out his duel with Yugi just to watch him squirm. [[BondVillainStupidity It ultimately bites him in the ass.]]
249* SpeaksInShoutOuts: In the Japanese original, Gansley recites quotes from military strategists instead of making business puns. Yugi calls him out on this, claiming that the old man is just using the quotes as decoration without actually internalizing their tactical lessons. It comes full circle when he uses one to convince himself to make a tactical blunder that Yugi exploits for the win.
250* SuicidalOverconfidence: He's convinced he has Yugi beat, so gives him a one turn reprieve as a HopeSpot. That one turn ends up costing him the duel.
251* WickedCultured: In the Japanese version, he makes several quotes from conquerors and warlords throughout his duel with Yugi, which irks the young man eventually due to [[DelusionsOfEloquence his perceived posturing as someone more profound than he actually is]].
252[[/folder]]
253
254[[folder:Shuzo Otaki]]
255!!Shuzo Otaki (大瀧 修三) (Adrian Randolph Crump III)
256[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/penguins.png]]
257-> Voiced by: Satoshi Tsuruoka (JP, Legendary Heroes); Andrew Paull (EN, Match of the Millennium), Ryosuke Otani (JP, Virtual World); Robert O'Gorman (EN, Virtual World), Antonio Villar (European Spanish)
258
259A former [=KaibaCorp=] accountant (human resources in the original) deeply obsessed with penguins. He runs the sharply-dressed Nightmare Penguin as his Deck Master and focuses on a Water beatdown playstyle, summoning aquatic monsters that receive an attack boost thanks to Nightmare Penguin's Deck Master ability.
260
261----
262* AnimalWrongsGroup: A somewhat heavier part of his personality in the Japanese original, where he rattles off every environmentally-unfriendly thing Anzu ever did in her life, then says that he's going to use her body to treat the Earth (especially the ice caps where the penguins live) with more respect.
263* AntiVillain: He is by far the most sympathetic of the Big 5 (if only because his is the most deeply fleshed out backstory), aside from his humiliating treatment in his duel with Téa. He had AbusiveParents and only found comfort in watching penguins at the zoo, jealous of their deeply paternal bonds with their children. He eventually worked up the ranks to gain enough authority to get his own penguin-themed amusement park, but [[{{Jerkass}} Seto]] turned his proposal down.
264* BeardOfEvil: More mustache of evil but you got the case.
265* CaptainErsatz: He is very clearly based on Franchise/{{Batman}} villain Oswald Cobblepot, aka The Penguin. As Nightmare Penguin he even sports the top hat and tuxedo.
266* DeathByIrony: He declares Dark Magician Girl to be useless without Dark Magician, so Téa summons Yugi's and the tag team wins her the duel.
267* DirtyOldMan: He makes many lewd comments about Téa and Dark Magician Girl in the Japanese version. Downplayed in the dub where Crump's middle aged.
268* FatalFlaw: Caution. Had he been a little more aggressive during the first phase of his duel and swarmed the field with the penguins in his hand after Penguin Sword gave him an edge, he could have won his duel with Téa.
269* FeatheredFiend: As Nightmare Penguin.
270* FreudianExcuse: He grew up with AbusiveParents and only found comfort in watching penguins at the zoo, jealous of their deeply paternal bonds with their children. He eventually worked up the ranks to gain enough authority to get his own penguin-themed amusement park, but Seto turned his proposal down.
271* GoodWithNumbers: He was formerly [=KaibaCorp=]'s head accountant in the English dub. This is explained in his backstory as it stemming from his love for counting.
272* HeadsIWinTailsYouLose: His secondary strategy revolves around generating advantage if a card of his is destroyed. His Gust trap is hit with Mystical Space Typhoon? It turns out his other facedown card was Driving Snow, which triggers when a trap of his is destroyed, allowing him to take out one of his opponent's spells or traps. A monster of his gets taken out in battle? He had set Revenge Sacrifice on his previous turn, which lets him Tribute the monster who defeated his to summon another one from his hand. It should be noted that it's a rather slow display of this trope, and can only counterattack singular moves by his opponent. When Téa manages to get more than one monster on the field, Crump can't keep up, which is what costs him the duel.
273* HomefieldAdvantage: Downplayed. Thanks to taking the form of his Nightmare Penguin Deck Master, he's immune to cold temperatures. So while he still gets frozen when he loses life points thanks to the stage gimmick of his arena, he feels no discomfort from it, allowing him to continue playing without distractions.
274* LaughablyEvil: Crump is portrayed as the most comedic and high strung of the Big Five, as he shows exaggerated facial expressions when hit, or surprised like an animated cartoon character (compared to his associates who all manage to stay serious during their Duels while in Deck Master mode).
