
The graphics in this game are fairly impressive. It’s obvious that the people at Magmic have taken the time to make their chess game look aesthetically pleasing; something the other chess games could have done with.
Playing Medieval Kings Chess 2 has several features. Once you start the game, the stylized menu will take you to the various game options including: Difficulty settings, board style and piece color. This game offers a little more than the other games in terms of difficulty settings. You can choose from 7 different difficulty modes ranging from human (play against a friend) to Ghengis Khan (very very hard).
Medieval Kings Chess 2 offers multiplayer, a function not yet seen with the mobile chess games reviewed to date. This is a great feature considering playing against a computer can be frustrating and less rewarding than defeating a human player.
In order to play this game against Fritz and test its power, I have set MKC2 to Ghengis Khan mode. Although no chess game has beat Fritz yet, there is a chance the Mongol conqueror will squash it with his mighty fist of chess doom.
Wait, nevermind. MKC2 was nowhere close to beating Fritz. After playing over 20 games of MKC2 versus Fritz, the ELO rating for MKC2 was calculated at 1540. This ELO corresponds to a class C rating. Not so great.

I have no complaints in terms of game play because it was fairly easy to move the pieces around and only once did the game come to a total stand-still. In this sense, the game is smooth and standard.
Medieval Kings Chess 2 combined with ChessGenius is what is needed for this review Guide. By having the elegant design and multiplayer capability of MKC2 combined with the superior chess engine of ChessGenius, we will finally be able to give a chess game the hotness rating we are looking for.
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