Royale With Chess
PC Gamer|April 2020
Might & Magic: Chess Royale sends the auto-battler into turbo-drive.
Alistair Jones
Royale With Chess

On the face of things, this feels like the kind of game that should never have been made, an amalgamation of ideas and franchises that should barely occupy the same publishing house, let alone be drawn together in the same studio. But for all the ways in which Might & Magic: Chess Royale seems from afar like an affront to everything that lead to its eventual creation, it’s actually a refreshingly pared-down take on an emerging genre.

For the most part, Chess Royale lives pretty straightforwardly up to its title. Leaning heavily on the Might & Magic franchise to provide a little extra validity, it places a relatively unambitious autobattler (the genre birthed by the likes of Dota AutoChess or Teamfight Tactics) into the vaguest-possible battle royale (Fortnite, PUBG) framework, encouraging 100 players to fight it out for top spot. It’s an amusing gimmick to add to a new genre, but it does little to change the way players interact with one another. When all your autobattler competitors are already last-man-standing affairs, bolting the word ‘royale’ to the end of your title isn’t exactly revolutionary.

This story is from the April 2020 edition of PC Gamer.

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This story is from the April 2020 edition of PC Gamer.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.