275* NothingPersonal: Crump tells Téa that he has no grudge against her and he simply needs a body to escape to the real world, saying she just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time.
276* NotSoHarmlessVillain: He uses a deck filled with weak penguins, which he's been obsessed with since childhood, and comes off as so pathetic in his duel with Téa that you almost feel sorry for him. Then in the duel between the Big Five and Yugi & Joey (in which most of the cards on the field belong to other Big Five members) he and his Deck Master, Nightmare Penguin, really come into their own, boosting the power of the WATER monsters Gansley had played and establishing a significant field advantage for the Big Five.
277* PungeonMaster: While all of the Big 5 are this, Crump makes puns more than any of the others. Almost every other sentence from him has some bird, ice, or number related pun in it.
278[[/folder]]
279
280[[folder:Chikuzen Ooka/Oka]]
281!!Chikuzen Ooka/Oka (大岡 筑前) (Johnson)
282[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/justice_1.png]]
283-> Voiced by: Shin'ichi Yashiro (Japanese); Creator/TedLewis (EN, Match of the Millennium), Creator/WayneGrayson (EN, Legendary Heroes); Andrew Paull (EN, Virtual World), Cholo Moratalla (European Spanish)
284
285A lawyer, formerly [=KaibaCorp=]'s legal advisor. Reflecting his self-perceived control of the courtroom, he uses Judge Man as his Deck Master. With its Deck Master ability, he can impose a "death sentence" (or "clear the courtroom" in the dub) by paying 1000 Life Points, which destroys all his opponent's monsters and deals 500 damage for each of them.
286----
287* AmoralAttorney: In the Japanese version he says outright he has no problem twisting the facts, and claims "the truth" is whatever tale he can spin for the court. In the dub, during an internal ThisCannotBe as he's defeated, he notes "I once convinced a jury that a man who was terrified of water stole a boat!"
288* BatmanGambit: He lets Joey abuse his Deck Master's ability to power up his monsters and swarm the field, because once he's invested enough resources, his Deck Master ability will make it all for nothing. In the Japanese anime he compares it to a gambler letting their wins go to their head and then blowing it all.
289* CheatersNeverProsper: Notably the only one of the Big Five who explicitly cheats in his duel, [[RealityWarper utilizing the mechanics of the virtual reality in order to alter Joey's luck to fail]] so only he come up ahead. [[{{Hypocrite}} Noah]] would call him out on this and threatens to erase/send him into the depths of cyber space before Joey decides to finish the duel anyway. It comes back to bite him as he is defeated through Joey's guile due to no longer being in complete control of the situation.
290* EvilIsPetty: Johnson targets Joey in the Big Five's tag duel because he's still sore about his loss. Johnson denies it, but no one is fooled.
291* FauxAffablyEvil: He acts humble to Noah and somewhat polite to Joey, but it soon becomes apparent that he's a slimy, underhanded and smug attorney under the facade.
292* FixingTheGame: His deck master Judge Man already had a ''huge'' game breaking ability, but he added rigging the results of Joey's luck-based cards to his advantage. [[EvenEvilHasStandards Noah wouldn't put up with that second one]].
293* FourEyesZeroSoul: In his human form, he's an AmoralAttorney who lies and cheats.
294* GenderBender: Disguises himself as Mai to trick Joey and briefly [[VocalDissonance talks with his own voice while still in Mai's form]].
295* HangingJudge: A literal case as Judge Man. In the Japanese, his Deck Master ability is even called ''Death Sentence''.
296* InformedAbility: He insists that he's a brilliant litigator and negotiator. He ends up losing his duel against Joey after getting bluffed in a 50/50 gamble. And then he ends up making the Big Five worse off in the duel with Yugi than they would have been had he just let Leichter handle the deal. It's obvious that he's only capable of winning when he's already got the odds rigged in his favor.
297* IronicName: His Japanese name is likely derived from the legendary [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ooka_Tadasuke Ooka Tadasuke]], an absolute ''icon'' of judicial fairness and wisdom.
298* LargeAndInCharge: Played straight when it comes to his monsters, being larger and more imposing in terms of attack power based on his Deck Master. Subverted overall, in spite of being having the largest monster as a Deck Master with only Leichter's Jinzo being taller, he's arguably the least skilled Duelist of the Five due to resorting to cheating to gain an advantage.
