Eye of judgement game




















Any player can create a room in this mode, but the game will always work the same way, it is not possible to play in another type of game besides the mode of conquering 5 lands.

One question that many had was the question of whether or not it was possible to cheat online. No, it is not possible at least in this way , since we can only use the cards that are shown on the screen in play, that is, each turn we are shown on the TV screen the card that we must take from our deck.

The game ends when one of the players conquers 5 lands, thus gaining another victory for his personal profile in the game. It is now known that something has failed in this whole game mechanism, it is possible to photocopy cards, and although we do not advise you to do the truth, this is a reality that can lead to disinterest in the game, it is hoped that further measures will be taken in future editions of the cards as this is one of the points where this game could not fail, although it is already known that Sony may ban members who resort to these methods, this measure may not be the most correct because as everyone knows the forbidden fruit is always the most desirable, and here who failed was the publisher itself.

It remains the idea that something else could have been done in this field. In conclusion, Eye of Judgment is the perfect title for fans of games of the genre, and when we talk about games of the genre we obviously talk about magic, to all those who like the genre be sure to try this beautiful game as they will surely be very pleased.

He tells Yagami that, on the night of the murder, he'd been drugged and knocked unconscious by an unknown assailant and woken up a couple of hours later in a public park. He figures the murderer must have taken his gun while he was unconscious. Since they have no further leads, Yagami and Kaito decide to track down Hamura, since he's the only person they know for sure knows the Mole's true identity.

With Higashi's assistance, they start looking for Hamura's hiding place. However, when Patriarch Matsugane hears the duo are seeking out Hamura, he calls them to a meeting at his home. There he begs them not to pursue Hamura and the Mole anymore, since he fears they will be killed for disrupting the plans of the powerful people backing the Mole's killings.

When Yagami and Kaito refuse to back down, Matsugane orders the few men in the Family still loyal to him including Higashi to attack them, since he figures Kaito and Yagami are better off in the hospital for a couple of months rather than dead. Regardless, the duo manages to defeat the Matsugane thugs and depart. Still seeking to pin down Hamura's location, Yagami and Sugiura bug the Matsugane family office.

After listening to some of their calls, they determine that Hamura is hiding at a Cho-han gambling hall operated by the Family in the Champion District. Yagami and Kaito go there and find Hamura gambling with Ozaki.

After a fight with the two, the duo interrogates a battered Hamura. The Captain refuses to reveal the Mole's identity but, based on what he does admit, the detectives figure out that the real mastermind behind the Mole isn't Director Kido, but rather Shono, the researcher. Before they can get any more information out of him, Hamura is saved by the arrival of Kengo and some of his other thugs, who attack Yagami and Kaito before fleeing with the Captain.

Seeking to learn more about AD-9, Yagami and his team contact the journalist, Hattori, since he's done extensive reporting about AD-9's development and he's one of Chairman Kajihira's informants.

Hattori tells the team that it's impossible for the drug's research data to have been fabricated, as Hashiski theorized. However, he does remark that, despite the drug's advanced development, the ADDC has inexplicably refused to move into the human trial stage. After learning about this and reflecting on the evidence, Yagami deduces that the drug actually has moved into human trials, but it has done so illegally: The Mole's victims have actually been human test subjects; kidnapped by the Mole so that Shono could use them as control subjects to test AD-9's toxicity on humans and later discarded when the experiments failed.

Yagami also theorizes that it was Shono who actually killed Waku at the ADDC in ; having used him as the first test subject for an early version of AD-9 that also proved fatal.

However, Sugiura is skeptical about this theory due to the lack of evidence and its convenient exculpation of Okubo. Seeking further clarity, Yagami travels to the Tokyo Metropolitan Prison to meet with Okubo for the first time in years.

Despite all that he has endured behind bars while awaiting his execution, Okubo insists to Yagami that he is innocent of both Waku and Emi's murders. After his intense talk with Okubo, Yagami goes out for a drink but is confronted by Detective Kuroiwa. The Detective tries to threaten Yagami into backing down from aiding Ayabe's defence, but Yagami refuses.

The two are interrupted by an assassin sent by Captain Hamura, who attacks Yagami and unsuccessfully tries to kill him. Fearing further attacks, Yagami and his friends seek refuge at the Kyorei Clan's base, since the Matsugane goons are less likely to attack them there.

