Yung Pudz: ELITE DUELIST or FILTHY RULESHARK? (you decide)

GigaVise Discord:   / discord   Yung Pudz: ELITE DUELIST or FILTHY RULESHARK? (You Decide) —Case 00247-A, Presented to the Court of Public Format Opinion Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, thank you for convening. Today, we gather not merely to discuss a duelist, but to weigh the character, conduct, and very soul of a man who has become—whether by brilliance or blasphemy—a known quantity in the Edison Format ecosystem. You may know him as Yung Pudz: a self-proclaimed Gigavise aficionado, a top-table menace, a frequent visitor to the DuelingBook Salt Mines, and, some whisper in hushed tones… a rules technician of suspicious convenience. Now, the prosecution will attempt to brand him a filthy ruleshark—a wretched creature who hides behind obscure rulings and outdated judge documents, twisting the blade of "correct procedure" to steal games like a thief in the night. They will say he preys on opponents' imprecision, that he lets misplays happen in silence, only to pounce when it is no longer reversible. They will argue that no man can loop Gigaplant that consistently without some sort of demonic pact. They will paint him not as a player, but as a manipulator of game state and social trust alike. A villain. A heretic. A shark in a custom mat. But let us not be so quick to condemn. Because the defense will show you evidence—overwhelming evidence—that Yung Pudz is no mere rules abuser, but a technical mastermind, a Gigavise monk who has spent years in the forests of the format, learning every line, every branch, every interaction, until his combo trees bear fruit that lesser duelists cannot even dream of. Is it not true that in a format so intricate, so ruled by timing and chain resolution, mastery of the rules is mastery of the game itself? Is it not the job of a true duelist to know not only how their cards work, but how yours don’t? You will be shown clips—match footage where he outmaneuvers multiple top decks using nothing but perfect recursion, flawless priority usage, and gigabrain-level rulings most duelists wouldn’t dare attempt mid-game. You will see his calm demeanor as he plays through Gorz, navigates through Torrentials, and ends on unbreakable boards after staring death in the face. The prosecution will hiss, “He only wins because people don’t know the rules.” But I ask you: is it his fault they didn’t read the book? This case is about more than one man. It is about whether we respect true knowledge, or whether we shame it as “toxic.” It is about whether a man can climb to the top through precision and cunning, or whether he must apologize for being better than you. So I ask you—deliberate carefully. Is Yung Pudz an elite duelist, a Gigavise prophet, a man who simply knows more than you? Or is he… something darker? A filthy ruleshark, scum of the subhuman earth, wielding the rulebook like a dagger to the kidneys of sportsmanship? The facts are in your hands. The format awaits your verdict. Court is now in session.