![]() ![]() The summoned monster has to list Fallen of Albaz as a material, which means that it is not generic enough. One can only dare to hope, but I admit it sounds like a bad idea already.īranded Fusion specifically needs Fallen of Albaz as material for whichever monster is being summoned. Who knows, in the future the norm might actually be fusion summoning from the deck, or we might get a generic spell card (not Future Fusion) that can fusion summon any monster by using the materials from deck. Looking at the restrictions of Red-Eyes Fusion and Fusion Destiny, we can safely say that restrictions are slowly being lifted. It can only be used once per turn (thankfully) and its only restriction is that it locks you out of any extra deck monster that is not a fusion monster. The Star of the Showīranded Fusion is the card that makes everything possible. At the time, it was an insanely powerful mechanic, and therefore the card came with restrictions (that were increased over time with erratas), which gave the opponent ample time to respond to it before its effect took place. Future Fusion was the first card to apply the concept of fusion summoning from deck. Curiously enough, all of these fusion spells are evolutions of another spell card that debuted in August 2006. Sounds familiar, right? We have three engines that basically do the same thing, Brilliant Fusion, Neos Fusion, Red-Eyes Fusion, and Fusion Destiny. Following up the same concept of previous fusion engines, the branded engine offers easy access to big fusion monsters using materials from your deck. ![]()
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