Dragon Ball Z OCG Game Rules Document

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Dragon Ball Z OCG Game Rules Document

Table of Contents
Game Overview Let's Look at the Cards Game Basics The Combat Step In Detail How to use Attacks Card Section Other Rules You Need to Know The New Rules for the DBZ OCG Glossary / Index Credits Page 02 Page 04 Page 10 Page 13 Page 14 Page 18 Page 27 Page 33 Page 35 Page 39

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Game Overview
You're playing as one of the Dragon Ball Z characters that are locked in a head-to-head fight to the finish. During the fight, you and your opponent will hurl attacks at each other and unleash powerful defenses and effects. You will compete to gain control of all 7 Dragon Balls, empty an opponent's Life Deck of cards, or advance to a higher level and become the most powerful personality in the game.

What is an Online Card Game (OCG)?
It’s a game where you play with a custom deck of cards that you put together from your online program. You choose how your fighter attacks and his strategy for winning by how you build and play your deck. That’s what makes this game fun. You get to play the way YOU want to. The online program and the Dragon Ball Z OCG Patch that came with this rulebook is all you need to begin playing. Golden Rule: Some cards are so powerful that they break the rules of the game. When a card specifically contradicts a rule in the rulebook, the card overrides the rule.

How to Win a Game
Survival Victory: Be the last one standing! You win the instant your opponent's Life Deck is empty! Dragon Ball Victory: Gain control of all 7 of the Dragon Balls! Capture, play and recapture them until 1 set is completely yours! Most Powerful Personality Victory: Advance your Main Personality to the highest possible personality level in your game.

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What's In a Turn?
A turn is made up of 5 steps: Draw, Non-Combat, Power-Up, Combat, and Rejuvenation. In a turn, one player is the Attacker and the other player is the Defender. During the Combat Step, both players fight one-on-one with their attacks and powers. Here's how the steps work with you playing as the Attacker: 1. Draw Step: You look at the top 6 cards of your Life Deck, put them back in any order, and then draw 3 cards. 2. Non-Combat Step: You may play Allies, Dragon Balls, Locations, and NonCombat cards face-up from your hand and leave them on the table. 3. Power-Up Step: Gain Power Stages! You now power-up your MP and all your Allies by raising their power stages equal to their Power-Up Rating (PUR) found on their Personality cards. Declare Combat? If you are going to enter Combat, you must declare it to your opponent at this time and then go to the Combat Step. If you choose not to declare Combat, you go directly to the Rejuvenation Step. 4. Combat Step: Prepare Phase: You and the Defender prepare for the fight by doing any effects that occur “When entering combat.” The Defender looks and rearranges the top 6 cards of his Life Deck and draws 3 cards. Alternating Attack Phases: You and the Defender now battle it out in alternating Attack Phases. You get the first Attack Phase to either attack or use a card power. Afterward, the Defender gets an Attack Base to attack or use a card power. This goes back and forth until you both pass in back-toback Attack Phases. Then, the Combat Step ends. 5. Rejuvenation Step: First both players discard down to 1 card in hand. If you skipped the Combat Step, you may choose to have both of you take the top card of each of your Discard Piles and put them at the bottom of each of your Life Decks.

Now it's Your Opponent's Turn.

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Let's Look at the Cards
Personality Cards
Personality cards represent the characters in the Dragon Ball universe and they are either played as Allies or Main Personalities. Your Main Personality (MP) is made up of 3 or more consecutive personality cards starting with level 1, some personalities can have up to 5 personality levels.

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Mastery Cards
Mastery cards prove that your Main Personality have achieved mastery of Martial Arts Style. Mastery cards offer advantages that last throughout the game, and they are placed in play before the game begins. To play a Mastery card, you must declare a Tokui-Waza.

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Combat Cards
Combat cards are what you use to attack and defend. All 3 types of Combat cards can use up your Attack Phase or defend during your opponent’s Attack Phase. These cards play from your hand, are immediately used, and are then discarded unless the card says otherwise. The three types of Combat Cards are Physical, Energy, and Event.

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Non-Combat Cards
Non-Combat cards produce effects that generally are not attacks. They are played in front of you during your Non-Combat Step, and they remain face up on the table until they are used. There are 2 kinds of Non-Combat cards: Setups and Drills.

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Dragon Ball Cards
Dragon Ball cards represent the mystic Dragon Balls in the show. Each has its own unique power in the game, and when you control all 7 Dragon Balls of the same type, you win the game.

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Location and Sensei Cards
Location cards are places in the Dragon Ball universe where fights may or may not have happened. Location cards affect all players at all times. Sensei cards allow you to keep aside a small deck of ANY cards from the Dragon Ball Z OCG as a backup strategy against your opponent.

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Game Basics
Winning a Game:
1. Survival Victory: You win the instant your opponent has no life cards in their Life Deck. Cards are taken from Life Decks by: Discarding and drawing cards in the course of play. Dealing Life Cards of Damage Your opponent discards one card from his Life Deck for each power stage of damage taken by a Personality when that Personality's Counter is at 0. We'll cover this more later on. Card Effects Some cards have effects that result in cards being discarded from your opponent's Life Deck. Such effects are NOT considered to be damage even though life cards get discarded. 2. Dragon Ball Victory: You win when you control all 7 Dragon Balls of the same set. The challenge is keeping them under your control, because they can be captured in various ways. 3. Most Powerful Personality Victory: When your Main Personality reaches the highest level possible out of all personalities in the current game by anger without using cards to advance a level without anger you win the game. If a card is used against you to postpone your victory, when that card effect ends if you are still at the highest personality level possible still, you win the game.

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Beginning a New Game:
First You Need a Main Personality: A Main Personality (MP) is a Dragon Ball Z character that is represented by 3 to 5 stacked cards. You start off with your Level 1 MP, and then you can advance to other levels during the game. An MP must have at least 3 consecutive personality levels starting with a level 1 and may go all the way to level 5. No MP may have 2 of the same level. Now You Need a Life Deck: You need to construct a Life Deck consisting of at least 50 cards, with the maximum being 75. (See Deck Construction page 32). How to Set Up a Game Step-by-Step: 1. Both players place their MP’s cards face-up in front of them in numerical order with the lowest-numbered card on top. If the character you’re playing is a Rogue Personality, you must declare if he is a hero or a villain. 2. If any player is declaring a Tokui-Waza, it must be declared, and a Mastery card of that Martial Arts Style or a Styleless Mastery if declaring a Freestyle Tokui-Waza must be played at this time. 3. Both players set their Counters at 5 power stages above the 0 power stage on their starting MP card. 4. Both players check for the double power rule. Compare the power rating of your Main Personality to your opponent's. If the starting power rating of your Main Personality is double or more than your opponent's, then you set your MP at 2 power stages above 0 and your opponent sets his Main Personality at its highest power stage, and is the Attacker on the first turn. 5. Both players shuffle their Life Decks. 6. Players now may swap cards from their Sensei Deck into their Life Deck. 7. Begin the game. Unless the Double Power Rule was used, each player rolls dice to see who goes first.

The Sequence of Play for One Complete Turn
The Attacker for the Turn If you are the Attacker, you go through all 5 steps of a turn and can choose whether or not to declare Combat. The Defender is the player responding to the Attacker for the turn. The Defender plays only during the Combat Step and the Rejuvenation Step. 1. Draw Step: If you are the Attacker, you do these 2 things in the following order for this step: Look at the top 6 cards of your Life Deck and rearrange them in any order and put them back. Draw 3 cards from the top of your Life Deck.

