
Kaya's Prophecy
Stacklands meets Slay the Spire in a tribal village sim where a permanently hungry god dictates your entire production chain. Short, breezy, and worth a look if the genre is new to you.
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Screenshots & Media

About Kaya's Prophecy
My first reaction to Kaya's Prophecy was pure recognition: I'd seen this card-stacking DNA before in Stacklands, and the combat silhouette is unmistakably Slay the Spire. The developers don't hide it either. What they've done is strip both references down to their load-bearing walls and rebuild something lighter and more approachable on top. That's a legitimate design choice, and for a specific type of player it works. The question is whether you're that player. The core loop runs on two rails that feed each other constantly. On the village tableau, you drag and stack resource cards alongside worker cards to craft progressively stronger materials, tools, and structures. Coconuts become coconut milk, raw stone becomes building blocks, redundant cards get recycled into demonic blood currency that you spend at totems for randomised booster packs. Keeping the tableau lean matters mechanically: the more cards sitting on the board at day's end, the larger the food tribute that the god Kalades demands. Miss his offering and he retaliates with lightning strikes, famines, or direct harm to your villagers across four escalating wrath tiers. That pressure timer is the game's best idea. It stops you from hoarding every card like a completionist and forces genuine prioritisation every single day cycle. The second rail is turn-based deck combat, triggered when you send a villager on an expedition. Hands of five cards, split between attack, armor, and utility types, play out against one to three enemies whose next action is always telegraphed. Armor persists between rounds, which is a small but smart divergence from the Slay the Spire model and makes defensive builds feel genuinely different. Cards enter your combat deck primarily through equipment crafted back in the village, so the two loops stay tightly coupled throughout. Where the game loses me a little is at the edges of both systems. Deck construction is largely passive: you craft gear, the gear adds cards, and by the mid-game your explorer is powerful enough that most normal encounters stop requiring real thought. Players who want deep archetype decisions and trim-or-keep agonising over every card will find it thin. On the village side, the random camera zoom that snaps in every time an event triggers has annoyed enough Steam reviewers that it stands out as a genuine friction point rather than a taste issue. The single save file that deletes on victory is another quirk that removes any low-stakes reason to replay once you've seen the ending. Replayability exists because booster draws are randomised each run, but the campaign itself is linear and clocks in around five to six hours, so the ceiling is visible early. For someone new to the card-stacker sub-genre, though, this is a near-ideal starting point. The in-game checklist tutorial does real work: it hands you one goal at a time and trusts you to figure out the recipe system by experimentation rather than wall-of-text instructions. The hand-drawn art, inspired visibly by Oceanic and tribal motifs with cassowary iconography baked into the currency, gives the whole thing a personality that budget indie titles often skip. Veteran Stacklands or Slay the Spire players may find the strategic ceiling arrives too quickly, but anyone who hasn't spent thirty hours in either of those will likely hit that ceiling only after they've had a good time getting there. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS: Windows 10
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- Integrated Graphics
- Processor
- Intel Core i3-7100 3.9GHz or AMD Ryzen 3 2200G
Recommended
- OS
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS: Windows 11
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 or AMD R9 270 or Better
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-7500 or AMD Ryzen 5
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Reviews & Ratings
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Game Info
- Developer
- Jérémie & Thibaut
- Publisher
- Yogscast Games
- Release Date
- Apr 10, 2025