thre for numebering it so theywont misplace it
Flip it side ways dude!
No, I'm stupid. you have to go to the other side of the rainbow to do this
Sometimes they are stuck to the back side of the deck lid.
The block casting numbers are on the top driver side of the bellhousing flange at the back of the engine. The engine code is stamped into a pad on the block deck in front of the passenger side cylinder head.
They are the engine serial number and the suffix code. The suffix codes can easily be decoded. For example, a CRV suffix code is a 454, 450 HP, 4-speed transmission. If the serial numbers that precede "CRV" match the VIN of the car, then you have a numbers matching LS6 4-speed car.
You can only have between zero and 15 cards in your Side Deck.
During a Duel, your side deck is untouchable, nothing can affect it. Only in between the Duels in a Match, can side deck cards be switched with main deck cards, and therefore allow them to be used.
No. A column is identified by the letters at the top of the window.
Typically you put those "just-in-case" cards into your side deck; cards to respond to a variety of deck types. For example, you might include Shadow-Imprisoning Mirror in your side deck for when you go up against a DARK-attribute deck. Including that card in your main deck could prove to be less than optimal if your opponent is not using many DARK monsters.Another use of the side deck (albeit a rare one) is to radically change your deck. The trick here is that your opponent has already seen your deck once and is using their side deck to counter yours. You can throw him/her off by constructing your deck and side deck in such a way that you know which cards to swap out to make your deck run differently (i.e. taking out your effect damage cards to include out-of-play cards).
Drivers side, right in front of the cylinder head, there is a pad on the block, with a series of numbers, starting with 2 letters, usually.
This is simple science. A reflection shows the opisite side, not angle. So when the numbers and letters are shown, that's what happens.
No, but this is where the Side Deck comes into play. The side deck is composed of exactly 15 cards and is kept beside a player at all times. Between rounds in a tournament, a player can switch his/her side deck's cards out with his regular deck's cards as long as after the switch, he shows his next opponent that there are exactly 15 cards in his/her side deck.