If you mean how many versions of a card, there is just one, Armityle the Chaos Phantom.If you are asking how many actual cards of Armityle were printed, there must be hundreds of thousands worldwide, including his Japanese original release.
depends on the sacred beast one is 3 continues face up spell cards another is 3 continues face up trap cards and the last one is 3 fiend type monsters and you need to sacrifice 3 monsters because there so powerful
How long have you had the card it depends on that and how many of that card were first made.
You can have up to 3 copies of each card of the Crystal Beast series in your Deck. There is no limit to the amount of Crystal Beast cards you can have in a Deck.
I have them all uria lord of searing flames hamon lord of striking thunder raviel lord of phantasms And the fusion: armityle the chaos phantom
No. When people say 'God Cards', they mean Slifer, Obelisk and Ra. Even though many other monsters are named after or based on other gods (Nephthys, Horus, etc) only those three are 'God Cards'. Hamon, Uria and Raviel are known as the 'Sacred Beast' cards.
The Ganges river is sacred to the people of India. It is the river the Buddha used symbolically in many of his teachings.
The fact that rivers send water and food that sustains life, provides for cleaning, and seemingly replenishes itself might explain why many people in India still consider them sacred. People in India have many sacred idols.
Because it's beast.
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Buddahisim is sacred because to many people it is very important.
The Statue of Liberty is certainly respected and cherished by New Yorkers; to call it sacred might be an overstatement, since it is not actually a religious shrine. In a metaphorical sense it could be called sacred, because it represents freedom, and many people hold freedom to be sacred, particularly in context with the many people that have died securing our freedom.