Compara los precios de Janken Cards en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por GKT Studios Entertainment. Publicado por GKT Studios Entertainment. Lanzado el 17/10/2016. Disponible en PC, Mac. Géneros: Casual, Indie, Strategy.

Rock-paper-scissors logic bolted onto a board-card hybrid. Cute idea for a couch session, but known bugs and zero online community mean you need friends in the room to get anything out of it.

I came to Janken Cards with low expectations and, honestly, they were met pretty accurately. The core concept is clever enough on paper: take rock-paper-scissors suit logic, spread 30 cards across a shared board, and make two players race to fill three columns with matching suits to claim the win. If nobody pulls it off, the higher point total decides things. It is a tighter premise than it sounds, and in a quick local match against a friend there are genuine moments where you have to think two moves ahead before committing a card. The special cards are where the game tries to add a layer on top of that skeleton. Landing a combo at the last moment to flip a column is genuinely satisfying the first time it happens. The problem is that the CPU opponent - which is your main option once the couch empties out - does not provide much of a test. It plays predictably enough that the challenge disappears fast. The tournament mode sounds like it should extend the longevity, but players in the Steam community have flagged a bug where the game locks up after a match ends, forcing an ALT+F4 restart just to keep playing. That is not a minor inconvenience in a short-session game. It is a session killer. The onboarding is also rough. The trailer, by community accounts, shows almost nothing useful about how board control actually works - how a suit contest resolves, what flipping cards over means, how column ownership is claimed. New players are dropped in with minimal guidance and expected to figure it out through trial and error. For a casual title at this price tier, that friction is a mismatch. The game supports full controller input and local co-op split screen, which is genuinely useful if you are sitting two people at a PC, and there is a Remote Play Together tag on Steam, which at least opens the door to playing with a friend remotely rather than requiring them on the same couch. Look, this is a sub-five-dollar local party game with a simple hook and some real bugs dragging it down. The concept has legs - a rock-paper-scissors board game with combo cards could be a tight little thing. Right now the execution leaves too many loose ends to recommend it with confidence. If you have a specific person in mind to play it with, right now, in the same room, you will probably get your money's worth in one sitting. For everyone else, the CPU cannot carry the solo experience and the tournament mode may leave you staring at a broken Continue button. Fred, Scout Team

Janken Cards

Janken Cards

17 oct 2016GKT Studios Entertainment
GamerScout opina

Rock-paper-scissors logic bolted onto a board-card hybrid. Cute idea for a couch session, but known bugs and zero online community mean you need friends in the room to get anything out of it.

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I came to Janken Cards with low expectations and, honestly, they were met pretty accurately. The core concept is clever enough on paper: take rock-paper-scissors suit logic, spread 30 cards across a shared board, and make two players race to fill three columns with matching suits to claim the win. If nobody pulls it off, the higher point total decides things. It is a tighter premise than it sounds, and in a quick local match against a friend there are genuine moments where you have to think two moves ahead before committing a card. The special cards are where the game tries to add a layer on top of that skeleton. Landing a combo at the last moment to flip a column is genuinely satisfying the first time it happens. The problem is that the CPU opponent - which is your main option once the couch empties out - does not provide much of a test. It plays predictably enough that the challenge disappears fast. The tournament mode sounds like it should extend the longevity, but players in the Steam community have flagged a bug where the game locks up after a match ends, forcing an ALT+F4 restart just to keep playing. That is not a minor inconvenience in a short-session game. It is a session killer. The onboarding is also rough. The trailer, by community accounts, shows almost nothing useful about how board control actually works - how a suit contest resolves, what flipping cards over means, how column ownership is claimed. New players are dropped in with minimal guidance and expected to figure it out through trial and error. For a casual title at this price tier, that friction is a mismatch. The game supports full controller input and local co-op split screen, which is genuinely useful if you are sitting two people at a PC, and there is a Remote Play Together tag on Steam, which at least opens the door to playing with a friend remotely rather than requiring them on the same couch. Look, this is a sub-five-dollar local party game with a simple hook and some real bugs dragging it down. The concept has legs - a rock-paper-scissors board game with combo cards could be a tight little thing. Right now the execution leaves too many loose ends to recommend it with confidence. If you have a specific person in mind to play it with, right now, in the same room, you will probably get your money's worth in one sitting. For everyone else, the CPU cannot carry the solo experience and the tournament mode may leave you staring at a broken Continue button.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

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Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayerpvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttier:sub-5Local Party GameColumn ControlRock-Paper-Scissors MechanicSpecial Combo CardsCouch Co-opTournament ModeController FriendlyRemote PlayFamily Casual

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0
Storage
350 MB available space
Graphics
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4500 Series
Processor
Pentium Dual Core T4500 @2.3Ghz

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
GKT Studios Entertainment
Distribuidora
GKT Studios Entertainment
Fecha de lanzamiento
17 oct 2016

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Janken Cards?

Janken Cards está disponible en PC, Mac.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Janken Cards?

Janken Cards se lanzó el 17 de octubre de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló Janken Cards?

Janken Cards fue desarrollado por GKT Studios Entertainment.