![]() ![]() The second are the people angry about the day one dlc, but what else are you going to do? Most Kickstarter a give bonuses and letting people get those after release is the better of the two evils. It's kind of like the uncanny valley effect for them. Three aspects I see, a bunch of STS fans that don't like games being too close to sts, they seem to not mind monster train despite that game being a message execution-wise but if it gets too close to the STS formula but deviates too much they don't like it, specifically they want to remove cards and run 5 card combo deck. But I don't see myself grinding up the ranks in Roguebook. And I find myself not wanting to continue. I am only at about 20 hours, fully upgraded the first two and half upgraded the other two. Even when I just want to play everything in any order. I can play a turn in STS in a couple of seconds, I can't in Roguebook. ![]() you just have to play very slow, because the animations are all very slow and all feel very fixed and block everything elöse you want to do. I often try to attack one, but didn't quite click on the right spot so it doesn't work and then my hand gets all fuzzy when i start clicking other things and. Playing cards in quick succession is a pain in the ass and the hitboxes for many enemies are weird. It may be just me, but I find card draw is extremely hard to get in this game - and since you also never can reduce your deck size, I find myself with very uneven hands no matter how much I try to pick balanced cards. ![]() Which also means it feels bad to try out new heroes or combinations because the new ones necessarily feel a lot weaker before you grinded even more with them. fighting elites is not a question about whether you think you can risk it, but a chance whether you even find them.Īccount Progression means you are getting vastly stronger with grinding - it costs a lot but eventually every hero can start with 50% more base health, which is huge. There is a lot of Pathing RNG which I don't enjoy. (I had to be told it is possible and where to find it). Decklist is borderline unreadable, to change party leader is very hard to see. ![]() Regardless, at least at this point, I'd definitely move RB into my number 3 STS style game, behind only the aforementioned STS and Monster Train, and I've purchased and played probably about 15 or so now, so I don't say that lightly. Perhaps people just felt Griftlands took more chances, perhaps it was related to that day 1 DLC thing I see roguebook apparently had, maybe the end game for roguebook is bad (I'm still very early)? Different enough that it didn't make me just wish I was playing STS, but familar and intuitive enough that I could jump right in and keep moving and feel, correctly or not, like I generally knew what I should be doing at any given moment.Īll of which is to say, I also find the scores for the two games confusing. Will probably give it another chance at some point since, you know, I paid for it, but my first impression was one of disapointment.Ĭonversely, I'm finding Roguebook to be a blast right from the get go. My experience was the same with Griftlands, wanted to like it but it just wasn't hooking me, felt super clunky, never really felt intuitive, comfortable, or fun. ![]()
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