Compara los precios de Dungeon League en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Christopher Yabsley. Publicado por Christopher Yabsley. Lanzado el 31/10/2018. Disponible en PC, Mac, Linux. Géneros: Action, Indie, RPG.

Grab three friends and a fistful of controllers: this ten-minute dungeon brawler is the closest thing to a competitive RPG you can run at a house party without rules arguments.

I respect what Dungeon League is trying to do, and as someone who spends most of his time worrying about netcode and time-to-kill in polished live-service shooters, that feels like a meaningful concession. The pitch is surgical: take dungeon crawling, strip out the forty-hour campaign, inject a MOBA-adjacent competitive structure, and cap every match at around ten minutes. Four players, procedurally generated maps, fog of war from the start, and a rotating set of round objectives that keep each session from feeling like a rerun. On paper, that is a solid idea. In practice, it mostly delivers. The moment-to-minute loop works because no two runs share the same dungeon layout, enemy composition, or loot pool. You spawn separated, with the map dark and hostile. You are simultaneously farming mobs for experience and items, and hunting your opponents, and chasing whatever the current objective demands. One round it is Witch's Eye, a hot-potato mode where you carry a relic that is actively draining your health. Next round it is Chicken Chase, where you are literally wrestling farm animals away from the enemy team. The objectives are goofy, but they create genuine tactical friction. Do you spend that two-minute window pushing fights, looting chests, or locking down the objective? The answer changes depending on your character, your current items, and who got the better RNG on loot drops. That variance is the game's biggest strength. Character variety is worth noting. Luna is a shadow archer who can move unseen and slow enemies with frost arrows, which is a completely different playstyle from Drake the pyromancer, who leans on a phoenix companion and a meteor golem for area denial. Albert, the unicorn prince, can charm monsters and redirect them at opponents, which sounds ridiculous and is. The hero roster has enough mechanical difference between characters that there is a legible skill gap, even if the overall depth ceiling is not especially high. Between rounds, there is a brief Dugout phase where you can spend gold at a shop stocked with 70-plus items and learn new skills at the trainer, which gives the session arc a satisfying compression of the RPG loop into sprint-sized chunks. Now the honest part. This is a solo developer project and it shows in places. The player population is thin, with concurrent players regularly sitting in single digits based on available data, which makes online matchmaking feel like shouting into an empty dungeon. The game supports online PvP and co-op, and also local multiplayer with up to four controllers on one machine, but the fun-per-session ratio drops sharply when you are not playing with people you actually know. Solo play is flat by design since your character does not carry progress between matches. The community has flagged that content felt sparse at launch, and while the full release added characters, monsters, traps, and balance passes, this is still a game that lives and dies by whether you can recruit a couch. If you have a regular group and a free evening, Dungeon League earns its spot. It is the kind of game that runs great on almost any hardware, plays better with controllers than keyboard, and produces the exact chaotic arguments you want from a couch competitive game. Go in without a full lobby and the experience gets thin fast. Fred, Scout Team

Dungeon League

Dungeon League

31 oct 2018Christopher Yabsley
GamerScout opina

Grab three friends and a fistful of controllers: this ten-minute dungeon brawler is the closest thing to a competitive RPG you can run at a house party without rules arguments.

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I respect what Dungeon League is trying to do, and as someone who spends most of his time worrying about netcode and time-to-kill in polished live-service shooters, that feels like a meaningful concession. The pitch is surgical: take dungeon crawling, strip out the forty-hour campaign, inject a MOBA-adjacent competitive structure, and cap every match at around ten minutes. Four players, procedurally generated maps, fog of war from the start, and a rotating set of round objectives that keep each session from feeling like a rerun. On paper, that is a solid idea. In practice, it mostly delivers. The moment-to-minute loop works because no two runs share the same dungeon layout, enemy composition, or loot pool. You spawn separated, with the map dark and hostile. You are simultaneously farming mobs for experience and items, and hunting your opponents, and chasing whatever the current objective demands. One round it is Witch's Eye, a hot-potato mode where you carry a relic that is actively draining your health. Next round it is Chicken Chase, where you are literally wrestling farm animals away from the enemy team. The objectives are goofy, but they create genuine tactical friction. Do you spend that two-minute window pushing fights, looting chests, or locking down the objective? The answer changes depending on your character, your current items, and who got the better RNG on loot drops. That variance is the game's biggest strength. Character variety is worth noting. Luna is a shadow archer who can move unseen and slow enemies with frost arrows, which is a completely different playstyle from Drake the pyromancer, who leans on a phoenix companion and a meteor golem for area denial. Albert, the unicorn prince, can charm monsters and redirect them at opponents, which sounds ridiculous and is. The hero roster has enough mechanical difference between characters that there is a legible skill gap, even if the overall depth ceiling is not especially high. Between rounds, there is a brief Dugout phase where you can spend gold at a shop stocked with 70-plus items and learn new skills at the trainer, which gives the session arc a satisfying compression of the RPG loop into sprint-sized chunks. Now the honest part. This is a solo developer project and it shows in places. The player population is thin, with concurrent players regularly sitting in single digits based on available data, which makes online matchmaking feel like shouting into an empty dungeon. The game supports online PvP and co-op, and also local multiplayer with up to four controllers on one machine, but the fun-per-session ratio drops sharply when you are not playing with people you actually know. Solo play is flat by design since your character does not carry progress between matches. The community has flagged that content felt sparse at launch, and while the full release added characters, monsters, traps, and balance passes, this is still a game that lives and dies by whether you can recruit a couch. If you have a regular group and a free evening, Dungeon League earns its spot. It is the kind of game that runs great on almost any hardware, plays better with controllers than keyboard, and produces the exact chaotic arguments you want from a couch competitive game. Go in without a full lobby and the experience gets thin fast.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayercooponline-cooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttier:indieParty BrawlerCouch CompetitiveObjective-Based PvPProcedural DungeonsMOBA-LiteShort SessionsController Required4-Player Local

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows XP
Memory
2 GB RAM
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce 8800 or Radeon® HD4800 series, 512 MB of memory
Processor
2.0 GHz

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Christopher Yabsley
Distribuidora
Christopher Yabsley
Fecha de lanzamiento
31 oct 2018

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Dungeon League?

Dungeon League está disponible en PC, Mac, Linux.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Dungeon League?

Dungeon League se lanzó el 31 de octubre de 2018.

¿Quién desarrolló Dungeon League?

Dungeon League fue desarrollado por Christopher Yabsley.