299* TheLoad: He's easily the second weakest duelist after Nezbitt, but this doesn't end up causing too much trouble as he's only allowed to play for one turn during the Big Five's duel with Yugi (though this is only because Nezbitt butts in and forces him out). Rather, he accidentally sabotages the Big Five when he insists on taking point in negotiating the terms of the duel. He sets them up for failure by agreeing to a Tag Duel and underestimating Joey, despite Leichter's warnings on both fronts. The only thing he does get in their favor is double the starting life point count, but this [[InstantWinCondition ultimately doesn't even matter]].
300* NeverMyFault: Only in the dub. He tries deflecting responsibility once it becomes clear to the others that Joey (who Johnson was certain would prove TheMillstone to Yugi) just secured the win for himself and Yugi in their duel.
301* RecurringElement: He is one of Joey's many opponents who resort to [[FixingTheGame cheating]] in order to best the blonde street rat.
302* ThisCannotBe: He assumes that Joey will hold Yugi back. To his astonishment, Joey ends up being the reason why Yugi wins, something his colleagues angrily berate him for. In the sub, he insists that wasn't supposed to happen; in the dub, he tries to [[NeverMyFault pass the buck on the blame.]]
303* VoluntaryShapeshifting: He changes his form the most of the Big Five during their stay in the Virtual World, going from disguising as Mai, to himself and finally as Judge Man.
304 [[/folder]]
305
306[[folder:Soichiro Oota/Ota]]
307!!Soichiro Oota/Ota (大田 宗一郎) (Nezbitt)
308[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/robots_4.png]]
309-> Voiced by: Hiroomi Sugino (JP), Creator/DavidWills (EN), Eduardo del Hoyo (European Spanish)
310
311An engineer and former chief technical officer of [=KaibaCorp=]. Naturally, due to his love of robotics and technology, he utilizes a Machine deck, particularly loving Machine King and using card effects to power it up. His Deck Master is Robotic Knight, which lets him discard Machine monsters to deal damage to his opponent with artillery barrages.
312----
313* ArmsDealer: Under Gozaburo, he was in charge of [=KaibaCorp=]'s military factories.
314* BigOlEyebrows: He looks like someone drew angry eyebrows on him with a giant marker.
315* BlingOfWar: As Robotic Knight, which has a gold outline on its robotic shell.
316* BloodKnight: Implied. He's the only one of the Big Five prior to the tag battle to make the decision to have himself as a Deck Master be on the playing field in order to be able to fight the opposing monsters of his enemies with his own might and he later makes blunt decisions to attack the enemy head on. And being the former technical officer of the company being in charge of the military assets, meant he indulged in warmongering as well.
317* CombiningMecha: Oota/Nezbit combines Robotic Knight with Machine King to create Perfect Machine King.
318* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: Even if he was consistently the most useless of the Big Five, he ''was'' technically the only one who won against one of his opponents and got them all Tristan's body to use.
319* {{Cyborg}}: He would desperately like to be one, a fact that Noah mocks him for.
320* EvenEvilHasStandards: When he manages to defeat Tristan due to the latter taking all of his hits aimed at Serenity (who had no idea how to play the game and would constantly summon weak monsters in Attack Mode, not realizing she had to turn the card sideways to defend), Serenity falls into HeroicBSOD and continually skips her turn for the next several rounds. Despite nothing compelling him to give her multiple chances to re-enter the game, he arbitrarily decides that she can have three skips before he considers her as disqualified.
321* FixingTheGame: [[ZigzaggingTrope Sort of.]] While he doesn't legitimately ''cheat'' the way Johnson does, he forbids his three opponents from discussing their strategies with each other, knowing that only one of them has any practical dueling experience and exploiting it to help get ahead.
322* FourIsDeath: He is the fourth one dueled and he is the only one to kill (temporarily at least) one of his opponents. Bonus points for the duel having four players, and the Perfect Machine King he becomes being a four stage card, though the other two were added to the game after the series, with a four on the shoulders.
323* GeniusBruiser: Subverted. He thinks he's become one after fusing to create Perfect Machine King but he relies on brute power more than strategy, and he later costs the Big Five their duel with Yugi and Joey.
324* HotBlooded: Not immediately obvious due to his guise as Robotic Knight and later Perfect Machine King give him the impression of a cold machine. When he's in the tag duel with the other Five, he makes reckless decisions based on impulse, leading to a massive hiccup that forces Leichter to be in control for the rest of the duel to regain their lead.
325* HumongousMecha: His Perfect Machine King, created by fusing Machine King and Robotic Knight.
326* IgnorantOfTheirOwnIgnorance: His one turn in control against Yugi and Joey makes it clear he has no clue just how bad he is at Duel Monsters: He forces Johnson out while describing himself as a "real duelist", before proceeding to blunder away his signature Machine King and a whopping ''2,800'' Life Points.
