Cardfight Vanguard Dear Days 2tenoke

Here’s a structured review for Cardfight!! Vanguard Dear Days 2 (the “tenoke” seems like a typo or nickname; assuming you meant the full game title).


The Evolution of the AI in Dear Days 2

The original Dear Days was criticized for its passive, predictable AI. Opponents rarely attacked aggressively, misused Guard, and failed to capitalize on superior ride lines. Dear Days 2 obliterates that reputation. The new AI, which players loosely call "Tenoke" (possibly derived from a streamer’s mispronunciation of "tenacious" or a Japanese term for "bamboo child," ironically representing something that grows quickly and is hard to break), analyzes the field, tracks your hand size, and even predicts trigger checks. It will deliberately hold back a Rearguard to bait your Perfect Guards, then unleash a Vanguard swing with a Critical Trigger. It will deck-thin efficiently and, most terrifyingly, remember your previous plays across multiple matches, adapting its aggression based on your clan’s weaknesses. cardfight vanguard dear days 2tenoke

For Trainer Users (On Legit Steam Copy):

  • Anti-Cheat Software: Dear Days 2 uses EOS (Epic Online Services) with heuristic anti-cheat. While it is not as aggressive as EasyAntiCheat, memory editing (scanning for VP values) triggers flags.
  • The Ban Wave Risk: Bushiroad historically bans in waves. Using a Tenoke trainer online to get infinite VP might work today, but six months from now, your account could be permanently locked out of online matchmaking. You will keep the cards, but you will only play AI.
  • Corrupted Saves: A poorly coded trainer can write invalid data into your save file (e.g., owning 99 copies of a card that is hard-coded to be limited to 4). This can cause the game to crash on launch, bricking 100+ hours of progress.

The Golden Rule: If you use Tenoke, stay strictly offline. Disable your network adapter before launching the trainer. Do not take your infinite VP deck into a ranked lobby. That is how you get reported. Here’s a structured review for Cardfight


Essay: The Crucible of Strategy – Understanding the "Tenoke" Challenge in Cardfight!! Vanguard Dear Days 2

In the evolving landscape of digital trading card games, Cardfight!! Vanguard Dear Days 2 stands as a monumental improvement over its predecessor. Released as a follow-up to the 2022 original, this sequel expands the roster, polishes the mechanics, and introduces a more ruthless AI. Among the game’s community, a term has emerged from the depths of online forums and Discord servers: "Tenoke." While not an official game mode or character, "Tenoke" has come to represent the ultimate test of a player’s mettle—the high-difficulty AI opponents that punish every misplay, demand perfect deck-building, and simulate the pressure of a real-world championship final. This essay explores the nature of the Dear Days 2 challenge, the strategies required to overcome it, and why the legend of "Tenoke" resonates so deeply with the Vanguard fandom. The Evolution of the AI in Dear Days

Part 4: The Community Divide – "Gatekeepers vs. Grinders"

The emergence of the Tenoke trainer has split the Cardfight Vanguard community into two warring camps.

3. About the Game (Cardfight!! Vanguard Dear Days 2)

  • Developer: FURYU Corporation / Bushiroad.
  • Genre: Trading Card Game (TCG) / Simulation.
  • Platform: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Steam (PC).
  • Gameplay: It is the sequel to Dear Days. It serves as a digital simulator for the actual card game, featuring the "D-series" rulesets and cards. It includes a story mode (often following the will+Dress anime characters) and online ranked battles.
  • Save Data: The tenoke release usually allows you to play the game on PC without owning it on Steam, but online features will not work on cracked versions (they are restricted to offline/versus CPU modes).

Scenario A: The Nuclear Option (Always-Online DRM)

Future updates to Dear Days 2 or a theoretical Dear Days 3 could force an always-online connection even for Solo Play. This would instantly kill save editing and trainers. However, this would also enrage the legitimate player base who want to play on the Switch during a flight or on Steam Deck offline.

2. The Animation & UI Overhaul

The original game was criticized for stiff animations. DD2 introduces:

  • Full-body ride animations with dynamic camera angles.
  • Persona Ride flourishes that feel as punchy as the anime.
  • A cleaner deck builder with smart filters (grade, race, set number, and even “cards Tenoke used in ranked”).