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2. Non-Combat Step: If you are the Attacker, you may now play Allies, Drills, Setups, Locations, and Dragon Balls from your hand during this step. To do this, just place them face-up on the table. If you play a Dragon Ball, you do what it tells you to right after you play it. If you play any Allies in this step, you set them at 3 power stages above the 0 power stage. Just remember: Main Personalities start the game at 5 power stages above 0, and Allies enter play at 3 power stages above 0. 3. Power-Up Step: This is the step where you (as the Attacker) get the power you need to fight. You go through this step in the following order: Declare Your Power-Up Step When you begin your power up step you must declare it to your opponent. At this time if they have any cards to use during your power up step they may use them. Power-Up Your Personalities You now power-up your MP and all your Allies by raising their power stages equal to their Power-Up Rating (PUR) found on their Personality cards. Declare Combat If you are going to enter Combat, you must declare it to your opponent at this time and then go to the Combat Step. If you choose not to declare Combat, you go directly to the Rejuvenation Step. 4. Combat Step: This is the step where energy attack fly, physical attacks pummel, Dragon Balls get captured, Events go off, Drills and Setups unleash their power, and Allies come to the rescue! Prepare Phase First the Attacker prepares by using any effects on his cards that occur “When Entering Combat.” Then the Defender prepares by doing the same thing. Then he looks at and rearranges the top 6 cards of his Life Deck and puts them back. Afterward, he draws 3 cards. If he has any more effects that occur “When entering Combat,” he uses them now.

Attack Phases During your Attack Phase, you may attack your
opponent’s MP with a physical attack or energy attack to try to hit him for life cards and power stages of damage. The Defender will do the same during his Attack Phases. 5. Rejuvenation Step: In this step, both players discard down to 1 card in their hands. If you are the Attacker and you did not declare Combat for this turn in the Power-Up Step, you can decide to rejuvenate. You rejuvenate by taking the top card of your Discard Pile and putting it at the bottom of your Life Deck face-down. If you choose to rejuvenate, your opponent must rejuvenate as well. The Rejuvenation Step itself is not optional, and you must go through the Rejuvenation Step during each of your turns. But remember, you only get to put the top card of your discard pile on the bottom of your Life Deck if you skipped Combat. Any other effects that occur during the Rejuvenation Step still happen, even if you did go into Combat during your turn.

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The Combat Step in Detail
Phase 1: The Prepare Phase The Attacker’s Half of the Prepare Phase As the Attacker, you prepare for the fight by using all your effects that happen “When entering Combat.” Just check the cards you have in play and in your hand for the phrase “When entering Combat.” If you see it and wish to use it, do what it says! If not, move on. Now the Defender Prepares… The Defender’s half of the Prepare Phase The Defender now does these 2 things in any order. 1. Use any “When entering Combat” effects on his cards in play The Defender may do this multiple times during the Prepare Phase, but each effect may only be used once. The Defender may also stagger these effects across this phase by using his “When entering Combat” effects either before or after he draws his 3 cards. 2. Look at the top 6 cards of his Life Deck, rearrange them and then draws 3 cards. The Defender may only do this once per Combat Step.

Phase 2: The Attack Phases What’s an Attack Phase? In an Attack Phase, a player may attack, use a card instead of attacking, or pass. The Attacker gets the first Attack Phase. After his Attack Phase is over, the Defender gets his own Attack Phase. Then, the Attacker gets another Attack Phase. This continues until both the Attacker and Defender choose to pass in back-to-back Attack Phases. When that happens – the Combat Step ends. What to do in an Attack Phase. You can do one of the following things in an Attack Phase: 1. Play a Combat card that can perform an attack from your hand and use it to attack your opponent with a physical or energy attack. 2. Use a card you have in play that can perform an attack to attack your opponent. 3. Use a Non-Combat or Location card for its effects. 4. Play a Combat card and use its effect. 5. Use a Personality Power If a personality has a power that you can use during your Attack Phase, you may use it. 6. Perform a Final Physical Attack 7. Pass

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Defending: The Second Part of an Attack Phase When you are getting attacked, you can defend with a card during your opponent’s Attack Phase. The card you are defending with must defend against the type of attack your opponent is performing. If he doesn’t attack, and uses his Attack Phase for something else, you do NOT defend in his Attack Phase. What can you do to defend? There are 6 things: 1. Play a Combat card that has a starburst on it from your hand. 2. Use one of your Setup cards in play if that card has a starburst on it. 3. Use a Drill that has a starburst. 4. Use an effect from your Main Personality that stops an attack or prevents damage from an attack. 5. Use an effect from an Ally that has taken control of Combat for your MP if that effect stops an attack or prevents damage from an attack. 6. Take the damage. If you can’t or don’t want to use a card that can defend, you may take the damage (if any) that is dealt. Remember. You can't use any of these cards in this phase unless it STOPS an attack or PREVENTS DAMAGE from an attack. That's how Combat works! Now let's look at how to use attacks in the Combat Step.

How to use Attacks
Use the Battle Sequencer! If you want to see a step-by-step blueprint on how an attack works, go to page 16. The Battle Sequencer is there to give you everything you need to understand how to attack! There are 2 kinds of attacks: physical attacks and energy attacks. Physical attacks: Physical attacks use the Physical Attack Table and deal power stages of damage equal to the number found by comparing power ratings on the Physical Attack Table. Energy attacks: Energy attacks cost 2 power stages to perform and deal 4 life cards of damage and this damage is dealt by taking cards from the top of your Life Deck and placing them into your discard pile one at a time. Energy attacks that don’t have their cost listed always cost 2 power stages. Cards that state damage: Some Physical and energy attacks state what the damage is. When that happens, the damage from the attack is what is stated on the card itself.

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How Different Cards Attack Using Personality Powers to Attack: If an attack is on a Personality card power, you don’t physically do anything to the card itself to use its attack. Simply state you are using your Personality Power to perform an attack, you pay any costs, and do all the secondary effects of that personality power, then leave the personality in play after use. Personalities can only attack if they are in control of Combat. Using Combat Cards to Attack: Physical or Energy Combat cards usually perform or stop an attack. If you use a Combat card from your hand to attack, you play it on the table from your hand, use the effects of the attack, and then discard it. Game Effects from Attacks Secondary Effects: The effects of a card appear in the card power as text. When you perform an attack on a card, you use all the secondary effects of the card before dealing damage. Some of these effects may make your opponent lose life cards or power stages. These effects are not defined as “Damage” unless they modify an attack. If the attack is stopped, the effects are NOT stopped. Secondary effects occur regardless of if an attack is stopped or not. When a card effect causes you to lose power stages, not to a minimum of 0, if you go below 0, you must discard the top card of your life deck for every power stage left over. When you place a card from your discard pile into your Life Deck you must show your opponent(s) those cards. When you place a card from your discard pile into your Life Deck, you must place it into your Life Deck face down. Card Costs: A cost exists on a card only if the word “cost” (or the terms “costs” and/or ”costing”) appears on the card itself. Energy attacks that don’t tell you the basic cost on the card gain “Costs 2 power stages to perform” after the sentence describing the energy attack. Floating Effects: Floating effects are a type of effect that continues after a card is used. Floating effects have a clause that tells you when the effect will finish. Most floating effects last until the end of Combat. Floating effects can be created by any sort of card. “If Successful” Effects: These effects are in the card power also, and they start with the words “If successful.” They are only used if an attack isn’t stopped by a card effect or rule. Final Physical Attacks As a last ditch desperation move, you may discard any card in your hand as a cost to perform a Final Physical Attack. First you declare that you are going to perform a Final Physical Attack during your Attack Phase, and then you discard one card from your hand to pay for the attack. You then perform a physical attack doing PAT power stages of damage. Here’s the Catch – For the rest of Combat, you must pass in all of your Attack Phases, and you cannot defend against your opponent’s attacks. Floating Effects can still be used after you perform a Final Physical Attack, but other than that you are completely at your opponent’s mercy. Both you and your opponent can perform a Final Physical Attack once per Combat Step.

