Compare Tracks of Thought prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Tidbits Play. Published by indie.io. Released on 6/8/2024. Available on PC. Genres: Adventure, Casual, Indie, RPG, Simulation.

Wholesome bug vibes meet a card-based wit system where your chosen communication style shapes your deck - but a 40% positive rating on Steam says the execution doesn't fully back the concept up.

My instinct when I see a card-based RPG built entirely around conversation and conflict resolution is to lean in hard, because the decision-making framework sounds genuinely interesting on paper. Tracks of Thought puts you in the wings of a forgetful ladybug aboard a mysterious train, and the core loop asks you to resolve disputes through a battle-of-wits card system rather than swords or spells. Cards represent communication styles - logic and reasoning, sensitivity and empathy, charisma and inspiration - and crucially, the personality you build in the opening car determines which cards you accumulate and which opponents will give you trouble. Play as a pure rationalist and creative thinkers will be a wall; lean into charisma and cold logic users push back hard. That asymmetry is the most strategically interesting idea in the game. The structure is linear-but-layered. Each train car functions as its own contained world, with a cast of insect characters who carry personal quests ranging from recovering stolen items to, somehow, fomenting a worker revolution among the carriage staff. One of seven potential companions - always your personality opposite - joins you for the full ride, and that pairing shapes the flavor of your playthrough. The companion system is a small but smart piece of design: it creates a dynamic where your blind spots as a communicator are literally walking beside you the whole time. Where the wheels come off is in polish. Community feedback points to a version number still reading ALPHA at launch, sound effects firing at odd moments, UI elements flickering in and out during card encounters, and at least one documented progression-blocking bug involving a quest item. For a game whose entire emotional pitch is warmth and self-reflection, rough technical edges cut against the mood badly. When the game is working, it is a pleasant, low-stakes afternoon - think something adjacent to a gentler Undertale crossed with a personality quiz that has actual stakes attached. When it is not working, it feels unfinished. The audience here is narrow but real: players who want a cozy, story-first experience with light mechanical hooks, have patience for indie rough edges, and are drawn to the wholesome-adjacent art style and insect cast. If you are coming in expecting robust deckbuilding depth or satisfying strategic variance across runs, this is not that game. The card system is a vehicle for narrative, not a system to be optimized. Approach it on those terms and the journey to the Control Room is earnest and occasionally charming. Approach it expecting tight mechanics and you will bounce off fast. At its current state, waiting for a patch or two before boarding is the sensible play. Diego, Scout Team

Tracks of Thought
AdventureCasualIndieRPGSimulation

Tracks of Thought

Jun 8, 2024Tidbits Playindie.io
GamerScout Says

Wholesome bug vibes meet a card-based wit system where your chosen communication style shapes your deck - but a 40% positive rating on Steam says the execution doesn't fully back the concept up.

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About Tracks of Thought

My instinct when I see a card-based RPG built entirely around conversation and conflict resolution is to lean in hard, because the decision-making framework sounds genuinely interesting on paper. Tracks of Thought puts you in the wings of a forgetful ladybug aboard a mysterious train, and the core loop asks you to resolve disputes through a battle-of-wits card system rather than swords or spells. Cards represent communication styles - logic and reasoning, sensitivity and empathy, charisma and inspiration - and crucially, the personality you build in the opening car determines which cards you accumulate and which opponents will give you trouble. Play as a pure rationalist and creative thinkers will be a wall; lean into charisma and cold logic users push back hard. That asymmetry is the most strategically interesting idea in the game. The structure is linear-but-layered. Each train car functions as its own contained world, with a cast of insect characters who carry personal quests ranging from recovering stolen items to, somehow, fomenting a worker revolution among the carriage staff. One of seven potential companions - always your personality opposite - joins you for the full ride, and that pairing shapes the flavor of your playthrough. The companion system is a small but smart piece of design: it creates a dynamic where your blind spots as a communicator are literally walking beside you the whole time. Where the wheels come off is in polish. Community feedback points to a version number still reading ALPHA at launch, sound effects firing at odd moments, UI elements flickering in and out during card encounters, and at least one documented progression-blocking bug involving a quest item. For a game whose entire emotional pitch is warmth and self-reflection, rough technical edges cut against the mood badly. When the game is working, it is a pleasant, low-stakes afternoon - think something adjacent to a gentler Undertale crossed with a personality quiz that has actual stakes attached. When it is not working, it feels unfinished. The audience here is narrow but real: players who want a cozy, story-first experience with light mechanical hooks, have patience for indie rough edges, and are drawn to the wholesome-adjacent art style and insect cast. If you are coming in expecting robust deckbuilding depth or satisfying strategic variance across runs, this is not that game. The card system is a vehicle for narrative, not a system to be optimized. Approach it on those terms and the journey to the Control Room is earnest and occasionally charming. Approach it expecting tight mechanics and you will bounce off fast. At its current state, waiting for a patch or two before boarding is the sensible play. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertier:sub-5Personality-Driven DeckConversation CombatCompanion SystemCozy MysteryBug CastWholesome RPGLinear AdventurePolish Issues

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Unsupported

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Unsupported.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7+
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
6 GB available space
Graphics
DirectX Compatible
Processor
2.0 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible

Recommended

OS
Windows 7+
Memory
4 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 10
Storage
6 GB available space
Processor
2.0 GHz
Sound Card
DirectX Compatible

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Game Info

Developer
Tidbits Play
Publisher
indie.io
Release Date
Jun 8, 2024

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What platforms is Tracks of Thought available on?

Tracks of Thought is available on PC.

When was Tracks of Thought released?

Tracks of Thought was released on 8 June 2024.

Who developed Tracks of Thought?

Tracks of Thought was developed by Tidbits Play and published by indie.io.