327* {{Irony}}: Beneath his mechanical and logical facade, Nesbitt is the most impulsive and makes the most illogical decisions in the tag duel.
328* MachineMonotone: Attempts to put this up as Robotic Knight.
329* TheMillstone: In the duel against Yugi and Joey, he totally blows the substantial lead that his allies had established; not only does he botch his chance to finish off Joey and eliminate him, but his misplay results in the Big Five losing almost 3000 Life Points, forcing Daimon/Leichter to take over the duel earlier than he'd wanted. If not for his blundering, they probably could have won.
330* MisanthropeSupreme: He favors machines over people.
331* LeeroyJenkins: Long-term strategy is not Nezbitt's strong suit. In his three-on-one duel he focuses on a beatdown strategy with Machine King while constantly discarding his other monsters to deal damage to his opponents through his Deck Master's ability. This kind of play leaves him with virtually no resources when Machine King is destroyed, forcing him to put his Deck Master into play since he has nothing else left. Then during the tag duel against Yugi and Joey, he blunders into attacking a monster he accidentally powered up due to its effect, losing the Big Five a powerful monster (ironically, his beloved Machine King) and then causing them to take a big direct hit from Yugi, costing them greatly.
332* NoHonorAmongThieves: Tries to abandon his four teammates and leave them trapped in the virtual world after he acquires Tristan's body.
333* NormalFishInATinyPond: Perhaps a better description is "Tiny Fish in a Microscopic Pond". He only gets as far as he does in his first duel because, out of his three opponents, one has little to no practical dueling experience due to usually cheering from the sidelines (Tristan), and another is brand-spanking-new to dueling, with zero knowledge about how the game is even ''played'' (Serenity). That he forbids his opponents from discussing their strategies (and, by extension, how to play) with each other shows that he knows this and is taking full advantage of it. When he goes up against seasoned players (Yugi and Joey), however, he quickly proves himself to be [[TheMillstone the biggest liability to his allies]].
334* OneWingedAngel: Gets an impressive one when he (as Robotic Knight) fuses with Machine King to create Perfect Machine King: 2700 ATK, 1500 DEF. It gains 500 ATK for every Machine monster on the field, including itself, and Nezbitt runs a Machine deck and has a Magic Card that turns ''opposing'' monsters into Machines - in Nezbitt's duel, this causes the King to rocket up to '''5200''' ATK the second it's summoned.
335* UnskilledButStrong: He comes across as intimidating during his duel with Duke, Tristan and Serenity, managing to score the only (partial) victory of the Big Five. However, when closely examined, he only came across as threatening as he did due to Duke being the only one with credible experience--though not as skilled as Yami Yugi or Seto--in the game: Serenity is a newcomer, and Tristan, in addition to being recklessly distracted trying to protect Serenity, is not experienced at playing the game as he's usually on the sidelines. Bombarding them with beatsticks like Machine King, his Deck Master's ability, and later, Perfect Machine King is enough to overwhelm the novices. To seasoned players like Joey and Yugi, his blunt force tactics are easily put down and it takes Leichter to get back the momentum due to his recklessness.
336* WeHaveReserves: His support strategy--summon, then discard Machine monsters to directly deal damage to his opponents. The only ones that ultimately matter to him are his beatstick Machine King and himself as Robotic Knight.
337* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: Once he brings out Machine King, he relies solely on boosting its power and later enhancing it by merging himself with it to become Perfect Machine King, becoming an even more powerful beat stick to his enemy with no additional tactic after this.
338* WoodenKatanasAreEvenBetter: After stealing Tristan's body, he attacks Seto with a bokken and easily disarms Seto when he tries to fight back with a steel pipe. In the Japanese version, he claims to be a five-Dan kendo master.
339[[/folder]]
340
341[[folder:Kogoro Daimon]]
342!!Kogoro Daimon (大門小五郎) (Leichter)
343[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/d6f767fd85c2b30d05db43d34f0ef4f1649a949056aff96dbb9d073a4cd2b790_ri_v_ttw.png]]
344-> Voiced by: Creator/EijiTakemoto (JP, Legendary Heroes); Hisashi Izumi (JP, Virtual World), Creator/EricStuart (EN, Match of the Millennium), Tom Souhrada (EN, Virtual World), Jesús Rodríguez (European Spanish)
345
346Former assistant to Gozaburo Kaiba and later, Seto. The only one of the group with any real understanding of Duel Monsters strategy, he utilizes a control deck that locks down his opponent's plays through various cards that come at the cost of his Life Points, which he continually replenishes using support cards. This playstyle is highlighted by his Deck Master Jinzo, which negates and destroys Trap cards as it always does, but as a Deck Master its effect is only applied to his opponent, giving him all of Jinzo's benefits with no drawback.