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Battle Sequence
1. The attacker uses a Non-Combat card or personality power, or plays a Combat card from his hand, or passes (if the attacker passes, proceed to the next Attack Phase). 2. The attacker pays costs, if any, associated with that card or power. 3. Resolve all secondary effects on the card or power (secondary effects are those effects not directly associated with an attack. This does not include effects within the same sentence as the attack and effects with the clause “If successful” attached to it. An effect in the same sentence as an attack is considered an “If successful” effect.). If a card that does not have an attack was used in place of an attack, all of the effects on that card are considered secondary effects. 4. This is the beginning of the Defend Phase. The defender plays a card from his hand or uses a Non-Combat card or personality power to defend against that attack. 5. Resolve all secondary effects from the defender’s card or personality power (all effects from Non-Combat/Combat cards that are used as a defense are secondary effects). After that the Defend Phase ends. 6. If the attack is not stopped at this time, the attack is considered successful (an attack is considered successful even if it deals no damage). 7. Determine the Base Damage, if any, from the attack (Base Damage is damage that is calculated by consulting the Physical Attack Table for physical attacks, unless it is already stated on the physical attack; or Base Damage is the amount of damage an energy attack would do as stated on the card; all of which do not include modifiers from the attack or other effects generated by Drills or any other cards). 8. Add and/or subtract any modifiers, from the attack, Drills, personality powers, etc., to the Base Damage. 9. Any power stages of damage from the attack are dealt. 10. Any life cards of damage from the attack are dealt. 11. If the attack does 5 or more life cards of damage, the attacker may capture an opponent’s Dragon Ball. 12. Any “If successful” effects that the attacker has are resolved. If there are multiple “If successful” effects, the attacker gets to decide the order in which those effects happen. 13. The card used to perform the attack is now discarded unless the attack says otherwise.

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Dealing Damage You’ve attacked in your Attack Phase! It got through! So how hard did it hit? Attacks will always deal what is called “Base Damage.” There are 2 types of Base Damage in the game: life cards and power stages. Life cards of damage are discarded from the top of your Life Deck. You discard one life card off of your Life Deck for each life card of damage dealt to one of your personalities. Note: When life cards of damage are taken, they must be reviewed to prevent the improper discarding of a Dragon Ball card. Power stages of damage are dealt by lowering your opponent’s power stage on his personality card down for each power stage of damage dealt from the attack. What happens when that personality runs out of power stages? The remaining power stages are converted to life cards of damage. What Does “PAT” mean? “PAT” stands for “Physical Attack Table” and is the number that is found when you compare the power ratings of personalities. PAT is the Base Damage for physical attacks. Modified Damage: If an effect inside a card power modifies the damage from an attack, it is always added on top of the Base Damage of the attack, even if the attack doesn’t deal the kind of damage that is being modified. When a personality is at 0 and is dealt power stages of damage, those power stages of damage are converted into life cards of damage, and is considered both types of damage. Multiplying Base Damage from Multiple Cards: When you have multiple card effects that would increase the base damage of an attack by a multiple amount (Double the base damage, triple the base damage, quadruple the base damage, etc. etc.), only one multiplier is used on the Base Damage, and the other card effects that multiply the damage are ignored. A Note about Damage Prevention: Preventing damage from the attack is not counted as modifying damage from the attack.

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Card Section
Styled, Freestyle and Named Cards
Styled Cards: If a card belongs to a Martial Arts Style, the first word of the card's title will be the style that it belongs to. The card will also show the Kanji symbol of that style. The 6 Martial Arts Styles are listed below: Red Martial Arts Style: This Style is great for leveling fast, and beating down the opponent with physical attacks. Blue Martial Arts Style: This Style is great both for its defensive and offensive cards. Black Martial Arts Style: This Style focuses on hand disruption and beating down the opponent with powerful attacks. Namekian Martial Arts Style: Focuses on powering up fast. This style also is good at rejuvenating. Can only be used by personalities with Namekian heritage. Orange Martial Arts Style: This Style relies on Drills to control the battle, while destroying the opponent with energy attacks. Saiyan Martial Arts Style: “Strength is Might” is the motto for this style – hitting big and often, as well as leveling fast. This Style can only be used by a Saiyan or a descendent of a Saiyan! Freestyle Cards: These cards do NOT have a Martial Arts Style listed in the first word of the card title and do NOT belong to a Martial Arts Style. Freestyle cards do not have a Kanji. Any Life Deck in the game can legally contain Freestyle cards. To declare a Freestyle TokuiWaza your deck can only contain Freestyle cards. Named Cards: Have the name of a DBZ Personality in the title, and they can be Styled or Freestyle cards depending on the first word of the card's title.

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Personality Cards
Personality cards represent the characters in Dragon Ball Z and they are either played as Main Personalities or Allies. Your Main Personality (MP) is made up of 3 or more consecutive levels of Personality cards starting with level 1 (he can have up to 5 levels). Your MP always starts with his level 1 Personality card. Personality cards can also be Allies which can assist your MP in battle, and they are played in the Non-Combat Step. Power Stages: are a Personality's strength. The Counter on the Personality is used to show what the current strength is. The Counter will go up and down on the card as it keeps track of your power stages. Remember: A Power stage is the space that holds a power rating. A power rating is the numeric value of a power stage. If a personality is at his highest power stage, he cannot go any higher, nor can he store any power stages from effects to gain them later. Power-Up Rating (PUR): A Power Up Rating will appear on the left side of a Personality card. The PUR is the number of power stages that you move your Counter up during your Power-Up Step. Personality Powers: are the effects in a personality's power box. A Personality's power can only be used during the Combat Step, and is used only once per turn, unless the character advances or loses a Personality level. When this happens, you get to use the card effect again even if you used it earlier this turn. You cannot use your MP's power when an Ally is in control of Combat and vice-versa. Constant Powers: These effects have the words “Constant Power” as a header in the power box. These powers are constantly active, and must be used whenever possible. Keyword requirements: Some cards have effects that may require a certain keyword to be in the title of the personality in control of combat for you to use those effects. These are Bio-Android, Celestial, Spice Boy, and Super Saiyan. The keyword may be placed anywhere in the title of the personality, but they must be there in order for that personality to use the effect of the card. Advancing Your Main Personality This section explains how MPs advance (or lose) Personality levels. Higher levels of personalities mean higher power! Here's how you do it. Going to the Next Level: Whenever a player has 5 or more anger, immediately advance your MP one level, if possible and discard all drills you control in play. Card effects raise a player’s anger a certain amount. Anger from a single effect never carries over. f you lose a personality level or advance a personality level in some other way than reaching 5 or more anger, your anger level is not changed.  Whenever you advance a level, set your Main Personality at their highest power stage. 

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If you are at your highest personality level and you have 5 or more anger, raise your MP to your highest power stage and set your anger to 0. Taking Them Down a Notch: Your MP can only lose a personality level from card effects. Whenever an MP loses a level, the player sets their power stages to 5 above 0, on the lower level, no matter what power stage they were before. Any Drills you have in play get discarded as well.

