Compara los precios de Death Roads: Tournament en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por The Knights of Unity. Publicado por The Knights of Unity. Lanzado el 15/11/2023. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Indie, Racing, Strategy.

Slay the Spire with a steering wheel and a grudge: a post-apocalyptic deckbuilder where your card draw depends on what weapons you bolted to your car this run.

My first hour with Death Roads: Tournament was spent losing badly because I kept thinking about it like a normal deckbuilder. Once I stopped trying to curate individual cards and started thinking about my vehicle as the deck-building unit itself, something clicked in a genuinely satisfying way. This is a turn-based roguelite built around car combat on a grid, where the cards you have access to are determined entirely by your hardware: your choice of driver, car, wheels, engine, and mounted weapons each contribute a fixed set of cards, so optimizing your load-out is the real strategic lever. It sits comfortably in the Slay the Spire lineage in terms of map structure and run progression, but the actual combat system is its own creature. The handling-and-skid system is where the game earns its depth. Each vehicle has a handling stat that functions as the resource you spend to play cards. Burn too much and you enter a skid, forcing you to draw from a separate skid deck that sends your car careening in directions you did not choose. Higher gears unlock more powerful cards but raise your skid risk, so every turn is a tension calculation between aggression and control. Positioning matters too: ramming an enemy into a wall can instant-kill them, and weapon targeting patterns mean you often need to maneuver into specific lanes before firing. For a game with the word "racing" in the genre label, it rewards patience over speed. The tooltip system deserves a mention. Everything in the game is inspectable mid-battle, including your opponents' decks, which lets you actually plan around what they are likely to do. After a few runs you can read an enemy vehicle on sight and know roughly how it fights. That kind of visual literacy building is rare and satisfying. The comic-book, grindhouse art style reinforces the post-apocalyptic wasteland framing without going grimdark, and the sound design punches through on impact moments even if the road rock soundtrack wears thin by run three. The weaknesses are real though, and strategy players specifically will feel one of them hard: there is no ascending difficulty system. No ascension levels, no modifiers, no unlockable challenge modes. Once you understand the systems and unlock enough drivers and cars to experiment with synergies, the question of "what do I do next" does not have a clean answer. The mid-run events also repeat at a rate that suggests a content library that could be two or three times larger. RNG variance in early-run card availability can occasionally make a run feel decided before you have had a meaningful choice, which compounds the lack of difficulty scaling as a frustration point for players coming from more tuned roguelites. For newcomers to the genre the game is actually a reasonable entry point, not a hostile one. The short tutorial covers the core loop, tooltips handle the rest, and the run length is tight enough that a failed attempt feels like a lesson rather than a waste of an evening. Veterans of Slay the Spire or Monster Train will find a genuinely novel combat system that holds up on its own terms, even if the meta-progression runs out of road faster than they would like. Sitting at around 80 percent positive on Steam across several hundred reviews, the community consensus is warm but honest: the bones are excellent, the ceiling is lower than the ambition. Diego, Scout Team

Death Roads: Tournament

Death Roads: Tournament

15 nov 2023The Knights of Unity
GamerScout opina

Slay the Spire with a steering wheel and a grudge: a post-apocalyptic deckbuilder where your card draw depends on what weapons you bolted to your car this run.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Platinum
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Mínimo histórico: €1.04

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My first hour with Death Roads: Tournament was spent losing badly because I kept thinking about it like a normal deckbuilder. Once I stopped trying to curate individual cards and started thinking about my vehicle as the deck-building unit itself, something clicked in a genuinely satisfying way. This is a turn-based roguelite built around car combat on a grid, where the cards you have access to are determined entirely by your hardware: your choice of driver, car, wheels, engine, and mounted weapons each contribute a fixed set of cards, so optimizing your load-out is the real strategic lever. It sits comfortably in the Slay the Spire lineage in terms of map structure and run progression, but the actual combat system is its own creature. The handling-and-skid system is where the game earns its depth. Each vehicle has a handling stat that functions as the resource you spend to play cards. Burn too much and you enter a skid, forcing you to draw from a separate skid deck that sends your car careening in directions you did not choose. Higher gears unlock more powerful cards but raise your skid risk, so every turn is a tension calculation between aggression and control. Positioning matters too: ramming an enemy into a wall can instant-kill them, and weapon targeting patterns mean you often need to maneuver into specific lanes before firing. For a game with the word "racing" in the genre label, it rewards patience over speed. The tooltip system deserves a mention. Everything in the game is inspectable mid-battle, including your opponents' decks, which lets you actually plan around what they are likely to do. After a few runs you can read an enemy vehicle on sight and know roughly how it fights. That kind of visual literacy building is rare and satisfying. The comic-book, grindhouse art style reinforces the post-apocalyptic wasteland framing without going grimdark, and the sound design punches through on impact moments even if the road rock soundtrack wears thin by run three. The weaknesses are real though, and strategy players specifically will feel one of them hard: there is no ascending difficulty system. No ascension levels, no modifiers, no unlockable challenge modes. Once you understand the systems and unlock enough drivers and cars to experiment with synergies, the question of "what do I do next" does not have a clean answer. The mid-run events also repeat at a rate that suggests a content library that could be two or three times larger. RNG variance in early-run card availability can occasionally make a run feel decided before you have had a meaningful choice, which compounds the lack of difficulty scaling as a frustration point for players coming from more tuned roguelites. For newcomers to the genre the game is actually a reasonable entry point, not a hostile one. The short tutorial covers the core loop, tooltips handle the rest, and the run length is tight enough that a failed attempt feels like a lesson rather than a waste of an evening. Veterans of Slay the Spire or Monster Train will find a genuinely novel combat system that holds up on its own terms, even if the meta-progression runs out of road faster than they would like. Sitting at around 80 percent positive on Steam across several hundred reviews, the community consensus is warm but honest: the bones are excellent, the ceiling is lower than the ambition.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardscloud-savestier:sub-5Handling ManagementGrid PositioningPart-Based DeckbuildingSkid MechanicDriver-Vehicle SynergyEscape MechanicSponsor SelectionPost-Apocalyptic Roguelite

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7 / Windows 8 / Windows 10
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
with at least 1GB VRAM
Processor
Intel Core i3 2.5Ghz or AMD Phenom 2.5Ghz or greater
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible Sound Device

Recomendados

Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
The Knights of Unity
Distribuidora
The Knights of Unity
Fecha de lanzamiento
15 nov 2023

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Death Roads: Tournament?

Death Roads: Tournament está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Death Roads: Tournament?

Death Roads: Tournament se lanzó el 15 de noviembre de 2023.

¿Quién desarrolló Death Roads: Tournament?

Death Roads: Tournament fue desarrollado por The Knights of Unity.