347----
348* AmbiguouslyBrown: He's got dark skin, dark hair, and a six foot thick Southern accent in the dub.
349* UsefulNotes/AmericanAccents: Has a pretty straight up Dixie accent in the dub.
350* AnimeHair: Though not as impressive as Kemo's, his hair stands up in a single spike.
351* BaldOfEvil: As Jinzo.
352* BeardOfEvil: Has a classic evil goatee.
353* BigOlEyebrows: He also has thick villainous eyebrows.
354* BoringButPractical:
355** While the rest of the Big Five's Deck Masters have fairly elaborate and flashy effects, Daimon/Leichter just has Jinzo's straight-forward, but ''very'' effective ability to permanently lock his opponent's Trap Cards while leaving his own Traps free to use.
356** His choice of cards for his deck is an example as well, unlike the other members of the big 5 he doesnt care about using a particular theme for his deck. He simply picks which ever cards are most effective at locking his opponent down.
357* CastFromHitPoints: His playstyle is to use powerful cards that drain his Life Points, then regain them with cards like Solemn Wishes or Life Absorbing Machine.
358* CoatHatMask: He disguises his Jinzo Deck Master this way.
359* CoolMask: Wears one along with some SinisterShades when he first appears; one could argue that the mask he wears as Jinzo counts too.
360* {{Cyborg}}: As Jinzo.
361* TheDragon: Out of the Big Five, he's the closest of the members to being one for Noah. He's the only member Noah seems to not have total contempt for and even respects. The fact he was selected to duel against Kaiba, who Noah was obssessed with defeating, is an indication of the confidence he had in Leichter's skills.
362* DragonInChief: He is by far the most skilled duelist in the Big Five and takes over for the group permanently in their unified duel with Yugi and Joey. After seeing him take on both heroes for two episodes you could be forgiven for forgetting that the rest of the Big 5 are even there.
363* DramaticUnmask: Takes the effort of disguising his Deck Master identity before revealing himself as the powerful Lockdown-style monster Jinzo when Kaiba tries to set Trap cards.
364* DrivenByEnvy: All of the five are envious of Kaiba, but Daimon/Leichter is the worst, as he feels he and not Seto, should have been given control of [=KaibaCorp=] due to Kaiba taking his title as heir to president.
365* FauxAffablyEvil: Shows several shades of this, being polite to his enemies in spite of his obvious contempt for them.
366* JerkassHasAPoint: He's a bad guy, no doubt, but he's entirely right when he calls out Kaiba for the way he used Mokuba and The Big Five during TheCoup against Gozaburo.
367* ILied: Daimon/Leichter's response when Yugi reminds him that he promised to return Honda's body if the Big 5 were defeated. Ironically, he actually ''did'' intend to return the body initially, but Ooka/Johnson talked him out of it.
368* KillSat: He uses Satellite Cannon, which remains out of reach of attacks, and gains 1000 ATK points every turn.
369* KillerRabbit: Injection Fairy Lilly. She's a small cute fairy with only 400/1500. However, by paying 2000 Life Points he can raise her attack to 3400 until the end of his turn, making her very hard to get rid of. Leichter's initial strategy is to make sure he always has enough life points to milk her power for all it's worth.
370* LargeAndInCharge: Out of the Five, he's the most talented duelist and is therefore given the most control when the Big Five are forced to duel together. He is also physically tallest as a human and probably as Jinzo as well.
371* LeanAndMean: As Jinzo. Possibly as a normal person as well, since he is the tallest of the Big Five but seems to have narrow shoulders.
372* MinoredInAsskicking: An attorney by trade, Daimon/Leichter seems to have a real talent for Duel Monsters, being clearly far more skilled than the rest of the Big Five and able to give some serious competition to Kaiba, Yugi and Joey.
373* NobleDemon: Implied by his own distaste towards Kaiba's actions, though this doesn't mean he isn't above things like playing unfairly.
374* OddNameOut: In the original, he's the only one whose name doesn't begin with an "o". He arguably counts in the English as well, given that his name is a ShoutOut to Hannibal Lecter.
375* OneSteveLimit: In the original, he shares his name with Kaiba's butler, Daimon.
376* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: Delivers a lengthy one to Kaiba in which he calls him out on his ruthless attitude and treatment of Mokuba.
377* TheResenter: He was next in line to run [=KaibaCorp=], until Seto arrived, and despises Seto for this.
378* WeaksauceWeakness: While Leicther is a very talented duelist his strategy has one major weakness, its utter dependence on him constantly regenerating his lifepoints. The second Kaiba figures that out, he destroys his most powerful monster, Injection fairy lily, because Leicther can't power her up twice in a row due to the high cost of activating her effect and he spends the rest of their match on the defense.
