100% Orange Juice - Starter Character Voice Pack (DLC)
A dice-driven anime board game where RNG is the mechanic, not the excuse. Four players, one board, zero guaranteed outcomes.
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About 100% Orange Juice - Starter Character Voice Pack (DLC)
100% Orange Juice is a digital multiplayer board game built around characters pulled from Orange_Juice's own catalog of shoot-em-ups and action titles. QP, Suguri, Sora, and friends from Flying Red Barrel and QP Shooting all show up here, but instead of dodging bullet patterns they're rolling dice, landing on event squares, and trying to outlast each other across a randomized board. The Starter Character Voice Pack is a DLC add-on that layers Japanese voice acting onto the base game's character roster, so if you're already invested in the anime aesthetic, this makes the whole thing feel more complete. From a strategy angle, 100% Orange Juice sits in an interesting spot. It looks like pure chaos on the surface, and honestly, a fair portion of it is. But there's a real decision layer underneath: each character has distinct stat spreads across HP, attack, defense, and evasion, and card deck construction before each match is where most of your meaningful choices live. Cards can swing combat, negate event squares, or force opponents into bad positions. Knowing when to play aggressively versus turtling toward your star-count objective is the kind of read that separates repeat players from newcomers. The game doesn't hold your hand through that learning curve, but it's short enough that you absorb it through repetition rather than a tutorial slog. For anyone skeptical about the RNG factor: yes, dice decide a lot. A bad roll can end a winning position in one round. But the card system, character selection, and positioning on the board all act as probability modifiers, which means experienced players do win more often over a session than pure luck would predict. Think of it less like chess and more like a card-game-infused Monopoly variant where knowing the meta matters but not knowing it doesn't completely lock you out. The multiplayer community, backed by 29,867 Steam reviews landing at 91% positive, has kept this game alive well past its 2014 release, and the active online lobbies reflect that. The voice pack DLC itself is a minor but worthwhile addition if you're already committed to the base game. It doesn't add mechanics, characters, or balance changes. It adds voice lines tied to combat events, card plays, and win or loss screens. For players who have logged dozens of hours and want the presentation to feel tighter, it delivers exactly what it advertises. As a standalone purchase it makes no sense, and if you're new, the base game without voices is the smarter entry point. The mod ecosystem is modest compared to a Paradox title, and the AI opponents in single-player are functional but won't stress-test anyone who has played a few dozen matches. The depth here is in multiplayer sessions with consistent opponents, not in grinding solo content. If your interest is primarily single-player strategy, this probably lands below your threshold. If you have a group of three friends willing to commit to chaotic board game nights with a persistent meta, the per-session investment is hard to argue against. Diego, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Orange_Juice
- Publisher
- Fruitbat Factory
- Release Date
- May 16, 2014
