Compare Slay the Spire prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mega Crit. Published by Mega Crit. Released on 1/23/2019. Available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox. Genres: Indie, Strategy. Metacritic score: 89/100.

Forget most roguelikes that came after it, this is the one that rewired how strategy players think about card synergy, and it still plays cleaner than its imitators six years on.

I have lost count of how many Ascension levels I have climbed since 2019, and the honest answer is that the number embarrasses me. Slay the Spire is a turn-based roguelike deckbuilder across three procedurally generated acts, and the reason it holds up against every successor the genre has produced is that its decision-making density per run is extraordinary. Every node on the map is a micro-bet: fight an elite for a bigger reward pool, take the question-mark event and gamble on a relic, rest at a campfire versus forging ahead with health you might not spend. None of these choices are cosmetic. They compound. The four base characters cover very different strategic identities, and getting comfortable with each one is where the game's true mileage comes from. The Ironclad is the correct first pick: his Burning Blood relic heals 6 HP after each combat, which functions as a forgiveness buffer while you learn how relic-card synergies work. The Silent lives or dies on card cycling and poison stacking, rewarding players who can read a run's trajectory early and commit to a build. The Defect's orb-channelling system (Lightning for damage, Frost for block, Plasma for energy) adds a second resource layer that looks complex but becomes intuitive once you understand Focus scaling. The Watcher, the fourth character, is the highest-ceiling class in the base game: toggling between Wrath stance for double damage and Calm stance for energy refunds creates some of the most explosive turn sequences in any card game, but the margin for error is thin enough that new players should earn a win or two with someone else first. The turn-based combat is fully telegraphed, meaning every enemy shows its next action before you commit, which shifts pressure squarely onto your own play rather than hidden information. The honest critique worth flagging: high Ascension levels (the game's 20-tier difficulty system per character, unlocked progressively by winning) do introduce a degree of run-variance frustration. If the card reward pool fails to give you the key piece of a synergy by the end of Act 1, Act 2 elite fights can feel punishing in a way that borders on unfair rather than instructive. This is a known community complaint, and it is real. The soundtrack also draws mild criticism for becoming repetitive over long sessions. These are not dealbreakers, but they are the things experienced players will cite when they set the game down for a few weeks. On the positive side, the mod ecosystem via Steam Workshop is substantial. Custom characters like The Hermit and the Downfall mod (which lets you play as the bosses) extend the game well past its already generous base content. The Ascension system alone provides a structured ladder that gives purpose to runs long after you have cleared all four characters at default difficulty, which is something a lot of roguelikes fail to deliver. For newcomers worried about the learning curve: the game gates you to the Ironclad on run one, there is no timer pressure, and every card and relic includes a full tooltip. The information is all there. You just have to learn to read it. At a Metacritic score of 89 and a Steam rating that sits at 98% positive across an enormous review base, the consensus is about as settled as it gets for a PC game. The question is not whether Slay the Spire is good. The question is whether you are ready to accept that a run that looks lost by Act 2 is often a lesson rather than a failure. Players who treat early defeats as data tend to build confidence quickly. Players who need a narrative hook or visual spectacle to stay engaged may find the sparse presentation a barrier that no amount of mechanical depth will fix. Diego, Scout Team

Slay the Spire

Slay the Spire

Jan 23, 2019Mega Crit
GamerScout Says

Forget most roguelikes that came after it, this is the one that rewired how strategy players think about card synergy, and it still plays cleaner than its imitators six years on.

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About Slay the Spire

I have lost count of how many Ascension levels I have climbed since 2019, and the honest answer is that the number embarrasses me. Slay the Spire is a turn-based roguelike deckbuilder across three procedurally generated acts, and the reason it holds up against every successor the genre has produced is that its decision-making density per run is extraordinary. Every node on the map is a micro-bet: fight an elite for a bigger reward pool, take the question-mark event and gamble on a relic, rest at a campfire versus forging ahead with health you might not spend. None of these choices are cosmetic. They compound. The four base characters cover very different strategic identities, and getting comfortable with each one is where the game's true mileage comes from. The Ironclad is the correct first pick: his Burning Blood relic heals 6 HP after each combat, which functions as a forgiveness buffer while you learn how relic-card synergies work. The Silent lives or dies on card cycling and poison stacking, rewarding players who can read a run's trajectory early and commit to a build. The Defect's orb-channelling system (Lightning for damage, Frost for block, Plasma for energy) adds a second resource layer that looks complex but becomes intuitive once you understand Focus scaling. The Watcher, the fourth character, is the highest-ceiling class in the base game: toggling between Wrath stance for double damage and Calm stance for energy refunds creates some of the most explosive turn sequences in any card game, but the margin for error is thin enough that new players should earn a win or two with someone else first. The turn-based combat is fully telegraphed, meaning every enemy shows its next action before you commit, which shifts pressure squarely onto your own play rather than hidden information. The honest critique worth flagging: high Ascension levels (the game's 20-tier difficulty system per character, unlocked progressively by winning) do introduce a degree of run-variance frustration. If the card reward pool fails to give you the key piece of a synergy by the end of Act 1, Act 2 elite fights can feel punishing in a way that borders on unfair rather than instructive. This is a known community complaint, and it is real. The soundtrack also draws mild criticism for becoming repetitive over long sessions. These are not dealbreakers, but they are the things experienced players will cite when they set the game down for a few weeks. On the positive side, the mod ecosystem via Steam Workshop is substantial. Custom characters like The Hermit and the Downfall mod (which lets you play as the bosses) extend the game well past its already generous base content. The Ascension system alone provides a structured ladder that gives purpose to runs long after you have cleared all four characters at default difficulty, which is something a lot of roguelikes fail to deliver. For newcomers worried about the learning curve: the game gates you to the Ironclad on run one, there is no timer pressure, and every card and relic includes a full tooltip. The information is all there. You just have to learn to read it. At a Metacritic score of 89 and a Steam rating that sits at 98% positive across an enormous review base, the consensus is about as settled as it gets for a PC game. The question is not whether Slay the Spire is good. The question is whether you are ready to accept that a run that looks lost by Act 2 is often a lesson rather than a failure. Players who treat early defeats as data tend to build confidence quickly. Players who need a narrative hook or visual spectacle to stay engaged may find the sparse presentation a barrier that no amount of mechanical depth will fix.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Tags

singleplayerachievementscontroller-supportcloud-savessteamRoguelike DeckbuilderAscension SystemRelic SynergiesProcedural MapsFour-Character RosterHigh ReplayabilitySteam Workshop ModsTelegraphed Combat

System Requirements

Minimum

Processor
2.0 Ghz
Memory
2 GB RAM
Graphics
128mb Video Memory, capable of OpenGL 2.0+ support
Storage
500 MB available space

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Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
89
Steam
98%(213,214)

Game Info

Developer
Mega Crit
Publisher
Mega Crit
Release Date
Jan 23, 2019

Game Modes

singleplayer

Languages

Subtitles (17)
EnglishSimplified ChineseFrenchGermanKoreanRussian+11 more

Features

AchievementsController SupportCloud Saves

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What platforms is Slay the Spire available on?

Slay the Spire is available on PC, Mac, Linux, Xbox.

When was Slay the Spire released?

Slay the Spire was released on 23 January 2019.

Who developed Slay the Spire?

Slay the Spire was developed by Mega Crit.

Is Slay the Spire worth buying?

Slay the Spire holds a Metacritic score of 89/100, making it one of the standout Indie titles. See the full reviews, ratings and how-long-to-beat times on this page to decide.