379* ShoutOut: In the English dub, "Leichter" is named for [[Film/SilenceOfTheLambs Hannibal Lecter]], and in [[http://images2.wikia.nocookie.net/__cb20081213044448/yugioh/images/c/c1/JinzoYAP1-EN-UR-LE.png the Jinzo body]] looks the part a bit. It also fits he gives such [[HannibalLecture speeches]] too.
380* SignatureMon: Oddly enough it's actually not Satellite Cannon, his most dangerous card, but Injection Fairy Lily, who is often drawn [[OddCouple together with Jinzo]] seemingly just because of her appearance in his duel.
381[[/folder]]
382
383!!Employees
384
385[[folder:Daimon/Hobson]]
386!!'''Daimon (大門) ([[DubNameChange Hobson]])'''
387[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hobson_4363.png]]
388--> Voice by: Ryuji Saikachi (Toei series), Creator/JimmyZoppi (English), Alejandro Villeli (Latin American Spanish), Miguel Ayones (European Spanish)
389
390Seto Kaiba's faithful butler, rarely leaving his side. He once worked as a torturer and learned to resist torture himself, before being employed by the Kaiba family. Using his skills of torture, he designed the Electric Chair Ride game of Kaiba's Death-T theme park. The ride was designed to make the participants scream, which they must resist doing to avoid being electrocuted with ten million volts.
391
392In the Toei anime he was given the name Daimon, and was a more heroic character than in the manga. The Duel Monsters anime also named him Daimon, and the English dub named him Hobson.
393-----
394* AbsurdlyHighStakesGame: His Electric Chair Ride of Death-T's horror section electrifies you to death if you scream.
395* AdaptationalHeroism: In the first series anime by Toei, he is portrayed as more sympathetic. Instead of being a master torturer, he's an elderly player of Duel Monsters. Being ill and perpetually on life support, Daimon experienced Seto Kaiba's kindness when Seto was young. He duels for Kaiba in the hopes of his good heart reemerging, and upon his loss, urged Yugi to restore Kaiba's kindness.
396* AdaptationPersonalityChange: In Toei's anime he's not that bad of a guy.
397* AntiVillain: In the first series anime, where he's only following Kaiba's evil orders in the hopes that he'll eventually become good again.
398* DisabledInTheAdaptation: In the Toei anime, he is decrepit with age and has had to replace many of his internal organs with artificial ones. He half-jokingly calls himself a zombie because of this.
399* DubNameChange: The English dub changes his anime name from "Daimon" to "Hobson."
400* EverybodyCallsHimBarkeep: In the manga, he's just Kaiba's butler.
401* HighVoltageDeath: His fate in the manga.
402* ManInTheMachine: In the Toei anime, he's being sustained by life support and numerous devices, and he can't last very long outside his life support capsule.
403* MoralityPet: In the Toei anime, he was the one person Kaiba cared for as a child, and he expresses hope that his kindness can be restored.
404* NamedByTheAdaptation: The Toei and second-series anime named him Daimon (Hobson in the English dub). He was unnamed in the manga.
405* NobleDemon: In the Toei anime he's much more noble than other versions, where he's a WorthyOpponent to Yugi and a MoralityPet to Kaiba.
406* {{Reincarnation}}: Of ancient Egypt's Gelbelk, keeper of the pharaoh's dungeons and also a master torturer.
407* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the manga, Johji shits on his lap, which causes him to shout and get electrocuted. Played with in the Toei anime where it's mention he's already dead, but was revived through life support. In ''Duel Monsters'', he disappears after his first appearance, suffering no punishment for taking Sugoroku to Kaiba.
408* TickleTorture: Literally, he sets up tickle machines in an attempt to get Yugi's crew laughing so they'll be ''electrocuted to death''.
409* TortureTechnician: Doubles as this for Kaiba as well as being his butler.
410* UncertainDoom: In the Toei anime Kaiba leaves him for dead after his loss, but it's never started whether he actually died.
411* WorthyOpponent: In the Toei anime Yugi considers him one, as they share a respect for games and he refuses to cheat or use an unfair advantage like earlier opponents.
412[[/folder]]
413
414[[folder:Laser Tag Assassins]]
415!!'''Laser Tag Assassins'''
416[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/assassins_6016.png]]
417
418The Laser Tag Assassins were three professional mercenaries hired by Kaiba. After being offered ¥10,000 each for killing Yugi and his friends in the Shooting Stardust game of Kaiba's Death-T amusement park, they were determined to get their job done and were equipped with guns that fired real lasers that can cause fatal electric shocks, whereas Yugi and his friends were given toy guns.
