Compare 100% Orange Juice prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Orange_Juice. Published by Fruitbat Factory. Released on 5/16/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Indie, Strategy.

Mario Party meets a Japanese crossover anime, but with deck-building teeth: more read-the-board than roll-and-pray if you know what you're doing.

I went into 100% Orange Juice expecting a novelty and came out with a character tier list scrawled on a sticky note next to my monitor. On the surface this is a four-player digital board game where everyone rolls a single die, moves around a loop, lands on Bonus, Drop, Encounter, Warp, or Damage panels, and races to hit norma checkpoints by collecting stars or racking up wins. Underneath that deceptively simple wrapper there is a surprising amount of actual decision-making: which norma path to commit to (stars vs. wins), when to pick a fight versus absorb a Drop panel hit, whether to hold hyper cards and bait opponents into unfavorable engagements. The community puts it well: will you level up when someone behind you can use your position against you? Should you pitch three hyper cards when something better lands in your hand? These are real questions with real consequences. The character roster is where most of the strategic texture lives. The base game gives you around 20 playable characters, each with individual HP, ATK, DEF, and EVD stats plus a unique hyper card that only they can draw. No classes are hard-coded, but the community has naturally sorted them into roles: aggressive attackers like Yuki and Star Breaker who chase down star-rich targets, evasion-based runners like Suguri whose Accelerator hyper removes dice variance for a chapter, defensive tanks like Kiriko, and support picks like Natsumi who leans into heals and revives. New players should start with QP or Marc. Both are straightforward, forgiving of early mistakes, and teach the core combat loop without burying you in gimmicks. The DLC packs, now numbering over 40 at a few dollars each, expand the roster further with characters like Sweet Breaker whose board-control hyper reshapes an entire late game, but the base meta is completely viable without spending extra. Beyond the standard Normal Mode free-for-all, there is a Co-op mode where all players cooperate to bring down a powered-up boss, and a Bounty Hunt mode that shifts the win condition to fame accumulated through fetch quests and notoriety. Both add meaningful variety, and Co-op in particular plays very differently from the competitive modes since coordinating card plays and positioning actually matters at the table level. The campaign gives each character a short story arc and is the primary way to farm stars and unlock new characters without playing online. Match length runs roughly 40 to 50 minutes once you set the turn-timer to a brisk speed, which is a legitimate quality-of-life setting worth enabling immediately. The caveats are real. Variance is high, full stop. A single bad run of die rolls in the final third of a match can undo 45 minutes of optimal play, and first-time players will hit that wall before they understand it well enough to route around it. The card unlock grind through in-game currency is slow if you want a full collection, and some characters behind campaign-specific unlock paths require effort that feels deliberately opaque. The music loops are catchy but limited, which becomes noticeable in longer sessions. And the DLC catalog, while individually cheap, adds up fast if you want every character permanently in your roster rather than cycling the weekly free rotation. For my money the single biggest thing going for 100% Orange Juice in 2025 is how active the developer still is: card visual overhauls, new events, balance patches, and a Steam Workshop scene that extends replayability well past the base content. Steam reviews sit at 94% positive across nearly nine thousand ratings, which for a ten-year-old indie title is a genuine signal, not momentum. If you have three friends available for a weekly session and can stomach the chaos, there is a lot of structured thinking hiding behind the anime art style. If you are a solo player hoping for a deep single-player puzzle, manage expectations accordingly. Diego, Scout Team

100% Orange Juice

100% Orange Juice

May 16, 2014Orange_JuiceFruitbat Factory
GamerScout Says

Mario Party meets a Japanese crossover anime, but with deck-building teeth: more read-the-board than roll-and-pray if you know what you're doing.

