Gaming Age writes: "I'll start off this review by stating I did not play the original Magna Carta on PS2. I avoided it due to some negative reviews, and then by the time I decided I wanted to check it out, it was a little tough to locate locally. Having played Magna Carta 2 now, though, I doubt I'll see the need to go back and play it. Not because I find Magna Carta 2 to be exceptionally bad though, I actually think it's a pretty decent RPG on the 360, and one that I hope people don't tend to overlook. There's nothing about the plot or characters that's going to excite genre fans, it's pretty run of the mill storytelling fluff, but the combat system is actually interesting and involving, and far more fun than I suspected. I doubt that the original Magna Carta stacks up to this, and I'm going to continue to avoid it for that reason."
OXM's Edwin writes: "The sun is shining, there's a half-finished copy of Bioshock Infinite back home, I've got a third-hand 3DS in the post (it cost £80 - sucks to be you, launch buyers!) and another long Easter weekend is upon us. How are you spending yours - engaging in religious ceremonies? Decapitating make-believe rabbits? Dying of chocolate? Visiting your drunken excesses on relatives? Or playing videogames?"
Lots of mediocre titles in that list save Amalur and Overlord . There are better underrated titles out there , some more ignored than that list
Russ reports on all the RPG sales around the internet and retail stores this week.
We take a look at Magna Carta 2 and see if this Korean RPG is more exciting than the revolutionary bill its named after.