Compara los precios de Vortica en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Vortical Studios. Publicado por Caketown Interactive. Lanzado el 25/5/2026. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Indie, RPG, Strategy.

Tight twin-stick shooting, over 100 loot items, and a loadout system that actually rewards preparation - Vortica punishes autopilot runs and pays off the players who think before they shoot.

I gravitate toward games where the build choices matter more than raw reflexes, so Vortica caught my attention the moment I clocked its loadout system. This is a top-down twin-stick roguelite set across a derelict solar system, and the thing that separates it from the genre pile is how deliberately it gates progress on preparation rather than twitch skill alone. Enemy types have distinct weaknesses, map modifiers change the physics of your projectiles, and bringing the wrong kit into a mission is a quiet death sentence. That tension between loot flexibility and loadout commitment is where the game lives. The core loop sends you into procedurally generated space zones - collapsed labs, asteroid corridors, abandoned outposts - where you clear alien hordes, rescue civilians, and extract through a Vortal before the situation deteriorates beyond recovery. Weapons range from corroded automatic rifles up through high-powered plasma guns, and you can supplement your firepower with deployable sentry turrets, jumping boots, improvised explosives, and crafted traps built at your homebase between runs. With over 100 items in the pool, synergy hunting across runs gives the loot layer real depth. Players who ignore the loadout screen early will hit a wall fast; players who start cross-referencing item interactions will find the difficulty curve flatten in satisfying ways. One Steam reviewer put it plainly: loadout awareness is the actual skill floor here. Where Vortica shows its indie seams is in enemy legibility and mission variety. Certain enemy types - the long-range Monoliths in particular - frustrate players because their threat range and weaknesses are not surfaced clearly by the game. Map modifiers like spatial anomalies and magnetic fields affect projectile behaviour in ways the game mostly expects you to discover through failure. That trial-and-error philosophy fits the roguelite DNA, but it can feel withholding rather than mysterious, especially for newcomers. Mission objectives also draw criticism for sameness across the mid-game, which is a real pacing issue when runs start feeling procedurally similar even if the maps are not. Co-op is where the rougher edges smooth out. Local and online co-op turns the chaos into a feature rather than a complaint, with two players able to split loadout responsibilities - one leaning into turrets and utility, the other running aggressive gun builds - creating genuine team-play decisions that solo runs cannot replicate. The synthwave soundtrack is legitimately good, the pixel art holds up at any zoom level, and the post-launch patch cadence from Vortical Studios looks active: the v1.0.5 update already added new items and balance fixes within weeks of release, which signals a developer paying attention. Steam user sentiment sits at 87% positive, which for a newly launched indie with under 100 reviews is a solid early signal rather than a settled verdict. For strategy-adjacent players who like optimisation loops dressed up as shooters, Vortica delivers. The loadout decision space is meaningful, the loot pool is wide enough to support multiple playstyle archetypes, and the boss fights serve as genuine checkpoints that test whether your build actually coheres. It is not a deep narrative experience, and if you need your mechanics explained rather than implied, the onboarding will irritate you. But for anyone who has ever paused mid-run to recheck item synergies before committing - this one is worth the time. Diego, Scout Team

Vortica

Vortica

25 may 2026Vortical StudiosCaketown Interactive
GamerScout opina

Tight twin-stick shooting, over 100 loot items, and a loadout system that actually rewards preparation - Vortica punishes autopilot runs and pays off the players who think before they shoot.

PC
Steam Deck Playable
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €11.87

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Acerca de Vortica

I gravitate toward games where the build choices matter more than raw reflexes, so Vortica caught my attention the moment I clocked its loadout system. This is a top-down twin-stick roguelite set across a derelict solar system, and the thing that separates it from the genre pile is how deliberately it gates progress on preparation rather than twitch skill alone. Enemy types have distinct weaknesses, map modifiers change the physics of your projectiles, and bringing the wrong kit into a mission is a quiet death sentence. That tension between loot flexibility and loadout commitment is where the game lives. The core loop sends you into procedurally generated space zones - collapsed labs, asteroid corridors, abandoned outposts - where you clear alien hordes, rescue civilians, and extract through a Vortal before the situation deteriorates beyond recovery. Weapons range from corroded automatic rifles up through high-powered plasma guns, and you can supplement your firepower with deployable sentry turrets, jumping boots, improvised explosives, and crafted traps built at your homebase between runs. With over 100 items in the pool, synergy hunting across runs gives the loot layer real depth. Players who ignore the loadout screen early will hit a wall fast; players who start cross-referencing item interactions will find the difficulty curve flatten in satisfying ways. One Steam reviewer put it plainly: loadout awareness is the actual skill floor here. Where Vortica shows its indie seams is in enemy legibility and mission variety. Certain enemy types - the long-range Monoliths in particular - frustrate players because their threat range and weaknesses are not surfaced clearly by the game. Map modifiers like spatial anomalies and magnetic fields affect projectile behaviour in ways the game mostly expects you to discover through failure. That trial-and-error philosophy fits the roguelite DNA, but it can feel withholding rather than mysterious, especially for newcomers. Mission objectives also draw criticism for sameness across the mid-game, which is a real pacing issue when runs start feeling procedurally similar even if the maps are not. Co-op is where the rougher edges smooth out. Local and online co-op turns the chaos into a feature rather than a complaint, with two players able to split loadout responsibilities - one leaning into turrets and utility, the other running aggressive gun builds - creating genuine team-play decisions that solo runs cannot replicate. The synthwave soundtrack is legitimately good, the pixel art holds up at any zoom level, and the post-launch patch cadence from Vortical Studios looks active: the v1.0.5 update already added new items and balance fixes within weeks of release, which signals a developer paying attention. Steam user sentiment sits at 87% positive, which for a newly launched indie with under 100 reviews is a solid early signal rather than a settled verdict. For strategy-adjacent players who like optimisation loops dressed up as shooters, Vortica delivers. The loadout decision space is meaningful, the loot pool is wide enough to support multiple playstyle archetypes, and the boss fights serve as genuine checkpoints that test whether your build actually coheres. It is not a deep narrative experience, and if you need your mechanics explained rather than implied, the onboarding will irritate you. But for anyone who has ever paused mid-run to recheck item synergies before committing - this one is worth the time.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayermultiplayercooplocal-coopachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savestier:indieLoadout BuildingItem SynergiesExtraction LoopSynthwave SoundtrackHomebase CraftingMap ModifiersBoss GauntletCo-op Builds

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 950, Radeon R7 360, or Intel HD Graphics 630
Processor
Dual Core 2.4 GHz

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10
Memory
16 GB RAM
Storage
2 GB available space
Graphics
GeForce RTX 2060, Radeon RX 5600 XT, or Intel Arc A580
Processor
Quad Core 2.4ghz

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Vortical Studios
Distribuidora
Caketown Interactive
Fecha de lanzamiento
25 may 2026

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Vortica?

Vortica está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Vortica?

Vortica se lanzó el 25 de mayo de 2026.

¿Quién desarrolló Vortica?

Vortica fue desarrollado por Vortical Studios y publicado por Caketown Interactive.