Your Turn to Die: Majority Vote Death Game, Vol. 2

Your Turn to Die: Majority Vote Death Game, Vol. 2

  • Downloads:7325
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2022-02-14 08:52:22
  • Update Date:2025-09-13
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Tatsuya Ikegami
  • ISBN:1975339908
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

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Reviews

Danni Lykaios

Huh。 Interesting to see how the Manga ever so slightly differs from the game。 Can’t wait to see how they handle future chapters!

Ghostea

There was a long gap between this and the previous volume, which I think kind of hurt my perception of it。 The series still feels like it is revving up for something greater, but right now the intensity is just not there for a death game series。 If the next volume does not catch my attention I may drop the series。 It is good, but it can be doing more。

Craig Schorling

This was a good volume。 It still has the chaos and tension of who is good and who isn't going on。 The art is nothing special but passable for sure。 The characters are fun but a little uninventive。 What I like most about this is the survival visual novel vibes that it gives off due to being based off a video game。 It reminds me of the Nonary Games but not as good in the story department。 This is a fun, end of the day read but nothing new or groundbreaking。 This was a good volume。 It still has the chaos and tension of who is good and who isn't going on。 The art is nothing special but passable for sure。 The characters are fun but a little uninventive。 What I like most about this is the survival visual novel vibes that it gives off due to being based off a video game。 It reminds me of the Nonary Games but not as good in the story department。 This is a fun, end of the day read but nothing new or groundbreaking。 。。。more

Mark

After majority ruled and somebody paid the price, heads are going to roll。 Joe and Sara still have their bond to rely on as they try to keep everybody together, but if they’re not careful, somebody else might end up getting the point。A silly story begets a silly introductory paragraph and this story remains goofy as all get out。 It continues to be entirely impossible to take anything seriously given some of the headgear the characters choose to wear。 It’s certainly the most likely manga to make After majority ruled and somebody paid the price, heads are going to roll。 Joe and Sara still have their bond to rely on as they try to keep everybody together, but if they’re not careful, somebody else might end up getting the point。A silly story begets a silly introductory paragraph and this story remains goofy as all get out。 It continues to be entirely impossible to take anything seriously given some of the headgear the characters choose to wear。 It’s certainly the most likely manga to make a milliner break out into cold sweats。This is textbook ‘manga you read because you’re interested in how crazy and insane it will get before it finally ends’。 If you’re a fan of these complicated death traps and betrayals, it’s certainly not a great example, but this is the kind of story where I expect my eyes to be rolling and am upset if they aren’t。 Possibly it’s video game origins have something to do with this。Luckily, the climax of this volume involves the revelation of an impossible crime where a decapitated head that somebody stole off with and jammed in a safe because they believed the person was still alive after a clear psychotic break was itself stolen from that very (locked) safe, so I think I’ll be just fine。This volume lacks a little compared to the initial paranoia of its forebear, although there are clearly some object lessons being set up in the folly of believing in other people and even more crazy side plots being thrown on top of a premise that doesn’t especially need them (the Tarot cards in particular are a wrinkle this suit doesn’t need)。There’s definitely too much ‘where is this person’ and ‘we need to keep everybody together’, which is a genre staple, so it’s expected, but needs a little more oomph in the narrative to keep it interesting, doubly so with the unfortunate lack of a cast page (it should be a requirement in a story like this, if only so you can put giant X’s through the deceased cast as you go)。But when the traps get involved, things are a lot more fun and that’s the whole point anyway。 The big set piece this time around is a lovely little bit of high-stakes (cough) cruelty that ends up having a somewhat clever solution, if not especially fair play for the audience。 It definitely works better than the big middle finger the story gives to the results of the first game in the opening section。If this story is doing what you want it to be doing, it is worth a read, and that’s where my own thoughts fall on its nonsense。 I mean, who knows what absurdity somebody will show up wearing next (a sentiment borne out by this very volume)? I’m sure the ending to all this is going to enrage me, but I’d be rather disappointed if it didn’t。3 stars - it’s a death game and it isn’t playing fair and the characters are a bunch of odd ducks with questionable fashion。 There are enough questions and revelations that make me want to hang on, but I don’t know, if I was taking any of this seriously, that I’d be able to enjoy it in that context。 。。。more