Allies
What do Allies do? Allies are Personality cards that help your Main Personality. You can redirect power stages of damage to your Allies, and you can have your Allies attack and use their card powers when your Main Personality is at 1 power stage above 0 or lower. Example: Goku is getting hit hard! His power stages are getting pummeled and he has lowered his counter down to his bottom power stage (which is 0). Since he is so weak, Tien comes to the rescue, and takes control of Combat for Goku. As long as Goku's counter is not set to 2 stages above 0 or above, Tien can fight in Goku's place, and use his card power! Putting Allies into Play: Allies are placed into play during the Non-Combat Step by the Attacker for the turn, they are initially set at 3 power stages above 0. When you place Allies into play, they must be the same personality level as your Main Personality or lower. If your Main Personality is level 1, you can only play level 1 Allies. If your Main Personality is level 2, you can play level 1 or level 2 allies. An Ally cannot be put into play if there is an MP in play matching that personality. Both players may have the same Ally in play, but each player can only have one personality card of that Ally in play. Overlaying Allies: After the Ally is in play, you can play that Allies next level Personality card on top of him. This is called “Overlaying”. When you overlay, you set the Ally to his highest power stage on his next level. It is okay to have an Ally’s overlaid level exceed your Main Personality’s level. Card effects that place Allies into play can be used to overlay Allies. If a card discards an Ally with 2 levels because of overlaying, both levels of the Ally are discarded, and the owner gets to choose in which order all of that Ally’s levels go to the discard pile. Powering Up Allies: Allies always Power-Up by their Power-Up Rating during your PowerUp Step. Allies and Damage: When one of your opponent’s attacks becomes successful, you may choose to redirect any power stages of damage the attack would deal to one of your personalities not in control of Combat. If your opponent has to use the Physical Attack Table, he still uses the power rating of the personality in control of Combat. The personality taking the power stages of damage must take all of the damage of that one attack. In other words, if your opponent does 5 power stages of damage with an attack, you cannot deal 2 power stages to one ally and 3 to another. Any power stages of damage converted into life cards of damage are still discarded from your Life Deck.

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Allies Taking Over Combat: At the beginning of your Attack Phase, if your MP is at 1 power stage above 0 or lower, you may choose for one of your Allies to take control of Combat for your MP until your next Attack Phase. When this happens, your Ally acts just like your MP and can perform attacks, and use its personality powers. You also use the Ally’s power rating when the Physical Attack Table is used. During your next Attack Phase, you may choose to keep the current Ally in control of Combat, or have another personality take control of Combat. Other Ally Information: Main Personalities with only 3 levels may only have level 1 allies in their deck. Main Personalities with 4 or 5 levels may have both level 1 and level 2 allies in their deck. All Hero Main Personalities may only use Hero and Rogue Allies. All Villain Main Personalities may only use Villain and Rogue Allies. You cannot have Allies in your Life Deck that is the same character as your Main Personality. Allies cannot use their Powers or Constant Powers unless they are in control of Combat. When your Ally takes control of Combat from your MP, it remains in control as long as your MP is still at 1 power stage above 0 or lower, or until you have another personality take control of Combat at the beginning of one of your Attack Phases. Once an Ally has taken control of Combat, it can use its card power even if the MP already used its card power during the same Combat Step. Damage can still be redirected from the Ally taking over Combat to other Allies or the MP. Allies cannot use “When Entering Combat” effects since they cannot be in control of Combat during the Prepare Phase. If an Ally has taken control of Combat, and then it leaves play or your opponent gains control of the Ally, the MP immediately takes control of Combat again. The control of Combat always returns to the MP at the end of Combat.

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Combat Cards
Every Combat card will either use up your Attack Phase, or defend during your opponent's Attack Phase. The 3 kinds of Combat cards all share some common rules. The first rule is that you normally play them from your hand during an Attack Phase. How do you play a Combat card? First, you play it from your hand and place it on the table, and then you use it. After the effects on the card are used, the card is discarded. Energy Combat Cards: These cards are generally used to perform or defend against an energy attack. Physical Combat Cards: These cards are generally used to perform or defend against a physical attack. Event Cards: Generally, Event cards either stop attacks or produce effects that are not an attack. Example: Gohan is control of Combat, and plays the event card Red King Kai's Observation from his hand during his Attack Phase: “Your MP pays 5 power stages to discard all Allies and Non-Combat cards in play.” This now makes you and your opponent now have to discard any Allies and Non-Combats in play. Gohan now discards Red King Kai's Observation. Defend Symbol A starburst means the card is used as a defense. Attack Symbol A sword means the card is used as an attack. Some cards belong to a Martial Arts Style. If so, you will see the Style's Kanji on the card. All cards that belong to a Martial Arts Style will also have the name of the style as the first word in its title.

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Non-Combat Cards
Non-Combat cards produce effects that generally are not attacks. They are played in front of you during your Non-Combat Step, and they remain face up on the table until they are used. There are 2 kinds of Non-Combat cards: Setups and Drills. Setup Cards: Generally, you use a Setup card in your Attack Phase in the Combat Step, and then you discard it from play. Example: You are the Attacker. You draw the Non-Combat card Namekian Training during the Draw Step. You place it in play during the Non-Combat Step. You Power-Up in the Power-Up Step. You declare Combat and enter the Combat Step. On your Attack phase, you can choose to use Namekian Training, use all its effects and then discard it. Drill Cards: Drills are played during the Non-Combat Step. You play them face-up and leave them on the table. Drills are constantly in use for their game effects as long as they are in play, and may create effects multiple times within a turn. You must use a Drill's ability, even if you don't want to. When your MP advances or loses a Personality level, all of your Drill cards in play are immediately discarded. Freestyle Drills. If the first word of a Drill does not reference a Martial Arts Style, then it is a Freestyle Drill and can be played in any deck regardless of the TokuiWaza declared. You can have multiple copies of a Freestyle Drill in play. Styled Drills. These drills belong to one of the six Martial Arts Styles. A Styled Drill will have the name of a Style as the first word of its title as well as a Kanji that matches the Style. If you have a Styled Drill in play, you cannot play another Drill from a DIFFERENT Martial Arts Style. If you have a Styled Drill in play, you can only have 1 copy of that Drill in play. You can have other Styled Drills in play if they all belong to the same Martial Arts Style and are different from any other Styled Drill you have in play. Freestyle Drills can always be in play with Styled Drills. Both players may each have a copy of the same Styled Drill in play. When a player draws a Drill that cannot be placed in play because it doesn't match the Style of a Drill he already has in play, he may immediately show it to his opponent and shuffle it back into his Life Deck, but he does NOT get to draw a card to replace the unplayable Drill.

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Dragon Balls
Dragon Ball cards represent the mystic Dragon Balls in the show. Each has its own unique power in the game, and when you control all 7 Dragon Balls of the same type, you win the game. Dragon Balls are played during your NON-COMBAT STEP, and unlike other cards played in that step, their effects occur instantly. You can only have 1 type of Dragon Ball in your deck and you can only have one copy of each Dragon Ball card. Both players can have the same Dragon Balls in their decks, but only 1 copy of each Dragon Ball can be in play at a time. If you get the last of the 7 Dragon Balls by playing it, you win. But if you acquire the 7th Dragon Ball by capturing it, you must control the 7 Dragon Balls until the beginning of your next turn as the Attacker to win. You gain control of Dragon Balls by playing them from your hand in front of you, and by capturing them from your opponent. When you play a Dragon Ball, you immediately use its effects. Capturing Dragon Balls You can capture Dragon Balls from your opponent and use their powers. When you capture a Dragon Ball, you must choose to use all or none of its powers when you capture it. There are 2 ways to capture Dragon Balls: life card captures and card captures. Life Card Capture If your successful attack forces your opponent to discard 5 life cards of damage or more, then immediately after damage is dealt you can capture any one of your opponent’s Dragon Balls that are currently in play. This means that he must actually discard the cards for damage. Card Captures Some cards allow for the capture of Dragon Balls. Dragon Ball Floating Effects If a Dragon Ball produces a floating effect and the Dragon Ball is captured, the floating effect is cancelled. If the capturing playing uses its power, then it becomes active again. Discarding Dragon Balls When a Dragon Ball goes to the Discard Pile for any reason, check to see if the Dragon Ball is already in play. If so, it is removed from the game. If it is not already in play, then it goes face down at the bottom of your Life Deck. Discarding Dragon Balls when Taking Life Cards of Damage Dragon Ball cards do not count as damage when you discard them from your Life Deck as damage from an attack. You must flip over a different card for damage if you uncover a Dragon Ball. Example: It's your Attack Phase. You perform Vegeta's Gallic Gun for 6 life cards of damage against your opponent. Your opponent turns over the first card of damage in his Life Deck and it's Earth Dragon Ball 3. The Dragon Ball isn't in play so it goes on the bottom of his Life Deck. But Earth Dragon Ball 3 doesn't count as damage. Your opponent still must discard 6 cards and he does so.

