CABARET 4 CARD
This is the Grand Cabaret 4 Cards in Ginza.
An adult social gathering place where you can enjoy shows, drinks and card games. [/]
Only 4 “logical battles” [/]
Only 4 cards in your hand. It will be distributed randomly, but it will be all open from the beginning.
There is no luck factor after the hand is dealt.
It’s just four “logical battles” where you can win the game at once with one mistake.
Victory / defeat conditions change for each move [/]
“If you win, you win” “If you win, you lose” “If you win the last one, you win” …
The two players alternately put cards into play one by one.
A thrilling rule where victory / defeat conditions are constantly changing.
Read More: Best Card Battler Casual Games.
Demon’s Mirror
You’ve stumbled into a world filled with your worst nightmares. You’ve been here before, possibly thousands of times, and the journey ahead of you is going to take everything you have. Only you can bring balance to the chaos. Demon’s Mirror presents a fresh take on roguelike deck building by giving you an additional method to battle your opponents. Play powerful cards and create massive chains of tiles to sway the battle in your favor.
Use your deck of cards to battle foes
Chain tiles to attack, defend, and gain resources
Enemies can place tiles that will damage you
You can play cards or create chains to damage and destroy enemy tiles
What To Expect
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No playthrough is ever the same
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Fill your deck with the perfect set of cards to battle your opponent and manipulate the game board
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Match tiles to attack, defend, gain resources, as well as destroy enemy tiles
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Discover powerful artifacts that will give you exciting new powers
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Choose your own path to determine your own fate
If you took a roguelike deckbuilder and mashed it with a strategic puzzle battler you’d have Demon’s Mirror. This is NOT a cheap mobile game filled with IAP!
Can you survive a trip through the mirror?
Read More: Best Card Battler Roguelite Games.
Solaris Rift
BEST TEN MINUTES OF MY LIFE!!
– Real player with 0.7 hrs in game
Read More: Best Card Battler Strategy Games.
A fun little project of a game you can beat in an hour if you try. The devs did a really good job with making the strategy feel complex and worth thinking through with only a handful of main concepts. I definitely recommend checking Solaris Rift out and getting all the achievements!
– Real player with 0.5 hrs in game
The Zone: Stalker Stories
This is the Zone – a post-apocalyptic world of strangeness and confusion, treasure and danger, exploration and tactical card battles.
Advance through twisted monsters and deadly anomalies. Unearth artifacts of mysterious power. Develop your psionic abilities and crush foes with the force of your mind.
Create your perfect deck by equipping artifacts and researching new powers. Carefully manage your expedition to maximise your loot and how far from home you can go. Take side quests with unique rewards. Make friends… Make enemies.
Inspired by games such as Slay the Spire, S.T.A.L.K.E.R and Darkest Dungeon, the Zone blends a new take on deckbuilding with a full narrative RPG – a rich story crafted by industry veterans (Mount&Blade, The Next World).
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Gorgeous hand-drawn art
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Gripping story, colourful characters
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A beautiful, dangerous world to explore
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Deep inventory management - Assemble your deck and abilities by carefully choosing your equipment
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Research powerful upgrades for combat and exploration
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Complete side jobs to gain unique rewards
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Many different items and abilities to mix and match your perfect playstyle
Dead Man’s Draw
This is very close. Another game I wish I could give a neutral rating.
Its a push your luck card drawing game with each suit triggering a different mechanism and along with your traits you can combine them in to more or less devestating attacks in order to collect cards that bolster your score.
Contrary to some of the reviews Ive seen nothing to suggest that the AI is cheating, it does pull off some last minute nasty moves at times but keeping my cool I can think back to the many times I have done the same thing. How much this actually matters is debateable, if the game makes you feel like it is cheating then whether it is or it isnt, the frustration is always real. I think this will be the biggest sticking point for most people, at first it may not be quite so apparent but as things go on you will see through to the luck component of the game increasingly easily and more and more you will feel robbed by complete chance regardless of how well youve played a hand.
