Compare Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by CyberConnect2. Published by SEGA. Released on 7/16/2024. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action, Casual, Simulation.

If your group chat has three Demon Slayer fans and a free evening, this might scratch the itch. Anyone else should probably look elsewhere first.

My first instinct when I saw a Demon Slayer board game land on PC was to move on. CyberConnect2 makes arena fighters and weird action games, not Mario Party clones. But here we are. Sweep the Board is a licensed digital board game for up to four players, built around five thematic boards pulled straight from the anime, and it works just well enough to make you wish it worked a lot better. The structure is straightforward. Players roll dice and move around boards based on locations like the Mugen Train, the Entertainment District, and the Swordsmith Village. Each board runs a day-and-night cycle: during the day you race to hit a goal point set by the Kasugai Crow, collecting rank points for reaching it first. After dark, demons appear and players cooperate in QTE-driven boss fights against enemies like Akaza, timing and mashing button inputs to score hits. Minigames trigger at the end of each turn and come in two flavors: Skill Training events (memory matching, rhythm challenges, painting fill-ins) and the demon battle sequences. The cooperative demon fights are actually the highlight, small moments where the license actually earns its place. The board traversal between them, though, is where time goes to die. Pace is the central problem. Matches above 15 turns drag hard, and the celebration animations that play after basically every event tank the framerate noticeably, even on PC. None of the 12 playable characters, including the three leads and all nine Hashira, have unique abilities or perks. Everyone rolls the same dice and equips the same Slayer Dice bonuses, which is a wasted opportunity in a universe where each character has a completely distinct fighting style. The boards look thematically solid but player-versus-player interaction is almost nonexistent: you can rush to a destination before opponents, buy items like extra dice rolls or fast travel, but there are no traps, no sabotage, nothing to really stick it to the person in first place. That semi-cooperative design defang the competitive side entirely. Online is reportedly rough. Multiple critics flagged notable input lag during QTE sequences, enough to make demon fights feel arbitrary rather than skill-based. If you are planning to use this as a remote party game with friends on PC, factor that in. Local play with three friends on a couch is the version this game was built for, and even then, the session depth runs thin after a couple of boards. Steam user reception sits meaningfully positive with a small sample size, which tracks: the people buying this already love the IP and are getting exactly what they expected. For a non-fan wanting a proper digital party game, Mario Party Superstars via emulation or any number of PC alternatives will give a fuller experience. Sweep the Board is really for the person who watches the anime, wants to hang out with Tanjiro and Zenitsu in a low-stakes context, and does not mind a slow-burning session with forgettable minigames padding between the moments that actually feel like Demon Slayer. Fred, Scout Team

Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board!

Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board!

Jul 16, 2024CyberConnect2SEGA
GamerScout Says

If your group chat has three Demon Slayer fans and a free evening, this might scratch the itch. Anyone else should probably look elsewhere first.

PCXbox
Steam Deck Playable
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €15.22

GamerScout Verdict

Worth it only for Demon Slayer fans playing locally with friends; online lag and slow pacing undercut everyone else.

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Price History

Historical low
€15.227 Jul 2026
Official storesKeyshops
€14.97€15.82€16.68€17.535 Jun16 Jun27 Jun7 Jul18 Jul
5 Jun — 18 Jul
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Screenshots & Media

About Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board!

My first instinct when I saw a Demon Slayer board game land on PC was to move on. CyberConnect2 makes arena fighters and weird action games, not Mario Party clones. But here we are. Sweep the Board is a licensed digital board game for up to four players, built around five thematic boards pulled straight from the anime, and it works just well enough to make you wish it worked a lot better. The structure is straightforward. Players roll dice and move around boards based on locations like the Mugen Train, the Entertainment District, and the Swordsmith Village. Each board runs a day-and-night cycle: during the day you race to hit a goal point set by the Kasugai Crow, collecting rank points for reaching it first. After dark, demons appear and players cooperate in QTE-driven boss fights against enemies like Akaza, timing and mashing button inputs to score hits. Minigames trigger at the end of each turn and come in two flavors: Skill Training events (memory matching, rhythm challenges, painting fill-ins) and the demon battle sequences. The cooperative demon fights are actually the highlight, small moments where the license actually earns its place. The board traversal between them, though, is where time goes to die. Pace is the central problem. Matches above 15 turns drag hard, and the celebration animations that play after basically every event tank the framerate noticeably, even on PC. None of the 12 playable characters, including the three leads and all nine Hashira, have unique abilities or perks. Everyone rolls the same dice and equips the same Slayer Dice bonuses, which is a wasted opportunity in a universe where each character has a completely distinct fighting style. The boards look thematically solid but player-versus-player interaction is almost nonexistent: you can rush to a destination before opponents, buy items like extra dice rolls or fast travel, but there are no traps, no sabotage, nothing to really stick it to the person in first place. That semi-cooperative design defang the competitive side entirely. Online is reportedly rough. Multiple critics flagged notable input lag during QTE sequences, enough to make demon fights feel arbitrary rather than skill-based. If you are planning to use this as a remote party game with friends on PC, factor that in. Local play with three friends on a couch is the version this game was built for, and even then, the session depth runs thin after a couple of boards. Steam user reception sits meaningfully positive with a small sample size, which tracks: the people buying this already love the IP and are getting exactly what they expected. For a non-fan wanting a proper digital party game, Mario Party Superstars via emulation or any number of PC alternatives will give a fuller experience. Sweep the Board is really for the person who watches the anime, wants to hang out with Tanjiro and Zenitsu in a low-stakes context, and does not mind a slow-burning session with forgettable minigames padding between the moments that actually feel like Demon Slayer.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:aaaAnime Party GameDay-Night CycleQTE CombatCooperative Boss FightDice-Roll StrategyLocal Party BestIP Fan ServiceBoard Traversal

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750, 1GB or AMD Radeon R7 360, 2GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-2300 or AMD FX-4350

Recommended

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Network
Broadband Internet connection
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660, 2GB or AMD Radeon R9 270X, 2GB or Intel ARC A310, 4GB
Processor
Intel Core i5-3470 | AMD Ryzen 3 1200

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
CyberConnect2
Publisher
SEGA
Release Date
Jul 16, 2024

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Frequently asked questions about Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board!

How much does Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! cost?

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What platforms is Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! available on?

Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! is available on PC, Xbox.

When was Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! released?

Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! was released on 16 July 2024.

Who developed Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board!?

Demon Slayer -Kimetsu no Yaiba- Sweep the Board! was developed by CyberConnect2 and published by SEGA.