419
420In the original manga, the team composed of '''Johnny Gale''', a former Green Beret commander, '''Bob Mcguire''', a former SWAT team leader and sniper, and '''Name unknown''', a hitman who succeeded in killing all of his opponents until he was hired by Kaiba Corp.
421
422-----
423* AbsurdlyHighStakesGame: To them, getting shot by the enemy is just another game of laser tag. To the enemy, it's an actual war ground because their laser guns are real.
424* AdaptationNameChange: Johnny Gale, Bob Mcguire, and "Name unknown" are changed to Red, Black, and Blue in the Toei anime. Well, "Name unknown" doesn't get a name change, but rather...
425* AdaptedOut: "Name unknown" is replaced by a woman named Blue in the Toei anime.
426* CaptainErsatz: "Name unknown"...? That face looks familiar... A killer who never fails an assignment... Wait a minute... Holy crap, it's Manga/{{Golgo 13}}!
427* BountyHunter: Their targets? Primarily Yugi, and also his friends.
428* DubNameChange: The ''Dungeon Dice Monsters'' game names them Charlie Gale, Bickford Gage, and Snipes Crosshair, respectively.
429* FixingTheGame: Yugi and his friends walked into Death-T Arena 1 thinking it was just a normal laser tag game, and it is for them as they're giving regular toy guns used for laser tag. However, Kaiba had rigged the game and the assassins obviously have the upper edge here because their guns are ''real'', which the characters luckily found out before anyone died.
430* ForeignCussWord: In the Japanese manga, there was an instance where on of the assassins cursed in English.
431* PrivateMilitaryContractors: Johnny Gale and Bob Mcguire were former soldiers/law enforcement officers.
432* ProfessionalKiller: "Name unknown" was a professional hitman that had a perfect kill count until he was hired by Kaiba Corp, where our heroes obviously escaped death.
433* RaceLift: Bob Mcguire is a white man in the manga, whereas the Toei anime turned him into a black man named "Black"
434[[/folder]]
435
436[[folder:Chopman]]
437!!'''Chopman''' (チョップマン)
438[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/chopman_3781.png]]
439
440One summer during a camp near Domino Lake, Chopman murdered ten boy scouts who had been staying there in a single night. He chopped their bodies into unrecognizable pieces and the news of the murders had all of Domino City in fear. The suspect came to be known as "The Chopman", but was not captured and remained at large. Seto Kaiba later hired him for the Horror Stage of his Death-T theme park.
441
442After a horrifying struggle, Jonouchi manages to kill the Chopman by burning him alive.
443-----
444* AbsurdlyHighStakesGame: His role in Death-T is basically ''VideoGame/ClockTower'' come to life.
445* AdaptedOut: He doesn't appear in the first series anime because Death-T was heavily toned down by Toei Animation. Likewise, the first episode of the second series anime skips over Death-T's lower stages and goes right into Yugi's final Death-T battle with Kaiba, so he doesn't appear there either.
446* AxCrazy: As long as he gets to kill people, he's satisfied.
447* CaptainErsatz: Of Leatherface.
448* HockeyMaskAndChainsaw: How he dresses.
449* {{Homage}}: To ''Film/TheTexasChainsawMassacre'' and ''Franchise/FridayThe13th''.
450* HulkSpeak: He speaks like this in the ''Destiny Board Traveler'' game.
451* KillItWithFire: Jonouchi's solution for this psychopath.
452* PsychoForHire: Kaiba somehow tracked down this crazed killer and got him to be a living attraction.
453%%* SerialKiller
454* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: No one knows who his identity is - all they know is that he's the Chopman.
455* [[WouldHurtAChild Would Kill a Child]]: Killed ten boy scouts and was all-the-more-willing to kill Johji, Honda's infant nephew.
456[[/folder]]
457
458[[folder:Isono (Roland)]]
459!!Isono (磯野) (Roland)
460[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bestdad.png]]
461
462A rule-posturing [=KaibaCorp=] employee who refereed the final duels during Battle City, Isono is also Seto Kaiba's personal bodyguard. He continued to work for [=KaibaCorp=] after the tournament, though in ''VideoGame/YuGiOhTheFalseboundKingdom'' he quit and found new work at SIC.
463----
464* AdaptationDyeJob: Had black hair in the manga, which was made dark teal in the anime.
465* AnimeHair: Mild, but the dark parts of his hair are separated by lightning bolt-shaped stripes.
466* AscendedExtra: He gets a bit more to do in season 4 of the anime, highlighting his genuine loyalty to Kaiba as well as showcasing his positive traits more.