– Real player with 82.1 hrs in game
I really enjoyed this game, the rules are really simple to pick up, it’s fun to play, the characters are memorable and consistent in ‘who they are’ with the trait combos they use. The AI is really good and not overly cheaty, there were a couple of times I thought you wouldn’t keep drawing like that or you’d have had to have known that card was there to have carried on or to have played that card, but this didn’t happen often enough to make it a concern. It is incredibly fair the majority of the time.
– Real player with 55.0 hrs in game
Idle Poker
It’s a pretty decent idle/clicker/incremental game with fun progression and prestiges. The endgame can be pretty grindy unless you are extremely lucky. There are also lots of mistakes in the English, but it was never so bad that I couldn’t understand it as a native speaker. I’d say it’s definitely worth the price!
– Real player with 32.8 hrs in game
It’s cute for a little while but it fails in giving me something to “do”. in the sense that once you ascend ten times (a primary gameplay loop of idle games), you unlock the final ‘tab’ which just another variant of the poker game to very slowly earn rubies to boost the experience. But like anything with poker, you need to either know how to play entirely or just hope the RNG goes in your favor. I lost any real interest or reason to play after that point.
Got it on sale and got my money’s worth, just wish there was more to it.
– Real player with 24.9 hrs in game
SteamWorld Quest: Hand of Gilgamech
Makings of a Hero
SteamWorld is a franchise of vaguely connected games, each starring a friendly cast of robots. The latest entry – Hand of Gilgamech introduces a stark departure from the usual futuristic setting, venturing instead into the land of fantasy. Meet Armilly, an adventurer aspiring to at last become a member of the local heroes’ guild. Good heavens! The village has been invaded by an evil army and all of the heroes have been kidnapped. Such a tragedy, if only there was someone desperately longing for a worthy quest to finally prove themselves. It’s high time to gather your trusty companions and make this one count.
– Real player with 41.6 hrs in game
On my first playthrough I went with the Legend difficulty and I was not disappointed… Mostly. Also, quick note, I got the game half off so my thoughts are based around what I got for that price.
Starting with things I liked/loved:
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The Art is beautiful.
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The Characters are simple but lovable.
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The Music I find to be very pleasant to listen to.
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I love the opening and ending sequences, I wish there were more of these.
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The Ending Song, while short, made me smile. I love it.
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The card game mechanic is pretty solid. Deck-Building is fast and easy, chaining cards together for combos or allowing for an additional helpful card to be played is really fun, and while I didn’t use a lot of other cards, I can definitely see some ideas on how to use them for other play styles so I like that there is multiple options on how to play.
– Real player with 38.5 hrs in game
The Lord of the Rings: Adventure Card Game - Definitive Edition
Ever since the online emergence of Magic: The Gathering (sadly not available on Steam anymore), many developers tried to copy the formula and release their own version of a turn-based card game either for mobile phones or PC. A flux of these came in 2015, when even major companies put heavy emphasis on releasing entries of this genre expecting huge income. Many actually became more successful than the original, mainly more and more people began playing games on their smartphones and due to the simpler rules used compared to MTG.
– Real player with 134.9 hrs in game
How much you’ll enjoy this game partially depends on your expectations beforehand. If, like many others, you’re a huge fan of the physical card game you might walk away disappointed, as it changes quite a few mechanics.
That being said, looking at the product objectively as a whole, it’s pretty solid. Personally, I think they improved on the game quite a bit. Granted, I find the physical card game it’s based on to be pretty mediocre. It’s probably one of my least favorite card games from fantasy flight. Whereas the physical version felt a little stale and slow, the digital version feels a lot snappier, interactive, and overall more intriguing than the physical version.
– Real player with 107.7 hrs in game
This Throne Is Mine - The Card Game
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What is this game about?
This Throne Is Mine - The Card Game is very simple game, where each turn you are presented with “problems” that require either a certain number of strength or diplomacy to solve. Your cards have strength or diplomacy + a special which is very simple, such as boosting one of the several type of resources. You can upgrade cards to strengthen their effects or buy general upgrades. Ultimately, this is foremost a resource management game with very light deckbuilding. If that sounds interesting to you and you don’t expect too much from the graphics, story or expect very deep mechanics, it’s a game that can be fun to play for a while to beat the challenges set by the developers.
– Real player with 3.4 hrs in game
Unsung Knight
fun but crash a lot
– Real player with 2.6 hrs in game