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Discarding Dragon balls When Losing Life Cards for Effects When you discard life cards that are NOT a result of damage from an attack, the Dragon Balls DO count as cards discarded for that effect. Example: On your opponent's next Attack Phase, he plays an Event that makes you discard 3 cards from your Life Deck that aren't damage from an attack and the first card you turn over is Earth Dragon Ball 3. It's not currently in play, so you place it on the bottom of your Life Deck and you discard 2 more cards (not 3) since the Dragon Ball DOES count as a discarded life card since it isn't damage from an attack. Dragon Ball Loop: When you take life cards of damage and only have Dragon Balls in your Life Deck, you will get stuck in an infinite loop of discarding Dragon Balls because of the rules listed earlier. This is called a Dragon Ball Loop. If you get caught in a Dragon Ball Loop, you lose the game.

Mastery Cards and Tokui-Waza
Mastery cards offer advantages that last throughout the game, and they are placed in play before the game begins. To play a Mastery card, you must declare a Tokui-Waza. Mastery Requirements: All text on a card after "Mastery:" is only to be used if you have a Mastery, including qualifiers such as "Remove from the game after use." If you do not have Mastery, you can still use any effects on the card before it says the word "Mastery". How to Qualify To qualify for a Tokui-Waza your Life Deck must have a Mastery Card. Unless declaring a Freestyle Tokui-Waza, you must have at least one Martial Arts Style card (besides the Mastery card) in your Life Deck that is the same style as your Mastery. When you declare a Tokui-Waza at the beginning of a game, you receive +1 to the Power-Up Rating (PUR) of your Main Personality for the entire game. Saiyan Tokui-Waza To declare a Saiyan Tokui-Waza, your Main Personality must have Saiyan Heritage. Namekian Tokui-Waza To declare a Namekian Tokui-Waza your Main Personality must have Namekian Heritage.

Groups
There are 4 different groups in the DBZOCG. Anyone in these groups can use certain cards and effects that are exclusive to the personalities in that group. Saiyan Heritage The following personalities have Saiyan Heritage: Bardock, Borgos, Broly, Cell, Cell Jr. (all of them), Fasha, Gohan, Goku, King Vegeta, Nappa, Paragus, Raditz, Tora, Trunks, Turles, and Vegeta. Namekian Heritage The following personalities have Namekian Heritage: Cell, Cell Jr. (all of them), Dende, Guru, Kami, Lord Slug, Nail, Muri and Piccolo.

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Androids The following personalities are Androids: Android 13, Android 14, Android 15, Android 16, Android 17, Android 18, Android 19, Android 20, Dr. Kochin, Dr. Wheelo, Ebifurya, Kishime, Meta-Cooler, and Misokatsun. Planet Trade Organization The following personalities are part of the Planet Trade Organization: Burter, Captain Ginyu, Cooler, Cui, Dodoria, Frieza, Guldo, Jeice, King Cold, Recoome, and Zarbon.

Location Cards
Location cards are places in the Dragon Ball universe where fights may or may not have happened. Location cards affect all players at all times. Location cards are played during your Non-Combat Step just like a Non-Combat card. However, whenever you play a Location card during your Non-Combat step, you must skip the Combat Step of that turn. You cannot play a Location if the same Location is already in play. Unlike other cards, Locations can affect both players at the same time.

Sensei Cards
Sensei cards are a powerful force against the different types of decks that you will run up against. Each Life Deck may only have one Sensei card. Each Sensei has a Sensei Deck under it that contains cards that you may want to use against different types of decks. Before the game begins, you may swap out any cards in your Sensei Deck with the same number of cards from the top of your Life Deck and then shuffle your Life Deck afterward. The size of your Sensei Deck is equal to the Life Deck Size number printed on your Sensei card. Any card can be put into your Sensei Deck, but there are some rules... If you declared a Tokui-Waza, all Styled cards in your Sensei Deck must match the Style of your Tokui-Waza. The cards in your Sensei Deck DO NOT count toward the total minimum or maximum Life Deck sizes. Cards in your Sensei Deck DO count toward the maximum number of card copies you can have in your Deck. Any cards can be in a Sensei Deck. Example: You cannot have 3 Black Body Destruction in your Life Deck and another 3 Black Body Destruction in your Sensei Deck. You can have 2 in your Life Deck and 1 in your Sensei, or any other combination that does not take you above 3 cards because Black Body Destruction is limited to 3 per deck. Sensei Card Powers: Each Sensei will have a card power that may get used in a game. Just use the effect as described on your Sensei Card. How to Use a Sensei Deck: After you shuffle your Life Deck during setup, you may choose any cards in your Sensei Deck and set them aside face-up. Next, you take the same number of cards from the top of your Life Deck and put them into your Sensei Deck face-down. Now take the cards that you set aside and shuffle them into your Life Deck. You must show your opponent what cards from your Sensei Deck you have chosen to shuffle into your Life Deck. You do not have to show your opponent the cards that were swapped from the top of your Life Deck.

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Other Rules You Need to Know
“______ only” Cards: To use a card that is “_______ only,” your Personality in control of Combat must match the Personality the card identifies. You can put these cards in any deck, but to use them you must have the matching Personality be in control of Combat. This rule does not include Saiyan or Namekian Heritage only card effects, or effects with a keyword requirement. Advancing Levels: Your card effects that advance your MP a personality level prevent you from winning by the Most Powerful Personality Victory for the remainder of the game. If the advancement is optional and you choose not to advance, you may still win by MPPV. An opponent's card effect that advances your MP a personality does not prevent you from winning by MPPV. Attaching Cards: Some cards “attach” to other cards. When a card attaches, it is physically placed under the card it's attached to. An attached card stays in play until the card it's attached to leaves play or a condition on the card is made which causes it to detach. When that happens, discard the card that is attached. Note: When a Non-Combat card attaches itself to another card in play, you must use the card before it attaches itself to the appropriate card. Any cards that would prevent you from using a Non-Combat card would not affect an “attaching” card after it has already been attached. Cards that remove Non-Combat cards from play may remove attached NonCombat cards and their effects would be absolved. Card effects that affect other cards and multiple use cards: Whenever a card power affects your next attack and you use a card or power that is used multiple times in a Combat, it only affects the first use of that card. Cards Leaving Play: When a card is discarded from play, it leaves play first before it reaches the discard pile. When a card is removed from the game from play, it leaves play before it is removed from the game. Cards that Attack and Block: Some cards can perform AND stop attacks. Such cards may either ONLY attack or ONLY stop an attack when they are used. They cannot do both when they are used. Card Searching: Cards that search your Life Deck, discard pile, removed from the game pile, or Sensei Deck for a card and puts it into play or your hand cannot search for another copy of itself. Conflicting Card Effects: If 2 cards have conflicting instructions, the card that prohibits the instruction overrides the other card. Example: Player A has a Drill that says “No player can play Allies.” Player B has a card that says “Search your Life Deck for an Ally and play it.” Player B cannot play the Ally. Copying Cards: When a card copies a card that your opponent has played, the “copied” card that you use is an extra card that is created for this effect, which gains all of the text

