We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

Deck Builders Round Up

By -

Deckbuilders! I love 'em. Slay the Spire got me into this genre digitally, after originally feeling the pull of Magic the Gathering in the late 90's. After over a hundred hours playing Slay the Spire, the classic that invigorated the whole genre, I had the bug, bad. So since late 2019 I’ve been hunting for more. MOAR! Here’s a round up of a few favourites.

Let’s start with a couple of Proton-only titles, then look at the native options.

Neoverse [Steam]

(Note: Proton)

Yes, this is full of scantily-clad, over-sexualised ladies, thanks for noticing. Judge me all you like, but after landing this in a Humble Bundle, I was gobsmacked at how good it is and I stand by that assessment.

This is the game in this round up most like Slay the Spire, and like its inspiration (it launched almost exactly one year later), each of the three characters have very different styles. The right amount of challenge combines with surprisingly deep gameplay and brilliant synergies if you land the right cards. Well worth playing.

Tainted Grail: Conquest [Steam, GOG]

(Note: Proton. Also, I didn’t test the GOG version under Lutris/Wine, apologies)

Another single-player vs the world game, but this time, with a beautifully realised 3D world which acts as the map. The map has a clever lighting mechanic which revolves around a dwindling torch, driving the gameplay forward. Some unusual design choices in this one – for example just a single “block” will block ALL damage from one source, while other stats drive armour and dodge. There’s a lot going on and it’s pretty challening, but beautfully done. I've not played much yet, but it looks like there's about 7 characters to unlock.

Across the Obelisk [Steam]

Still in early access, but showing a lot of promise, this is the first "team" game I'm covering - this features a cast of four characters from different classes. The mechanics are under heavy development, but there's a nice combination of in-game progress as you build your deck and between-run progress as you build up city resources. There’s also the glimmering of a cool story developing already, and the lore of a fantasy world recovering after decades of conflict. Already fully playable for multiple hours, this is also one to keep an eye on if you prefer the finished product, as I suspect it’s going to be pretty special.

Roguebook [Steam]

My personal favourite, this game revolves around a party of two taking on a series of challenges inspired by the developer's other game, Faeria. Amazing (truly AMAZING) synergies are at play here, allowing you to develop awesome teamwork with much less RNG than Slay the Spire.

I honestly can’t recommend it enough. Full of character, an incredible overland map mechanic, inventive challenge system, beautiful graphics, clear, clean gameplay – it’s a must-buy in my opinion.

Hadean Tactics [Steam]

I’ve covered this one before and it continues to develop apace, as you can see when Liam covered it 6 months later for its huge content update. It’s the combination of classic deck building with grid-based auto-battling which makes this so unique and compelling.

The auto-battling is frantic, but freezes every 7 seconds to allow you to spend your three energy by playing cards from your draw pile. Your tactics here can deal damage, boost allies or reposition units, which all follow their own rules about how they attack on the field of battle. Intense and unusual.

 

Honourable mentions

Steamworld: Hand of Gilgamech [Steam, GOG]

Much more story-based than the others I've mentioned, but still recommended. Some synergies, much more limited deck-building, but because it's driven by its narrative, there's much more of a slow-burn going on here.

Dicey Dungeons [Steam, GOG]

This one hopefully needs no introduction. Is it really a deck builder? I don’t really care about pigeon-holing it – it’s great, and deserves to be played!

Deep Sky Derelicts [Steam, GOG]

A brilliant sci-fi team-based deck-builder. I recommend sticking to it for a while, because it starts out very slowly. It pays off in the longer run though.

 

If you have any other deck-building suggestions, holler in the comments!

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
16 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I'm Neil, an avid Linux user since 2006 and a Linux-only gamer since 2013. I used to contribute to GOL's Funding Crowd articles, but now contribute the odd article directly, most recently the Play It Now series, and the IYL articles.

I also occasionally dabble a bit in Python, I do Internet Security for a living and finally, I'm a big fan of Neil Degrasse Tyson. And not just because he has a cool first name.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
14 comments

AciD May 14, 2022
You forgot Griftlands, Gordian Quest and Fate hunters ;)
Furyspark May 14, 2022
You also forgot Last Evil. :P

Still, a good list to have for this genre.
scaine May 14, 2022
View PC info
  • Contributing Editor
  • Mega Supporter
Quoting: AciDYou forgot Griftlands, Gordian Quest and Fate hunters ;)
Griftlands! How did I forget that! I love Klei games. Never heard of Gordian Quest - thanks for that. And yep, Fate Hunters is excellent and of course there's the "spiritual remake" of that, Dreamgate, also excellent.

