Compara los precios de Backpack Battles en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por PlayWithFurcifer. Publicado por IndieArk. Lanzado el 13/6/2025. Disponible en PC, Linux. Géneros: Strategy.

Tetris meets auto-battler in a PvP grid puzzle that rewards obsessive spatial thinking over twitch skill - strategy players, this one belongs to you.

My gut reaction when I first saw Backpack Battles was skepticism. I cover shooters. I care about 240hz monitors and sub-20ms response times. And here was a game asking me to spatially arrange a frying pan next to a bunch of bananas to win fights I don't even control. I gave it an hour out of obligation. Three hours later I was still there, rearranging whetstones at midnight. That says something. The loop is tight and deliberately paced. Each run spans up to 18 rounds split between a shop phase and an automated battle phase. You pick one of seven classes - Berserker, Pyromancer, Reaper, Ranger, and the new Mage and Adventurer added for the 1.0 release - each with five subclass paths that unlock mid-run. The Ranger can pivot into a Beastmaster and start fielding hedgehogs and squirrels as actual combat units, which sounds absurd until a forest critter army ends your run in eight seconds. Every class starts with 12 to 14 grid tiles and you expand your bag capacity by buying pouches, fanny packs, and satchels from the shop. Over 500 items fill the pool, and placement is the whole game: a Hero Sword adjacent to two Whetstones fuses into a Hero Longsword with dramatically better damage output. Items trigger on cooldown timers during battle, so stacking speed buffs or Coldstacks that slow an opponent's trigger intervals is where the meta lives. Battles themselves run 10 to 20 seconds of fully automated combat that you watch rather than play - and it is, against all odds, genuinely tense. The PvP structure is asynchronous, which is the right call. You are never fighting a live opponent in real time. The matchmaking pulls saved builds from other players at similar rank and pits your current bag against their snapshot. There is no netcode to complain about because there is no netcode - your spatial strategy is the thing being tested, not your latency. Ranked and unranked modes are both available. A custom lobby mode does support synchronous play with friends on a timer if you want live mind-games. The ranked climb from Bronze upward is satisfying early, but community sentiment points to balance concerns at higher ranks: certain items like the Power of the Moon, which refills a large chunk of your health when Fatigue kicks in at nightfall, have a history of warping high-level games around whoever holds them. The developers patch frequently, but dominant strategies have a way of sticking around longer than they should, and the RNG shop rolls mean you can be denied the pieces for your intended build entirely. That combination frustrates players who like to execute a specific plan. For people coming from shooters or real-time strategy, the adjustment is real. You have no direct combat input at all. The win condition is entirely determined before the battle starts, which either makes each round feel like a puzzle you solved or a lottery you lost. Players who enjoy optimizing loadouts, reading item synergies from tooltips, and rebuilding around whatever the shop gives them will find a lot of depth here. Players who want to outplay someone mechanically in the moment will find nothing for them. The full 1.0 launch brought two new characters and a Puzzlebox bag variant for the Mage that uses tetrimino-shaped storage containers - a genuinely clever wrinkle for players who want their inventory management to feel like a spatial puzzle on top of a build puzzle. Steam user scores are sitting firmly in Very Positive territory, which tracks with a game that has been in early access since 2024 and arrived at 1.0 with its rough edges mostly addressed. Fred, Scout Team

Backpack Battles

Backpack Battles

13 jun 2025PlayWithFurciferIndieArk
GamerScout opina

Tetris meets auto-battler in a PvP grid puzzle that rewards obsessive spatial thinking over twitch skill - strategy players, this one belongs to you.

PCLinux
Steam Deck VerifiedProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €7.10

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My gut reaction when I first saw Backpack Battles was skepticism. I cover shooters. I care about 240hz monitors and sub-20ms response times. And here was a game asking me to spatially arrange a frying pan next to a bunch of bananas to win fights I don't even control. I gave it an hour out of obligation. Three hours later I was still there, rearranging whetstones at midnight. That says something. The loop is tight and deliberately paced. Each run spans up to 18 rounds split between a shop phase and an automated battle phase. You pick one of seven classes - Berserker, Pyromancer, Reaper, Ranger, and the new Mage and Adventurer added for the 1.0 release - each with five subclass paths that unlock mid-run. The Ranger can pivot into a Beastmaster and start fielding hedgehogs and squirrels as actual combat units, which sounds absurd until a forest critter army ends your run in eight seconds. Every class starts with 12 to 14 grid tiles and you expand your bag capacity by buying pouches, fanny packs, and satchels from the shop. Over 500 items fill the pool, and placement is the whole game: a Hero Sword adjacent to two Whetstones fuses into a Hero Longsword with dramatically better damage output. Items trigger on cooldown timers during battle, so stacking speed buffs or Coldstacks that slow an opponent's trigger intervals is where the meta lives. Battles themselves run 10 to 20 seconds of fully automated combat that you watch rather than play - and it is, against all odds, genuinely tense. The PvP structure is asynchronous, which is the right call. You are never fighting a live opponent in real time. The matchmaking pulls saved builds from other players at similar rank and pits your current bag against their snapshot. There is no netcode to complain about because there is no netcode - your spatial strategy is the thing being tested, not your latency. Ranked and unranked modes are both available. A custom lobby mode does support synchronous play with friends on a timer if you want live mind-games. The ranked climb from Bronze upward is satisfying early, but community sentiment points to balance concerns at higher ranks: certain items like the Power of the Moon, which refills a large chunk of your health when Fatigue kicks in at nightfall, have a history of warping high-level games around whoever holds them. The developers patch frequently, but dominant strategies have a way of sticking around longer than they should, and the RNG shop rolls mean you can be denied the pieces for your intended build entirely. That combination frustrates players who like to execute a specific plan. For people coming from shooters or real-time strategy, the adjustment is real. You have no direct combat input at all. The win condition is entirely determined before the battle starts, which either makes each round feel like a puzzle you solved or a lottery you lost. Players who enjoy optimizing loadouts, reading item synergies from tooltips, and rebuilding around whatever the shop gives them will find a lot of depth here. Players who want to outplay someone mechanically in the moment will find nothing for them. The full 1.0 launch brought two new characters and a Puzzlebox bag variant for the Mage that uses tetrimino-shaped storage containers - a genuinely clever wrinkle for players who want their inventory management to feel like a spatial puzzle on top of a build puzzle. Steam user scores are sitting firmly in Very Positive territory, which tracks with a game that has been in early access since 2024 and arrived at 1.0 with its rough edges mostly addressed.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

multiplayerpvponline-pvpachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieAsynchronous PvPInventory PuzzleBuild CraftingItem SynergyRanked LadderNo Real-Time CombatRun-BasedGrid Placement

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10
Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
300 MB available space
Graphics
GTX 1060 3G
Processor
Dual Core 2 GHz

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
PlayWithFurcifer
Distribuidora
IndieArk
Fecha de lanzamiento
13 jun 2025

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Backpack Battles?

Backpack Battles está disponible en PC, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Backpack Battles?

Backpack Battles se lanzó el 13 de junio de 2025.

¿Quién desarrolló Backpack Battles?

Backpack Battles fue desarrollado por PlayWithFurcifer y publicado por IndieArk.