The eye of judgment sounds like a really cool game and seems like something you would get addicted too and want to spend hours and hundreds of dollars on, but all it is is just another card game. What seperates this card game from others, besides the function of the eye toy, is that it has no substance. If you have no one to play with, you are kind of stuck with the 'scrimmage' mode vs. the comp, or online. It really gets old after a while when playing the comp as its pretty much the same thing over and over again. Also there is no mode of progression or anything, you just jump into a battle with the computer and if you win...you win and if you lose...you lose, thats that. After you get bored with the 'scrimmaging', which should be about an hour, you can try out online. With online, theres about 2 or 3 people online at a time across the world, and it seems like and only about 1 of them has a connection you can connect to. Also the card games loses its touch of "going out and finding rares" as people can easily dupe/copy cards themselves, from online, or just photo copy them. The only way the eye reads the card is from the black bars on top and bottom of the card which can be coppied on a peice of paper with a sharpie easily. So it loses the point in even going out and spending alot of money on cards so you can play people who are "masters" but who really just copy cards. This game might be cool if you have another player to play with but there really is a horrible job of teaching you how to play it, as its just a cr@ppy video that looks like it was made a few seconds and sounds like one of the videos i had to watch in science class back in high school. If i were you, save your 70 bucks and buy one of the newer games that just came out.
Other Helpful Reviews for The Eye of Judgment: Biolith Rebellion (Complete Disc)
Eye of Judgement is a unique card based game for the PS3. I'd say it's a mix between Magic the Gathering and the old Final Fantasy 8 card game (TetraMaster?) There's a 3x3 grid that you place your cards on, while a came... Read Full Review
After hiring several heavy equipment contractors to help get the game out of its plastic housing I spent about an hour admiring the artwork on the cards and in the instruction booklet before even setting the camera up. ... Read Full Review