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from the card that you are copying. This extra card then disappears when it is finished instead of going to your discard pile or your removed from the game pile. Damage Caps: When a card effect states the “maximum” amount of damage you can take from an attack, it only affects the type of damage stated. Whenever a card puts a “cap” on how much damage you can receive for the attack, the cap is applied when dealing damage. Power stages of damage that convert into Life Cards of damage because the defending personality is at 0 happens as damage is being dealt, and not during damage calculation. Discarding Your Own Cards for Effects: If you have a card effect that keeps your cards from being discarded, you cannot use your own card effects to discard those cards as well, and you do not get to use any effects that would require you to discard that type of card (because no such card was discarded). Do-What-You-Can Rule: If a card effect tells you to do something that cannot be done (or can only be partially done) in the game, do what you can and continue play. This rule does not apply to the costs of cards and effects. Example: Piccolo uses the Physical Combat card Namekian Dash for his Attack Phase. “ Physical attack doing +5 power stages of damage. Mastery: Raise your MP to its highest power stage, then shuffle the top 4 cards of your discard pile into your Life Deck. Remove from the game after use.” Piccolo sets his Counter to the highest power stage. But, surprise! He has only 2 cards in his Discard Pile. So he shuffles those 2 cards into his Life Deck since he doesn't have 4 cards. Now it's his opponent's Attack Phase. Endurance: Endurance appears on some cards in the card’s power box appearing in the form of Endurance #. # is the card’s Endurance value. Endurance is used directly from your Life Deck while you are taking damage from an attack. When you flip over a life card for damage, you check to see if the card has an Endurance value. If so, you may use the Endurance on the card to prevent some of the damage you are taking. To do this, take the card with Endurance and remove it from the game and you prevent the next # life cards of damage from the attack. # is the card’s Endurance value.

More details about Endurance: Left over Endurance disappears if any Endurance remains after all the damage is dealt. You do not get to stockpile up extra Endurance. Endurance can only be used while you are discarded life cards for Damage. Endurance cannot be used on card effects that would discard or remove cards from your Life Deck as a secondary or “If successful” effect. The card itself counts as a discard plus whatever is listed as endurance counts for that many more life cards of damage. For example, a card with 1 Endurance when

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removed from Endurance counts as 2 Life cards of damage. Damage must be preventable. Endurance cannot be used when a card effect stops your ability to prevent damage. When you use the Endurance on a card you are not using the Endurance mechanic, and not the card. Endurance can prevent a Dragon Ball Capture. If your opponent’s successful attack can deal 5 or more life cards of damage, your opponent can capture one of your opponent’s Dragon Balls. But he or she can only do this after you have manually discarded 5 or more cards from your Life Deck. So, you can use your Endurance to prevent enough damage to stop the capture of a Dragon Ball. Endurance still works if an effect makes you remove life cards of damage from the game instead of discarding them. If an attack deals life cards of damage, and those life cards of damage are not discarded but rather are removed from the game, you can still use Endurance on a card before it gets removed from the game. Focused attacks: A focused attack cannot be stopped or prevented by cards that have the ability to stop or prevent damage from both physical and energy attacks. Your opponent can still play and use cards that stop or prevent damage from both types of attacks to use their secondary effects but the attack will still be successful and deal all its damage. Endurance can still be used to prevent damage from a focused attack. Fusion: Some cards reference having a fused MP. To have a fused MP the printed name on your current MP level or on a level lower than your current MP level must be different from your actual MP's name. Golden Rule: In any game there are rules to follow. But in an OCG the cards themselves break the rules. This means that whenever a card specifically breaks a rule, the card overrides the rule. “May” Rule: When a card effect has the word “may” in it, then there is an effect that you have the choice to do or not. Otherwise you must do what you can on that card. Naming Rule: If a player is required to name a card for a card effect that makes the opponent look through their Life Deck, Hand, or Sensei Deck for that card and what they name is not a card that exists in the game, they may name another card. If a player is required to name a card for a card effect and the card they name is not a card that exists in the game, they must name another card for the effect as soon as they realize they did not name a proper card if the effect is still active. When they do this both players must agree to the name change, or if there is a disagreement the players may ask a judge to decide which card should be named from the effect. The decision made will be based on what cards name is closest to what was originally named, what card name matches any abbreviations that might have been used for the original name, or what the judge believes was meant to be named from the context of any conversation between players at the time the card was first used to name something.

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Ownership: The owner of a card is the person who brought the card to the game in his deck. All cards revert back to their respective owner after a game ends or when it leaves play. Parentheses Text in Card Powers: When you see parentheses in a card power with italicized text inside, it is explaining how a card can be used. It is NOT part of the normal timing sequence of the game. Sometimes text in parentheses will explain special rules for the card that would normally break or change a rule. Performing Attacks and Preventing their Use: When an opponent keeps you from performing a type of attack, your opponent is keeping you from using the card. Personality Power Prevention: If a card effect keeps you from using your Main Personality for any reason, it only keeps you from using that Personality’s Powers and / or Constant Powers. Putting Cards into Play with Card Effects: When you use a card effect to place a card into play, the card you put into play must still be a legal card you could play unless the card effect dictates otherwise. When you place a Drill or Ally into play with a card power, you must still follow the normal rules as if you were putting that Ally or Drill into play. Randomized Discards of Face-Up Hands: Whenever you have a card effect that allows you to look at your opponent’s hand and you use another card effect to discard a card at random from his hand, your opponent’s hand is randomized and temporarily placed face down, and a random card is then chosen and then the cards are placed up as before. Referencing: Whenever a card refers to your “opponent”, or “you”, it affects all of that player’s personalities. Remain: Remain is an effect that lets a card stay on the table after you play it, allowing you to use it an additional number of times equal to the number after the word “Remain.” You may then use the card exactly that many more times (and no more) for that Combat. After a card has used the number of its Remain, it is removed from the game. After the Combat Step ends, all cards in play with unused Remain effects are removed from the game. Example: You play an attack that has “Remain 2” in the card power. That means you can leave the card on that table and that it can be used 2 more times this Combat. Afterward, you remove it from the game. Remove from the Game: When a card effect removes a card from the game, it is put into a pile off to the side and cannot be used for the rest of the game, unless another card effect brings it back into play. Revealing Cards: If a card tells you to look at or reveal cards from either your Life Deck or Discard Pile, but does not tell you what to do with them afterward, then the cards must be put back where they came from in the exact same order they were in. Searching for Cards aka “Cherry Picking Rule”: Whenever you use a card effect to search for a card in your Life Deck, always show your opponent the card you searched for

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and shuffle your Life Deck and allow him to cut your deck. Whenever you search your Life Deck for a card and there is no legal card that you can get, your opponent has the option to look through your Life Deck to make sure that there are no legal cards for you to get. Skipping Attack Phases: When a player skips an Attack Phase because of a card effect, play continues as if the Attack Phase never happened. This means that any card effects that happen at the beginning of the Attack Phase do not work on the skipped Attack Phase, and other card effects that happen “in the next Attack Phase” happens in the next available Attack Phase. Stopping a Player from Using Cards: Whenever a card specifically does not allow you to use a Combat, Physical Combat, or Energy Combat card, you cannot play that card either. Stopping Unstoppable Attacks: If an attack cannot be stopped, a player may try to stop it anyway to gain the benefits of any effects on the card he uses. However, the card must be able to stop that same kind of attack.

Timing Conflicts: If a player has multiple cards or card effects that occur at the same time, that player may choose the order in which the cards are used. If there are multiple cards or card effects that occur at the same time for both players, the Attacker for the turn uses his card effects first. The Difference Between “Costs” and “Requirements” What is a Cost? Costs are compulsory actions required to play a card in the first place. To avoid any confusion on the term “cost” the following definition now is in place: A cost exists on a card only if the word “cost” (or the terms “costs” and/or ”costing”) appears on the card itself. Energy attacks that don’t tell you the basic cost on the card gain “Costs 2 power stages to perform” after the sentence describing the energy attack. What is a Requirement? In general, a requirement is an action that may be done to get a bonus effect. Any condition that must be met when playing a card that is not specifically named on the card as a cost. If a card doesn’t specifically use the word “cost” or “costs”, then any requirement that must be met to play such a card cannot be affected by cards that influence or are influenced by the cost of cards. Use When Needed Effects: The phrase "Use when needed" does NOT interrupt any parts within the Battle Sequencer. You may use "Use when needed" cards in between the parts of the Battle Sequence, but not DURING one of the parts.

