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Dice Legends blends roguelike progression with deckbuilding, using dice to drive combat. You roll, flip, and split dice to shape your hand, stacking effects and triggering combos that define your strategy. Created by indie developer Red Eclipse, it launched on PC in October 2025. The game emphasizes resource management and risk-reward decisions, as each die represents a card you can play or manipulate. With single-player only, it’s a tight, tactical loop where luck and planning collide. The goal? Master your deck’s potential across procedurally generated runs.
Each turn starts with rolling dice, which act as both resources and action points. You can play a die as a card, flip it to change its value, or split it into smaller dice to expand your options. Combos build by linking effects, like crit multipliers or debuffs, and chaining them requires balancing your hand size. Combat is turn-based and grid-based, with positioning affecting die rolls. Between runs, you unlock new cards and dice mechanics to customize your deck. The challenge lies in adapting to random maps and enemy types, while managing limited resources to avoid running out of dice mid-fight.
Players rate it 4.3/5 on Metacritic, with 87% finishing the game. Average playtime is 18 hours, but 25% hit 50+ hours chasing full completion. Community moods are split: 68% “frustrated but impressed” by its complexity, while 32% call it “addictive.” Reviews highlight the “deep synergy between dice and deck,” though 20% cite a steep learning curve. Achievements (35 total) take ~100 hours to unlock fully. Price at $19.99, it’s seen as a bargain for fans of strategic depth. Critics praise the innovation but note inconsistent difficulty scaling.
Dice Legends is a must-play for deckbuilding purists and roguelike enthusiasts who thrive on strategy. The dice system adds fresh layers of resource management, but its complexity may overwhelm newcomers. At $20, it’s a low-risk bet for those who enjoy optimizing combos and learning from failure. Skip if you prefer casual play, this one demands patience. For the right audience, though, it’s a rewarding test of skill and creativity.
Game Modes
Single player
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