[center][h1][color=yellow]Matt Ronwell[/color][/h1][/center] Matt laughed at the sudden vehement response he received from both girls. [color=yellow]"Come on, come on, relax a little, it'll work out fine. I know all the important stuff, besides isn't the point of going to a school to learn? What would be the fun if I already knew everything?"[/color] They certainly seemed rather enamored with the idea of knowing about deck types as being very important. Matt thought they were overhyping the idea but also accepted inwardly that it may have some merit. He'd find out after a duel or two, one way or the other. When Ayami- hey that was weird, both the girls' names started with aya- stated she used Nekroz Aya went on a mini rant about them before seemingly becoming embarrassed and stopping. She then immediately seemed to shrink into herself and began playing around with her deck, which seemed to cheer her up to some extent. The red-head boy spoke up again to Aya, saying that Kajius were apparantly quite scary. Hm, maybe he should look them up on his disk. He opened up a holoscreen from his duel disk and started searching info on Kajus and then turned to Ayami. [color=yellow]"You seem to speak your mind and know what you're talking about. I'm genuinely interested, what is so important about knowing how other people's decks function. Can't you simply do your own thing and respond as necessary? For example let's take Kaijus, how does me knowing they're running Kaijus help me?"[/color] Of course he could see merits to knowing your opponent's deck. Knowing your opponent's biggest monster and how to stop it either from coming out or getting rid of it once it was out. Still it only helped if you had the cards to do something about it, otherwise it wouldn't matter even if you could see every card your opponent had while playing.