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Building a Life Deck
In order for a Life Deck to be legal, it must meet the following requirements. Maximum Number of Card Copies Per Life Deck Mastery cards, Main Personality levels, Sensei card and Dragon Balls are all Limit 1 per deck and do count towards the maximum and minimum deck sizes. You may have multiple cards of an Ally Personality in your deck, but each personality card is limited to 1 per deck. Combat, Non-Combat, and Location cards are limited to 3 copies per deck unless they are named cards or say otherwise in the rules text. Named cards are limit 4 per deck if the name in the card title matches the name of your Main Personality unless the card says otherwise in the rules text. Life Deck Size Decks must contain a minimum of 50 cards. No Life Deck may contain more than 75 cards. Dragon Balls Dragon Balls must all be of the same set in a Life Deck. Main Personalities Each Life Deck must contain at least 3 consecutive levels of Personality cards of the same Personality, starting with a level 1 card. These cards make up your Main Personality for the game and do count toward Life Deck minimums and maximums. You may add additional card levels of your Main Personality up to level 5. No levels can be skipped. Allies Main Personalities with only 3 levels may only have level 1 allies in their deck. Main Personalities with 4 or 5 levels may have both level 1 and level 2 allies in their deck. Hero MPs must have hero Allies, and Villain MPs must have villain Allies. Rouge personalities may be used as allies in any deck, and will be considered the same alignment as the Main Personality. You may not place an Ally in your Life Deck that is the same character as your Main Personality. Mastery Cards This card does count toward Life Deck minimums and maximums, even though it starts the game on the table. Sensei Cards This card does count toward Life Deck minimums and maximums as well, even though it starts the game on the table. The Sensei Deck does not count as part of your Life Deck. Tournament Banned or Restricted Cards This is an online card game where our images of cards are updated whenever they’re changed. For this reason there are no banned or restricted cards and no cards with powers that are different to what is shown on their card.

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The New Rules for the DBZ OCG
The rules for the Dragon Ball Z Online Card Game are very similar to the rules from Score's DBZCCG and DBGTTCG. For veterans of Score's old card game who do not want to read the entire Rule Book, here are all the differences in rules for the DBZ OCG.

Difference in rules from the Dragon Ball Z Collectable Card Game The maximum deck size is 75 cards, this includes decks which declare a Namekian Tokui-Waza. Namekian style decks do not get to have 5 extra cards in their deck for the DBZ OCG. The minimum deck size is 50 cards. When starting a game, the Hero does not start first anymore. The Double Power Rule is still in effect. When drawing your hand, first look at the top 6 cards of your life deck and rearrange them in any order before drawing your 3 cards. If you skip the combat step you may choose not to rejuvenate. If you choose to rejuvenate then your opponent also does it. Allies power up by their own PUR. Remain X = this card stays in play to be used X more times this combat. There are no battleground cards. All cards are locations. Any cards can go into the sensei deck. There are no level 3 allies, even if your Main Personality has 5 levels. Combat cards are called Events. Combat cards now mean Physical Combat, Energy Combat and Event Combat. Non-Combat / Non-Drill cards are called Setups. "Mastery: " is a codeword that means "if you declared a Tokui-Waza." All text on a card after "Mastery: " is only to be used if you declared a Tokui-Waza, including qualifiers such as "Remove from the game after use."  Cards that search your Life Deck, discard pile, removed from the game pile, or Sensei Deck for a card and puts it into play or your hand cannot search for another copy of itself.  If you use a card effect to advance your MP a personality level without using anger you cannot win by the Most Powerful Personality Victory for the remainder of the game. Decks without a Tokui-Waza can use endurance.     

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Difference in rules from the Dragon Ball GT Trading Card Game The maximum deck size is 75 cards. The minimum deck size is 50. When starting a game, the Hero does not start first anymore. The Double Power Rule is still in effect. At the end of the turn you keep 1 card in your hand instead of 2. You cannot remove cards from your discard pile to advance a level. All energy attacks do a base damage of 4 life cards and cost 2 power stages, unless stated otherwise. If a card says "Physical attack" and does not state the amount of damage it does, use the Physical Attack Table to determine the base damage. If the physical attack does "+X" power stages or life cards of damage, use the PAT to find the base damage and add the "+X" damage as a modifier to the attack. Main Personalities with only 3 levels may only have level 1 allies in their deck. Main Personalities with 4 or 5 levels may have both level 1 and level 2 allies in their deck. There are no level 3 allies. "Mastery:" is a codeword that means "if you declared a Tokui-Waza." All text on a card after "Mastery: " is only to be used if you declared a Tokui-Waza, including qualifiers such as "Remove from the game after use." Cards that search your Life Deck, discard pile, removed from the game pile, or Sensei Deck for a card and puts it into play or your hand cannot search for another copy of itself. You can use card effects to raise your anger level. When you have 5 anger you advance your personality to the next level. If you reach your highest personality level in this way and the opponent doesn't have a higher level than you, then you win the game by the Most Powerful Personality Victory. If you use a card effect to advance your MP a personality level without using anger you cannot win by the Most Powerful Personality Victory for the remainder of the game. Decks without a Tokui-Waza can use endurance.

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Glossary / Index
Active Player: The active player is the person who started the current turn and can participate in every step. Ally: Allies are Personality cards that are played in the Non-Combat Step. Allies do 2 things: they can take over Combat for the Main Personality when the MP’s power stage is at his bottom 2 power stages, and you can redirect power stages of damage for the Main Personality or other Allies. Anger: Anger in the DBZ universe allows personalities to tap into higher, stronger forms of themselves. Card powers can change a personality’s anger. Attaching a Card: Placing a card under another card in play for the purpose of gaining an effect. Attack: Playing cards or using card powers to reduce an opponent’s power stages, Life Deck, or anger. Attacker: The player who can attack, play a card in place of an attack, or pass in the Attack Phase. Base Damage: On all cards, the base damage is PAT for physical attacks and 4 Life cards for Energy attacks, unless the card states a set amount of damage (EG: Physical attack doing 4 power stages of damage). Battle Sequencer: This is the actual step-by-step order of Combat that occurs in battle. Card Power: The instructions on a card containing the benefit of a card if played or used. Combat Card: A card type that is played and used during the Combat Step. There are 3 types of Combat cards: Physical Combat, Energy Combat and Event. Constant Power: A continuous effect that some Personality cards create as long as that Personality is in control of Combat. Controller: The controller is the person that currently has possession of a card. The controller may not always be the owner of the card, as in the case of captured Dragon Balls. Cost: A cost exists on a card only if the word “cost” (or the terms “costs” and/or ”costing”) appears on the card itself. Energy attacks that don’t tell you the basic cost on the card gain “Costs 2 power stages to perform” after the sentence describing the energy attack. Current Rulings Document (CRD): Some cards have raised questions that require official answers. To find these answers, go to www.DragonBallZOCG.com Damage: The loss in power stages or life cards caused by a successful attack. Power stages and life cards lost from effects from a card are NOT “damage”. Deck: Your Life Deck and your Sensei Deck combined. Discard: To put a card face-up on top of the Discard Pile.