The next day, Yagami and Sugiura head to the ADDC to confront Shono about their theory, in the hopes that they might be able to extract some useful info from him. After they are prohibited entry by Vice Minister Ichinose, the duo sneak in through the parking lot and confront Shono while he does his morning rounds of the hospital wing. After locking Shono in Waku's old room, Yagami lays out what his team has found and, though a terrified Shono denies everything, he slips up and mentions things he couldn't have known about if some of Yagami's claims weren't true.

During their conversation, Yagami determines that Shono was also behind Emi Terasawa's murder: After Okubo was acquitted, Shono feared that the investigation into Waku's case would continue, so he killed Okubo's girlfriend and framed him to make it look like Okubo had been falsely acquitted.

After departing from the ADDC, Yagami visits Okubo once more, tells him that he now believes in his innocence and swears that he will expose Shono's crimes and avenge Emi's death. Pressed for time, Yagami and Kaito decide to question Hamura once more.

In order to lure him out of hiding, the duo cause trouble at various Matsugane Family businesses throughout Kamurocho, eventually resulting in Matsugane thugs attacking them in the Champion District. When one of the thugs flees the fight, the duo chases him to Little Asia but find that they've been led into a trap: Hamura and a few of his goons surround them and hold them at gunpoint.

However, Patriarch Matsugane, who followed Hamura's men after they left the family office, intervenes and demands that Hamura spare the two detectives. The Captain tells the Patriarch to stand down, insisting that Yagami and Kaito have to be killed if the family is to continue existing.

After Kaito antagonizes Hamura for mistreating Matsugane for so long, Hamura angrily shoots him in the stomach, much to Matsugane's horror. Before Yagami is also shot, Sugiura arrives and attacks the thugs holding him at gunpoint, allowing them both to flee while Kaito is taken by Hamura and his men. Fearing for Kaito's life, the two listen in on the bugs they'd placed in the Matsugane office and discover where Hamura has taken him.

Yagami, Sugiura and Higashi rush to the abandoned building where Kaito is being held and fight their way through Hamura's mooks. Finally, Yagami confronts Captain Hamura on the building's top floor, where he is holding Kaito at gunpoint.

After Kaito manages to knock Hamura's gun out of his hand, Yagami attacks him and the two fight, with Yagami ultimately ending up victorious. Knowing that it won't be long before Hamura's boys arrive with reinforcement, Yagami tells Higashi and Sugiura to take Kaito to the hospital, while he and a newly arrived Patriarch Matsugane take Hamura to a place where they can question him without being interrupted: The Kyorei Clan's base at Cabaret Honmauren.

Despite refusing to give up the killer's identity, Hamura explains how he came to be involved in the conspiracy: The Mole was an assassin whom Hamura had been working with for years prior to the plot, finding him work through his underworld connections and taking a cut of the pay.

It was through this work with the Mole that he managed to save the Matsugane family from bankruptcy. The hit was so successful that Ichinose hired them again, this time to kidnap victims for Shono's experiments. Hamura and the Mole decided to use Kyorei yakuza as subjects since their deaths would seem like gang war casualties and draw less public attention.

Hamura also admits that Shintani's murder was his fault: While he was in jail, he feared he would be convicted for the third victim's murder, so he told Shintani that Shono was connected to the murder.

After Shintani started his own investigation into Shono's role in the murders, Ichinose ordered him killed. The questioning is interrupted by the arrival of the Matsugane Family's forces, led by Kengo and Ozaki, who set fire to the Cabaret and attack the Kyorei Clan to rescue Hamura. Murase is killed with a bomb and Shioya is badly beaten, but Yagami manages to escort Matsugane and a captive Hamura to the exit.

However, they are stopped by the arrival of the Mole, dressed in a dark raincoat that conceals his identity. The assassin tries to shoot Hamura to silence him, but the Captain is saved because Matsugane takes the bullets for him.

The Mole is forced to flee due to the fire's expansion, leaving Hamura and Yagami behind as they mourn the dying Patriarch.

