Compare Card City Nights prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Ludosity. Published by Ludosity. Released on 2/14/2014. Available on PC, Mac, Linux. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie.

Forget Magic clones and free-to-play traps. This is a hand-crafted, zero-IAP card adventure with a jazz-hip-hop soundtrack and a card system that actually makes you think spatially.

I keep a short list of small games that do exactly what they set out to do and then stop, gracefully. Card City Nights belongs on that list. Ludosity built a singleplayer adventure around an original card battle system that owes more to Tetra Master and Clash of Heroes than it does to any conventional TCG, and the result is something that sits in its own quiet corner of the genre. You move through a city of card-obsessed weirdos, talking to oddball characters, poking around backgrounds for coins in a style that reviewers have compared to Professor Layton, and gradually working toward collecting eight legendary cards to challenge the Card King. The structure mirrors the old Pokemon Game Boy games in pacing, but the tone is drier and stranger. The card system is where the craft really shows. Both players work on separate three-by-three grids, placing cards with directional arrows that must align to form connections. Chain three or more cards and you trigger a combo whose effect, attack, defense, revival, or neutral, is decided by which symbol type dominates the chain. It sounds simple, and it is accessible, but there is genuine spatial reasoning happening here. Deck-building lets you lean into rush-down strategies that flood the board with one-damage combos to lock out your opponent, or slower attrition builds that prioritize shields and health recovery. Neutral cards, which carry more arrows and more directional variety than their typed counterparts, act as the connective tissue of any good deck. The system clicks faster than most grid-based card games, and matches rarely overstay their welcome. The caveats are real and worth naming. Experienced card game players, especially anyone with years of Magic or Hearthstone behind them, will find the AI soft. The difficulty curve is there, and boss fights use best-of-three formats that demand more care, but losing more than a handful of matches on a full run is unlikely. The bigger sting is what happens after the credits: the game concludes just as your collection is hitting critical mass, and there is no meaningful endgame loop waiting for you. The adventure engine also keeps the non-battle sections light. Exploration mostly amounts to wandering between opponents and clicking on background objects. Anyone expecting a rich overworld will be underwhelmed. What holds all of it together is the atmosphere. The soundtrack, a blend of jazz and hip-hop, gives the whole city a late-night shimmer that the hand-drawn characters lean into. The writing is funny without being exhausting about it, and if you have spent time with other Ludosity titles like Ittle Dew, seeing those characters show up as cards carries a warm, low-key charm. The PC port originated as a mobile game, and the deck management interface still shows some of that heritage in how it handles sorting and browsing. It is not broken, just a little clunky when you want to dig through 180 cards. A sequel, Card City Nights 2, later addressed several of the original's structural gaps, including adding a shared board and online multiplayer, so if this one clicks, that is a direct next step. For the right player, around eight hours, no monetization friction, a genuinely original battle system, and a soundtrack worth keeping on in the background, this is a small game that knows what it is. Kai, Scout Team

Card City Nights
AdventureCasualIndie

Card City Nights

Feb 14, 2014Ludosity
GamerScout Says

Forget Magic clones and free-to-play traps. This is a hand-crafted, zero-IAP card adventure with a jazz-hip-hop soundtrack and a card system that actually makes you think spatially.

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About Card City Nights

I keep a short list of small games that do exactly what they set out to do and then stop, gracefully. Card City Nights belongs on that list. Ludosity built a singleplayer adventure around an original card battle system that owes more to Tetra Master and Clash of Heroes than it does to any conventional TCG, and the result is something that sits in its own quiet corner of the genre. You move through a city of card-obsessed weirdos, talking to oddball characters, poking around backgrounds for coins in a style that reviewers have compared to Professor Layton, and gradually working toward collecting eight legendary cards to challenge the Card King. The structure mirrors the old Pokemon Game Boy games in pacing, but the tone is drier and stranger. The card system is where the craft really shows. Both players work on separate three-by-three grids, placing cards with directional arrows that must align to form connections. Chain three or more cards and you trigger a combo whose effect, attack, defense, revival, or neutral, is decided by which symbol type dominates the chain. It sounds simple, and it is accessible, but there is genuine spatial reasoning happening here. Deck-building lets you lean into rush-down strategies that flood the board with one-damage combos to lock out your opponent, or slower attrition builds that prioritize shields and health recovery. Neutral cards, which carry more arrows and more directional variety than their typed counterparts, act as the connective tissue of any good deck. The system clicks faster than most grid-based card games, and matches rarely overstay their welcome. The caveats are real and worth naming. Experienced card game players, especially anyone with years of Magic or Hearthstone behind them, will find the AI soft. The difficulty curve is there, and boss fights use best-of-three formats that demand more care, but losing more than a handful of matches on a full run is unlikely. The bigger sting is what happens after the credits: the game concludes just as your collection is hitting critical mass, and there is no meaningful endgame loop waiting for you. The adventure engine also keeps the non-battle sections light. Exploration mostly amounts to wandering between opponents and clicking on background objects. Anyone expecting a rich overworld will be underwhelmed. What holds all of it together is the atmosphere. The soundtrack, a blend of jazz and hip-hop, gives the whole city a late-night shimmer that the hand-drawn characters lean into. The writing is funny without being exhausting about it, and if you have spent time with other Ludosity titles like Ittle Dew, seeing those characters show up as cards carries a warm, low-key charm. The PC port originated as a mobile game, and the deck management interface still shows some of that heritage in how it handles sorting and browsing. It is not broken, just a little clunky when you want to dig through 180 cards. A sequel, Card City Nights 2, later addressed several of the original's structural gaps, including adding a shared board and online multiplayer, so if this one clicks, that is a direct next step. For the right player, around eight hours, no monetization friction, a genuinely original battle system, and a soundtrack worth keeping on in the background, this is a small game that knows what it is. Kai, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Grid-Based CombatNo MicrotransactionsJazz SoundtrackCombo ChainingSpatial Deck-BuildingLudoVerse CrossoverPost-Game ThinMobile Port

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP
Memory
1 GB RAM
Graphics
Shader Model 2
Processor
2 GHz

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Game Info

Developer
Ludosity
Publisher
Ludosity
Release Date
Feb 14, 2014

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Card City Nights is available on PC, Mac, Linux.

When was Card City Nights released?

Card City Nights was released on 14 February 2014.

Who developed Card City Nights?

Card City Nights was developed by Ludosity.