He ended up on an adventure through time and duelled alongside Yugi Muto, the Pharaoh Atem, unbeknownst to Jaden as well as a man from the future, Yusei Fudo. On his travels, he had learnt that many of his friends' most powerful cards had been stolen. ![]() Jaden had also recently had an encounter most remarkable. Now Jaden's love for duelling has revived and he currently travels the world, searching for new challenges, accompanied by Yubel and the other Duel Spirits from his duelling deck, as well as the spirit of Jaden's deceased tutor, Professor Lyman Banner, whose spirit resides in his cat, Pharaoh. Now the two of them are reunited and Yubel no longer desires revenge, but the experiences had for a time changed Jaden into a serious young man whom had no longer a fondness for duelling, until he had stumbled into the past and got to duel the King of Games himself, Yugi Muto. In the Dimensions, Jaden had fused his soul with that of his Duel Monster card, Yubel, whose spirit wanted revenge on Jaden for abandoning her after she hurt other duelists in order to protect him. But for all that, Jaden had managed to pull through and "Get his game on!" to use his popular catchphrase. He battled Shadow Riders, faced the three Sacred Beasts, battled the Society of Light, faced the dark consequences of his past across many dimensions and faced the darkness of humanity itself, in the form of Nightshroud. Jaden had his rough patches at the Academy. ![]() Note also that a short film (titled just "Yu-Gi-Oh!") was produced, which you might want to watch after you've finished the "zeroth" series.Five years ago, Jaden Yuki had completed his time studying at Duel Academy, the school of duels set on an island out at sea. The "zeroth" series is 27 episodes in length, and was never dubbed, so you'll have to hunt down subtitles. As such, you can watch it at any point, though I would recommend watching it just before or after you watch the first series (just to see the contrasting ways in which the two series evolved). I didn't mention the "zeroth" series (the one released in 1998) anywhere in there because it's sort of orthogonal to the rest of the Yu-Gi-Oh! anime franchise. Konami has licensed it for dubbing, but the dubs presumably won't start until the dubs for ZEXAL series 2 are complete.
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