The content of the article has since been updated to be slightly more accurate. Yu-Gi-Oh: Duel Links also received a “Teen” rating from the ESRB, but this game does not appear when searching for Yu-Gi-Oh games on the ESRB website for some reason. UPDATE (): Apparently, Yu-Gi-Oh! Legacy Of The Duelist: Link Evolution is not the first Yu-Gi-Oh game to get a “Teen” rating from the ESRB. Yu-Gi-Oh! Legacy Of The Duelist: Link Evolution will release for Switch on April 25 in Japan, and sometime in Summer 2019 for the rest of the world. It adds, like the name implies, Link Monster cards along with an increased roster and about another 2,000 or so cards. That said, we will likely have to wait for the official release to find out for sure. Link Evolution is an updated version of Yu-Gi-Oh Legacy of the Duelist that was released in 2015. As Yu-Gi-Oh cards are often heavily censored in the West, some are speculating that this could mean Link Evolution uses the uncensored Japanese card artwork, which would explain the comments made on the ESRB website. So what changed? According to the ESRB website, the bump in rating comes down to several cards that depict “characters getting bitten, slashed with blades, or struck by arrows”, “small blood drips or splatters”, and “suggestive material/nudity”. This is because when the title was originally released in 2015, the ESRB gave it a more tame E10+ rating for Playstation 4 and Xbox One. This “Teen” rating is quite unusual given the game’s status as an updated port of the original Yu-Gi-Oh! Legacy Of The Duelist game. Ahead of its release on Switch later this year, Yu-Gi-Oh! Legacy Of The Duelist: Link Evolution, has become the first game based on the franchise to be given a “Teen” rating, at least according to the ESRB Website.
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