Quoting: FurysparkYou also forgot Last Evil. :P
Never heard of it! Incredibly, it looks even more gratuitous than Neoverse!

And separately, just yesterday, a couple of days after writing this article (even though it only got published today), I bought Incryption, which is also worth a shout out, because it's just all kinds of awesome and even has a Linux beta.
Helvedeshunden May 14, 2022
I think the most interesting by far is Inscryption. Deck building combined with overarching narrative, escape room and a table-top D&D-vibe really makes it stand out.

Black Book is a decent Slay the Spire-wannabe, too, with a witch theme. I only tried the prologue, though.


Last edited by Helvedeshunden on 14 May 2022 at 12:20 pm UTC
Furyspark May 14, 2022
Quoting: scaine
Quoting: FurysparkYou also forgot Last Evil. :P
Never heard of it! Incredibly, it looks even more gratuitous than Neoverse!

That's putting it mildly. ^^
eldaking May 14, 2022
Good write-up, though there are of course many more - with Slay the Spire and its exceptional success, "Roguelite deckbuilder" truly became a new genre. I am partial to Monster Train and Griftlands, but there are others I want to check - though I usually just play Slay the Spire until I burn out, wait and repeat. :P

An interesting thing I'd like to point out is that "deckbuilders" take their base mechanic from boardgames, in which it is both a big genre and one of the (relatively few) big "fundamental" mechanics (things as basic as "area control", "push your luck", "worker placement", "hand management", "variable player order", "engine building", etc). The mechanic was first introduced with the boardgame Dominion, still a very popular game though a bit "basic" considering all the things that were done thing. Dominion recently got a digital adaptation (in early access): https://store.steampowered.com/app/1131620/Dominion/

Other digital boardgames include "Ascension: Deckbuilding Game", "Aeon's End", and "Star Realms" and "Cthulhu Realms" (similar but differently themed games, the base version is free). Those boardgames, of course, lack the roguelite mechanics introduced by Slay the Spire, they are "just" deckbuilders.

I should also point that "deckbuilder" as a genre has nothing to do with CCGs, card battlers and other games where you build your deck before the game - it is a genre of game where you build your deck during the match, where selecting what cards to add to the deck (or remove from it) is the basic gameplay (and not a "meta-game" separate from the "game").


Last edited by eldaking on 15 May 2022 at 10:57 am UTC
hatniX May 14, 2022
Another one, I like to play is Nowhere Prophet (available on Itch, GOG, Steam).
Eike May 14, 2022
View PC info
  • Supporter Plus
From the heading, I really thought this would be a round-up of people building a new version of their game for Steam Deck. :D
MayeulC May 14, 2022
Quoting: EikeFrom the heading, I really thought this would be a round-up of people building a new version of their game for Steam Deck. :D

And I thought it was about a set of must-have games on steam deck :)

I've never been into deck builder games, personally :)
I've even been trying to avoid playing gwent in the witcher 3 :P
eloquence May 15, 2022
Thanks for the roundup! I very much enjoy the genre as well. One I'd encourage you to check out is Meteorfall: Krumit's Tale. Like most of them, there's no native Linux version, but it ran without issues for me using Proton. The graphical style is clearly borrowed from Adventure Time, but the game has its own sense of humor and offers great run variability through the different characters.

I put about 40 hours into it. It doesn't offer as much replayability as Slay the Spire, but it's still a ton of fun, and the ambience is quite fun while I find StS a bit bleak. At first it seemed a bit too RNG-heavy to me, but once you optimize your strategies, you can pretty reliably beat it unless you're really unlucky. The one criticism I have is that it can't quite hide its mobile origins - there's not much of a story to speak of, and the game could make better use of desktop screen real estate.
denyasis May 15, 2022
Thanks for the round up! I really hope you enjoyed writing articles like this as much as I like reading them!

I hope you all decide to do more in the future.
sknebel May 15, 2022
From a few days ago on here, https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2022/05/peglin-turns-peggle-into-a-slay-the-spire-styled-roguelike/ is also an interesting spin on the concept.
ElamanOpiskelija May 15, 2022
+1 For Inscryption.
A card game to rule them all... a game to rule them all, really. And it has a native Linux version.
chrisq May 17, 2022
Another vote for Monster Train.
I've played most of the games mentioned and it is my favourite, even over Slay the Spire.
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.