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Dragon Ball Loop: An infinite game loop that occurs when you take life cards of damage and only have Dragon Balls left. When this happens, you lose the game. Drill Card: Drill cards represent the Martial Art abilities of your Personalities. You play them during your Non-Combat Step, and they are discarded when the MP gains or loses a Personality level. Unlike Setup cards, Drills are kept in play after use and can be used multiple times throughout your turn. Effects: These are game instructions that are not directly associated with an attack. When part of an attack, these card effects occur whether or not the attack is successful. They are always finished before the opponent does anything else and are not considered damage. Endurance: Endurance appears on some cards in the card’s power box appearing in the form of Endurance #. # is the card’s Endurance value. Energy Attack: 1 of the 2 ways to attack in the game. (The other is a physical attack.) Most energy attacks cost the attacker 2 power stages to perform and cause the defender to take 4 life cards of damage, unless the power text says otherwise. Energy Combat Card: A Combat card that you play from your hand during an Attack Phase that usually will perform or stop an energy attack. Event: A Combat card you play from your hand during an Attack Phase that will either produce game effects or stop an attack. Final Physical Attack: This is a physical attack for PAT power stages of damage that is performed by discarding any card from your hand as a cost. For the rest of Combat you must pass in every one of your remaining Attack Phases and you cannot defend. Floating Effects: These are game instructions that are created by card effects that continue to exist in the game even though the card that created them is no longer being used. Focused attacks: A focused attack cannot be stopped or prevented by cards that have the ability to stop or prevent damage from both physical and energy attacks. Freestyle Card: Any card that does not have a Martial Arts Style assigned to it. Freestyle cards can be used in any Life Deck, including decks that qualify for a Tokui-Waza. To declare a Freestyle Tokui-Waza your deck must only contain Freestyle cards. Fusion: Some cards reference having a fused MP. To have a fused MP the printed name on your current MP level or on a level lower than your current MP level must be different from your actual MP's name. Hero: A Personality card that has a blue background. “If Successful” effects: These effects occur only if an attack is successful. In play: A card that is face-up on the table but is not in a Life Deck, discard pile, Sensei Deck or removed from the game pile. Also, Personality levels that are not the current level of a personality are not in play.

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Keyword: A word appearing on cards that is tied to a specific effect that is defined by the rules of the game or a card. Life Cards: These are the cards in your Life Deck. Life Deck: Your Life Deck is the entirety of all cards you bring to the game. It’s the stack of face-down cards next you your Main Personality that you draw and discard from during a game. These cards represent the life force of your MP. Location Cards: Location cards affect battles for both players and are placed in play during the Non-Combat Step by the active player. Once placed in play, a player must then skip the Combat Step. If a Location card is in play when a new one is placed in play, the old one is removed from the game. You cannot play a Location if the same Location is already in play. Main Personality (MP): The character that someone is playing in the game. The player uses his collected Life Deck to take on the persona of that Main Personality. The MP defines the alignment of the Deck that is being used by the player (hero or villain) as well as what kind of Allies he can use in play. Martial Arts Style: One of the 6 fighting styles represented in the game: Red, Blue, Orange, Black, Saiyan or Namekian. Mastery Card: A card type that is played before the game begins if an owner’s Life Deck matches the requirements for a Tokui-Waza. Modifier: A Modifier is an effect that alters how much damage an attack does, usually using a + or a – symbol. Modifiers can be found in the secondary effect text. MP: An abbreviation for the term “Main Personality.” Named Card: A card having a personality’s name in its card title. Namekian Heritage: If a card says “Namekian Heritage only” it means that only Namekian personalities may use these cards. Non-Combat Card: A card type in the OCG that is played during the Non-Combat Step, and stays in play. There are 2 types of Non-Combat cards: Setups and Drills. OCG: Online Card Game. Owner: The owner of a card is the person that brought the card to the table prior to the game starting. Pass: A choice a player makes to take no action other than say “pass” during an Attack Phase. Pass Consecutively: When both players pass in back-to-back Attack Phases thus ending the Combat Step. Physical Attack: One of the 2 types of attacks in the game. Physical attacks generally do power stages of damage and use the Physical Attack Table to calculate the Base Damage, unless the card specifies exactly what damage is done from the attack.

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Physical Attack Table: The card that you add to your deck that compares the power rating of 2 personalities to obtain a numeric value. Physical Combat Card: A Combat card that you play and use during an Attack Phase that usually performs or stops a physical attack. Playing a Card: Whenever you take a card and put it in play. Powering Up: This occurs during the Power Up Step of the Sequence of Play. Players’ power up their Main Personality’s and Allies power stages by their PUR. Power Rating: The numeric value inside a power stage that represents a Personality’s current strength. Power Stages: The spaces on Personality cards that contain numeric values. They are located to the right of the image of a Personality. Power-Up Rating (PUR): The number in the middle of the left side of a Personality card that determines how many power stages that personality gains in the Power-Up Step. Remain: An effect that allows a card to be used one or more times after it was used earlier in the same Combat Step. The number of times the card can be used again appears after the word “Remain.” Remove from game after use: To put a card face-up in your Removed-From-The-Game pile. That card cannot be played or used for the rest of the game. Revealed Cards: Cards that are face up in play, revealed in searches, or mentioned by name are revealed cards. Rogue: A Personality card that has a purple background. Saiyan Heritage: If a card says “Saiyan Heritage Only,” it means that only Saiyan Personalities can use it. Secondary Effects: Secondary effects are effects not directly associated with an attack. These card effects occur automatically and are always resolved before the opponent does anything else. The following are NOT secondary effects: costs, “if successful” effects, attacks, anything that stops an attack, or any text inside parentheses. Sensei Card: This card qualifies you to play a Sensei Deck. Sensei Deck: A deck and game mechanic that allows you to swap out cards in your Sensei Decks with cards in your Life Deck after Main Personalities and Masteries have been revealed, but before play actually begins. Sequence of Play: The 5 steps that make up a complete turn. Shuffling Your Life Deck: Randomizing a Life Deck to the point where its contents and the order of those contents are unknown to the shuffler and satisfactory to the opponent. Starburst: A Starburst tells you that the card is played as a defense in an Attack Phase. This means your opponent must attack and you must use the card as a defense.

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Styled Drills: These are Drill cards that have a Martial Arts Style attached to them. Styless Mastery: A Mastery that does not have a Martial Arts Style in its title. You must declare a Freestyle Tokui-Waza to play a Styleless Mastery. Tokui-Waza: A status a player gains by building a Life Deck composed of only Freestyle cards and cards from one Martial Arts Style or only Freestyle cards. A Mastery card from the chosen Style must be played if you declared a Tokui-Waza. There are 6 kinds of TokuiWaza: Red, Saiyan, Namekian, Orange, Blue, Black, and Freestyle. Tournaments: Official Dragon Ball Z OCG events. These events allow players to compete for prizes, and meet new people who love to play the game. Check www.DragonBallZOCG.com for more information about tournaments. Using a Card: A card is “used” when a player uses its effect. This is different than playing a card (see Playing a Card.) For Combat cards, using the card happens instantly after playing it except for cards with remain. Villain: A Personality card that has a red background.

Credits Lead Game Designers: Kevin Sweeny, Scott Wilding Art Director: Jason Pike Graphic Artists: Kurt Felton, Jarrett McBride, James Pickens, Lorne Madejczyk, Tom Skender Marketing Coordination: Kurt Felton, Jason Pike, Jarrett McBride Web Development: Kurt Felton, Jarrett McBride Site Moderator: Lawrance Miller, TJ Sanez, Tournament Coordinator: Jason Pike Playtesters: Sean West, Original game designers and creators of the Dragon Ball Z OCG: Geoffrey Brewster, Joshua Merckle Original Dragon Ball Z CCG game design, from which the Dragon Ball Z OCG game was derived: Jim Ward.

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For more information on the game, check out www.DragonBallZOCG.com Not Endorsed by Toei Animation / Funimation All right reserved.

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