
Right and Down
Two inputs. Fifty floors. A deceptively brutal decision tree that will make you rethink what a 'simple' roguelike can actually demand of you.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Right and Down
I went into Right and Down expecting a palette cleanser between heavier strategy sessions. What I got instead was a game that quietly stress-tested my risk management instincts for hours before I even reached floor 20. The concept is deliberately spartan: every turn, you move one card to the right or one card down. That binary choice, repeated across 50 procedurally generated floors, is where all the game's tension lives, and it is a surprisingly large space once you start reading the board correctly. The card layout on each floor presents three types of encounters: enemies, traps, and resource cards (health potions, armor bonuses, coins, and purchasable artifacts). Enemies go down in a single move, but each one displays the damage it will deal you on contact, so every step is a calculation. Fight too few enemies and you arrive at the camp upgrade every 10 floors without the experience needed to buy new skills. Fight too many on a bad path and status effects like Blindness, Freeze, or Poison will compound into a death spiral long before the late floors arrive. Frozen is the particularly nasty one: it strips your passive and equipment abilities, which are often the core of any character's survival plan. The game does not explain this to you. It expects you to die and learn. Character variety is where the replayability lives. You start locked to the Brute, but completing specific in-run criteria unlocks five additional heroes, each carrying a different starting artifact set and a unique skill system triggered by directional input sequences. One character heals by moving down four times consecutively. Another deals burst damage via a right-down-right-down pattern. Knowing and executing those sequences while simultaneously routing around a dangerous floor is where the game graduates from casual to genuinely strategic. The unlock conditions also feed into nine different dungeon variants, each adding a rule modifier that stacks difficulty in new directions. There is a meaningful progression loop here, even if it takes a few runs to see it. The criticism that lands is the tutorial gap. There is effectively no explanation of mechanics, trap interactions, or artifact synergies. A first-time player will not understand why Freeze is deadlier than Poison, or why skipping a strong enemy to grab an artifact can be a net negative run decision. Players who enjoy figuring systems out through failure will adapt; anyone who wants guidance upfront will be frustrated. The difficulty curve in the back half of runs can also feel punishing in a way that reads as RNG variance rather than earned difficulty, though the community notes that mc2games has patched balancing issues over time, including adjustments to character passives like the Dwarf. The absence of a mod ecosystem or difficulty slider means your only lever is getting better, which is either a feature or a flaw depending on your tolerance. For the price point, Right and Down delivers a genuinely distinct mechanical idea executed with enough depth to sustain dozens of runs. It is not a game that will hold your hand through its systems, but strategy players comfortable with learning by death will find a compact, well-iterated roguelike that respects the intelligence of its audience. Beginners should go in with the expectation that the first ten runs are tutorials with permanent consequences. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable. Runs flawlessly on Linux out of the box. Based on 3 ProtonDB community reports.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- Storage
- 1 GB available space
- Graphics
- NVIDIA GeForce 450
- Processor
- Intel Core i3 2.00 GHz
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Right and Down.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- mc2games
- Publisher
- mc2games
- Release Date
- Oct 18, 2022