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Screenshots & Media

About 100% Orange Juice

I went into 100% Orange Juice expecting a novelty and came out with a character tier list scrawled on a sticky note next to my monitor. On the surface this is a four-player digital board game where everyone rolls a single die, moves around a loop, lands on Bonus, Drop, Encounter, Warp, or Damage panels, and races to hit norma checkpoints by collecting stars or racking up wins. Underneath that deceptively simple wrapper there is a surprising amount of actual decision-making: which norma path to commit to (stars vs. wins), when to pick a fight versus absorb a Drop panel hit, whether to hold hyper cards and bait opponents into unfavorable engagements. The community puts it well: will you level up when someone behind you can use your position against you? Should you pitch three hyper cards when something better lands in your hand? These are real questions with real consequences. The character roster is where most of the strategic texture lives. The base game gives you around 20 playable characters, each with individual HP, ATK, DEF, and EVD stats plus a unique hyper card that only they can draw. No classes are hard-coded, but the community has naturally sorted them into roles: aggressive attackers like Yuki and Star Breaker who chase down star-rich targets, evasion-based runners like Suguri whose Accelerator hyper removes dice variance for a chapter, defensive tanks like Kiriko, and support picks like Natsumi who leans into heals and revives. New players should start with QP or Marc. Both are straightforward, forgiving of early mistakes, and teach the core combat loop without burying you in gimmicks. The DLC packs, now numbering over 40 at a few dollars each, expand the roster further with characters like Sweet Breaker whose board-control hyper reshapes an entire late game, but the base meta is completely viable without spending extra. Beyond the standard Normal Mode free-for-all, there is a Co-op mode where all players cooperate to bring down a powered-up boss, and a Bounty Hunt mode that shifts the win condition to fame accumulated through fetch quests and notoriety. Both add meaningful variety, and Co-op in particular plays very differently from the competitive modes since coordinating card plays and positioning actually matters at the table level. The campaign gives each character a short story arc and is the primary way to farm stars and unlock new characters without playing online. Match length runs roughly 40 to 50 minutes once you set the turn-timer to a brisk speed, which is a legitimate quality-of-life setting worth enabling immediately. The caveats are real. Variance is high, full stop. A single bad run of die rolls in the final third of a match can undo 45 minutes of optimal play, and first-time players will hit that wall before they understand it well enough to route around it. The card unlock grind through in-game currency is slow if you want a full collection, and some characters behind campaign-specific unlock paths require effort that feels deliberately opaque. The music loops are catchy but limited, which becomes noticeable in longer sessions. And the DLC catalog, while individually cheap, adds up fast if you want every character permanently in your roster rather than cycling the weekly free rotation. For my money the single biggest thing going for 100% Orange Juice in 2025 is how active the developer still is: card visual overhauls, new events, balance patches, and a Steam Workshop scene that extends replayability well past the base content. Steam reviews sit at 94% positive across nearly nine thousand ratings, which for a ten-year-old indie title is a genuine signal, not momentum. If you have three friends available for a weekly session and can stomach the chaos, there is a lot of structured thinking hiding behind the anime art style. If you are a solo player hoping for a deep single-player puzzle, manage expectations accordingly.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

Single-playerMulti-playerPvPOnline PvPCo-opOnline Co-opSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsSteam WorkshopCamera ComfortColor AlternativesCustom Volume ControlsAdjustable DifficultyPlayable without Timed InputPartial Controller SupportSteam CloudValve Anti-Cheat enabledStatsSteam LeaderboardsFamily SharingDigital Board GameHyper CardsCharacter MainsCo-op Boss FightBounty Hunt ModeNorma SystemAnime CrossoverDeck Building Light

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
Intel Pentium 2.0GHz or higher
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 8.0
Storage
600 MB available space
Sound Card
DirectSound compatible sound card

Recommended

Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
Orange_Juice
Publisher
Fruitbat Factory
Release Date
May 16, 2014

Game Modes

singleplayer
multiplayer
coop
online coop
Online Co-op

Languages

Audio (1)
Japanese
Subtitles (10)
EnglishJapaneseSimplified ChineseTraditional ChineseSpanish - SpainKorean+4 more

Features

AchievementsCloud Saves

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How much does 100% Orange Juice cost?

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What platforms is 100% Orange Juice available on?

100% Orange Juice is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was 100% Orange Juice released?

100% Orange Juice was released on 16 May 2014.

Who developed 100% Orange Juice?

100% Orange Juice was developed by Orange_Juice and published by Fruitbat Factory.