8/31/2023 0 Comments Roguebook heros![]() ![]() If there’s one missing, please tell me and I might add it to the list. Roguebook is entertaining enough and possibly more approachable at that.Hopefully I’ve caught all talents there are. In other words, I don’t feel it has the same depth has Slay the Spire, but none of that matters much if you aren’t looking for something to entertain you for 200+ hours. I would say that about 80% of that time has been with the same pair of characters chasing the same strong synergies each game, only deviating if my luck was terrible. I have played over 40 hours thus far, unlocking almost all of the Ascension-esque effects. Overall, Roguebook is a fun game that nevertheless feels a tad easier than Slay the Spire. But if you paired that character with another that is frequently offered cards that generate 0-cost Throwing Daggers that, you guessed it, dissolve when played, and then combine that with an attack the original character has that deals 1×8 damage… yeah. While some of them can be misses, a few can radically alter your entire gameplan.įor example, one character might get “Gain 1 Power each time a card is Dissolved,” which by itself is whatever. All too often in this genre, the optimal strategy is to keep your deck size as small as possible, so it was fun to see the designers address it with talents. Basically every X number of cards you add to your deck, unlocks a randomized selection of three talents based on the heroes you’re running. One twist I appreciated was the introductions of talents based on deck size. Each hero has their own exclusive card pools and there are four heroes total, and you can choose the pair at the beginning of each run. Losing one hero is not Game Over – you can recover by casting 5 special cards, but you get saddled with two spoiler cards in your deck until that level’s boss is defeated. Playing a Defend card (or a few others) will cause that hero to go to the front, with any incoming damage hitting just that person. Artifacts can also be earned/purchased, which give passive (and sometimes active!) abilities.Ĭombat is fairly standard Slay the Spire with cards costing resources to play, drawing new cards each turn, etc… except there are two heroes. Some gems are standard sort of “+3 damage” options, but some of the rarer varieties can do goofy things like giving you a free copy of the card, shuffling it back on top of your library, and similar. ![]() Speaking of gems, cards have gem slots ala Monster Train. You do eventually start earning progression currency that will allow you to improve future runs – thereby making exploration and combat easier overall – but things can be swingy in the beginning. While there are sometimes pre-revealed tiles you can head towards, the difference between uncovering an empty tile and one that lets you transform a basic card into a rare one with gems attached can be massive. Make no mistake: exploration is extremely RNG-driven. Gold can be found on the map, and there are a number of other structures that allow you to purchase new cards, get additional treasures, and there’s always a shop available to do likewise. Regular fights give ink bottles to uncover straight-line paths, and elite battles give AoE paintbrushes. By default, there is a very straight path to each level’s boss, but you are unlikely to survive without exploring more of the board and getting stronger. However the aesthetic is one of “blank pages,” where you use bottles of ink and paintbrushes to uncover blank tiles in order to explore and otherwise navigate towards the exit. The basic premise is that you have been sucked into (presumably) the titular book, and you must battle your way past many foes and bosses on your way out. There are a lot of interesting design decisions going on in Roguebook. ![]() And yet it is also different enough that it’s possible that someone who didn’t like Slay the Spire might enjoy Roguebook. Out of all of the deck-building games I have played, Roguebook is the one that has come closest to scratching the Slay the Spire itch. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |