Early Hours: SpellRogue is a surprising roll of the dice for the deckbuilder genre
If there's one thing I'm known for at GGRecon, it's a love of card games. I can't get enough of them, and whether that's enjoying Magic The Gathering with friends, collecting Pokemon and Yu-Gi-Oh! cards, or playing any of the other excellent card games out there in cardboard or digital form, nothing compares to drawing the card you need at the right time.
So much so, that Slay The Spire more or less created an entire genre off of that feeling, and while we've seen excellent alternatives since then, SpellRogue is a slick entry with plenty of its own fun ideas that make it well worth a look.
Roll the dice
The main thing differentiating SpellRogue from something like Slay The Spire is an additional degree of chance and luck. That's because you're not just playing cards as you progress through SpellRogue's world, but you're rolling dice, too.
Those dice values are then slotted into your available cards, which pull from a smaller pool than genre contemporaries, feeling less randomised but still with the chance for some surprising combos (at least to begin with - things go off the rails in the best way after a handful of runs).
The dice mechanic means you roll at the start of your turn, and then pick between cards to play. You can reroll a die up to three times, and I found managing both my rerolls, rolls, and cards made SpellRogue feel akin to Marvel's Midnight Suns (one of my favourite games in the last few years).
There's a satisfying feeling of slotting a dice into a card to trigger an attack, while some cards can have multiple dice added to build to the required total over time.
Check your status
As is usually the case with these Early Hours features, I've put in just a couple of hours so far, but keep finding myself finding something new that I like about SpellRogue.
My first run took one of the three classes, a water-type spellcaster, on a poison-based slant to deal damage over time where possible, but I'm equally excited to try new strategies facilitated by the cards earned through battle.
Those status effects are craftily handled, too. While poison deals damage each turn, your character can be 'Silenced', replacing your dice with ones that, when used, block you using the card they slot into for a number of turns.
Enemies can also inflict the 'Ignited' status effect which deals damage when you use them, prompting you to be flexible with your strategy, even when shifting between cards as you unlock them. Nothing ever feels permanent, in the best way.
If you've not fallen head over heels for the likes of Slay the Spire or Monster Train, there's every chance SpellRogue won't do it for you either. If you are used to slinging cards, however, you'll find a lot to like and keep revisiting.