Before dying, Matsugane forgives Hamura for his betrayal and says that it was his fault that Hamura had to resort to murder to save the family from ruin. After the fire department and the police arrive at the scene, Yagami is taken to police headquarters for questioning by none other than Kuroiwa himself.

While perhaps not as open and intensely customizable as a game like Magic: The Gathering, Eye of Judgment features a lot of strategy and micromanagement. And thankfully, the Eye just works. It scans every card quickly and effectively, making gameplay a pretty seamless experience. You can even opt to disable the lengthy battle animations for a much quicker, to-the-point style match.

Eye of Judgment also works hard to protect against cheating. When playing online, you must scan every card you want to use beforehand with the Eye, including multiple copies of the same card at once, so it registers all of them.

Once your deck is registered, the computer will randomly draw your cards for you during online play, which means you can never secretly draw from your deck to tip the battle in your favor. The computer keeps track of every card in your deck and hand, ensuring that duels are played fairly.

The only flaw in this system we could find was that the game will mistake a high-quality, color copy of a card for the real deal, meaning a sneaky gamer could print off pictures of cards they don't have and duel online with those. While this is regrettable, it doesn't necessarily damage the gameplay, since they still have to follow the rules when actually engaged in a match - they just don't own the cards they're using.

Otherwise, the online system works great, and supports text and video chat. You can search for custom games or play ranked matches - whatever you prefer. When using two PS3s in the office, we didn't notice any lag or gameplay issues at all, which is reassuring. Ultimately though, there is a certain charm to having two players share a board, and we suspect that people will enjoy playing on one PlayStation 3 more than online, unless of course you're in an area with no card game geeks, such as ourselves.

While Eye of Judgment has many other details to enjoy, it also carries with it a few significant flaws. First and foremost is the complete lack of a story mode, which makes no sense whatsoever. For a game with a detailed back-story provided in the manual and a rather mind-blowing though admittedly nerdy opening cutscene, we were thoroughly astounded that the only way to play on your own was just to face off with the computer in single matches.

This is the one aspect of the game that hurt our experience the most and we still don't understand why so much time and energy was put into an opening sequence when nothing would come of it.

And although playing online is fun and somewhat makes up for the lack of a campaign, having to look through your entire deck with every card draw can be frustrating. Not overly so, especially if you have all your cards spread out, but newcomers in particular might have trouble finding the card the computer has drawn from their deck.

Lastly, we must address the fact that Eye of Judgment does not necessarily need to utilize actual cards - everything could have been done virtually to create just about the same gameplay presentation. With that said, it's still a lot of fun to hold the card and actually interact with the game in an eccentric way, but keep in mind that Eye of Judgment is based around a gimmick of sorts, which may bother some people while pleasing a number of others.

Verdict As we've mentioned above, Eye of Judgment will appeal to a very, very select audience, but that audience will get a lot of enjoyment out of the title. I personally had a great time with it, although not everyone in the office had the same reaction. Take this into account before investing the money, but we can say with confidence that this is a fun card game that, if in the hands of card lovers, will be rather well received.

YES NO. Soooo, there are at least a couple of people, who still enjoy this pearl. After 10 years of not playing it, now i am fully back into it. Like a thunderstrike…, it hit me once again. I am just 15 Cards away from a complete Collection of all cards, but the last ones are the hardest, i guess. Nice to see at least one or two comments on this game, here and there. I will be checking from time to time here…. I just bought this game today, but only the game was available. I now need to print the cards, the mat and finally build a working camera stand.

Any hint for all this? I found the cards on the site thanks for that! I will probably have to measure everything to be able to print them on a proper A4 paper sheet. I am nonetheless looking for a printable mat and some hints on the camera stand. Any idea? My game is currently packed away so you may need to find someone with the dimensions of the grid.

Printed a map but still struggling with the camera stand. I went to a shop nearby which quoted an insane amount for 3d printing it… Still on the lookout! You are commenting using your WordPress. You are commenting using your Google account. You are commenting using your Twitter account. You are commenting using your Facebook account. Notify me of new comments via email. Notify me of new posts via email. Main menu Skip to content. Trophies have also made their way to the game. Not holding out for a sequel but who knows?

Man, and here I thought everyone forgot about this game. Thank you so much for preserving the memory of this game, it means a tremendous amount to me.

No problem at all!



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