467* FaceHeelTurn: In ''The Falsebound Kingdom'' Isono quit [=KaibaCorp=] to work for Scott Irvine, and is complicit in trapping Yugi and Kaiba in the game.
468* FriendToAllChildren: In ''VideoGame/YuGiOhReshefOfDestruction'' he's good with kids, organizing a Kaibaman show to give them hope and speaking kindly of Rebecca's skills.
469* RulesLawyer: According to him, duelists ''cannot'' interact with one another during the match, even if they're in danger of dying. He was ready to just start a countdown after Joey collapsed in his duel with Marik, when even Mokuba realized that maybe he should check to see if Joey had been seriously injured first.
470* ThoseTwoGuys: He often appears alongside Fuguta, another employee with similar hair.
471* UndyingLoyalty: In the anime he remains steadfastly loyal to Kaiba even after Dartz takes over the company.
472[[/folder]]
473
474[[folder:Scott Irvine]]
475!!Scott Irvine/Engineer A (技術者A)
476[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/scott2.PNG]]
477A [=KaibaCorp=] technician who supervised the creation of the Duel Disk, Scott Irvine bore witness to Kaiba defeating his Blue-Eyes Ultimate Dragon with Obelisk the Tormentor. His story ends there in the manga and anime.
478
479In the ''VideoGame/YuGiOhTheFalseboundKingdom'' video game, Scott is the main villain of the game, trapping the characters in a virtual game world in a bid to summon [=DarkNite=]. He also cameos in ''Anime/YuGiOhTheMoviePyramidOfLight'' and ''Anime/YuGiOhTheDarksideOfDimensions''.
480
481----
482* ActuallyADoombot: At one point in Kaiba's campaign, he and Yami Yugi team up to defeat Scott, only for the real Scott to reveal that they'd defeated a remotely-controlled robot stand-in.
483* AdaptationDyeJob: He had grey hair in the manga and anime, black hair in ''Pyramid of Light'', and ''The Falsebound Kingdom'' gives him brown-grey hair.
484* AscendedExtra: From a random technician to the main villain of ''Falsebound Kingdom''.
485* BeardOfEvil: In ''The Falsebound Kingdom'' his beard is more unkempt compared to his other versions.
486* BrainwashedAndCrazy: He inflicts this on Joey, Téa, and Bakura via mind control.
487* TheCameo: He makes minor appearances in the manga, the second series anime, ''Pyramid of Light'', and ''Darkside of Dimensions''.
488* FromNobodyToNightmare: Scott was a background extra from the manga and anime before appearing in the game. It's really highlighted in Yugi's campaign, since they have no idea who he is.
489* GlowingEyesOfDoom: He gets these when erasing Haysheen from the game and brainwashing the players.
490* GoMadFromTheRevelation: He went mad from seeing Yugi, Kaiba and Marik wield the Egyptian God Cards and became obsessed with controlling their power.
491* InsufferableGenius: He talks down to Yugi and his friends frequently, calling them a feeble-minded bunch who wouldn't understand his schemes. When Yami Yugi ''does'' figure it out, he's only mildly impressed.
492* MadScientist: He built a huge video game simulation to trap the players' souls and summon a wicked spirit.
493* NamedByTheAdaptation: ''The Falsebound Kingdom'' was the first media to name him. He went unnamed in the manga, ''DSOD'' gave him the last name Kuwabara after [[{{Tuckerization}} one of the movie's staff]], and the anime designated him Engineer A.
494* NeverFoundTheBody: Though [=DarkNite=] implies he's dead, Scott's body is never found and he vanishes without a trace.
495* SanitySlippage: While he's already unhinged by the start of the game, by the end he's gone mad to the degree that ''[=DarkNite=]'' calls him more than a little crazy.
496* SmugSnake: One of his defining traits in the game is his supreme arrogance. His mugshot's only expression is of him sneering.
497* StartMyOwn: He forms SIC after leaving [=KaibaCorp=], hiring Roland/Isono to work for him as well.
498* WouldHurtAChild: Threatens to kill Mokuba if Seto won't do as he says, and he set the game up to sacrifice everyone in it to [=DarkNite=].
499* YesMan: In the manga and anime he followed Kaiba's orders to the letter, inserting Kaiba's deck into the duel computer at maximum level despite the damage Solid Vision could cause.
500* YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness: Pulls this on the villain of the virtual game, Emperor Haysheen, to take over his army and his role.
501* YourSoulIsMine: He steals Mokuba's soul to coerce Kaiba into fighting Yugi, then adds that he'll ''kill'' Mokuba if Kaiba doesn't comply.
502[[/folder]]

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