Trials of Fire explained

Trials of Fire
Developer:Whatboy Games
Publisher:Whatboy Games
Engine:Unreal Engine[1]
Platforms:Windows
Genre:Roguelike deck-building
Modes:Single-player

Trials of Fire is a roguelike deck-building game developed by Whatboy Games and released for Windows in 2021. It blends card mechanics with turn-based tactics in a fantasy world.

Gameplay

Gameplay includes elements of roguelike deck-building games and tactical role-playing games using turn-based combat. It is set in a post-apocalyptic, dark fantasy world.[2] Players recruit adventurers to explore a overworld map that has been procedurally generated. Up to three adventurers can be in the party out of a roster of up to nine characters. As players discover points of interest on the map, they are given the option of choosing various courses of action, which may depend on skills. Combat takes place on a tactical map. Each character has a deck of cards, which allow them to attack and move. To play a card, players expend willpower from a pool shared by all characters. Although some cards generate willpower, it is most commonly gained by discarding cards. After winning battles and completing quests, characters gain experience points and can gain new, more powerful cards. Finding powerful equipment can also give players more cards, and traveling on the map eventually adds useless cards to characters' decks to simulate exhaustion. If the entire party dies, the game ends, but new characters and cards can be unlocked for the next game.[3]

Development

Trials of Fire entered early access on May 3, 2019,[4] and was released on April 9, 2021.[5]

Reception

Trial of Fire received positive reviews on Metacritic.[6] PC Gamer wrote, "Trials of Fires list of features may read like a videogame word salad, but the resulting combination makes for a fine RPG feast."[3] In an end of the year retrospective, PC Gamer called it "perhaps the most compelling strategy game to come out in 2021".[7] In recommending the game, Eurogamer described it as "a complex but seductive deck-building strategy game about sculpting the perfect RPG team".[8]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How Early Access helped shape tactical deck-building adventure Trials of Fire. Kayser. Daniel. Unreal Engine. 2021-04-21. 2023-05-31.
  2. Web site: Premature Evaluation: Trials Of Fire. Hogarty. Steve. Rock Paper Shotgun. 2019-05-07. 2023-05-31.
  3. Web site: Trials of Fire review. Lane. Rick. PC Gamer. 2021-04-07. 2023-05-31.
  4. Web site: Trials Of Fire is turn-based strategy with deckbuilding and post-apocalyptic ethics. Cox. Matt. Rock Paper Shotgun. 2019-04-03. 2023-05-31.
  5. Web site: Trials Of Fire, tactical deckbuilder, leaves early access on April 9th. Smith. Graham. Rock Paper Shotgun. 2021-03-23. 2023-05-31.
  6. Web site: Trials of Fire (PC). Metacritic. 2023-05-31.
  7. Web site: Trials of Fire is the most intricately layered strategy game of 2021. Valentine. Robin. PC Gamer. 2021-12-28. 2023-05-31.
  8. Web site: Trials of Fire review - seduced by sculpting the perfect RPG team. Purchese. Robert. Eurogamer. 2021-04-21. 2023-05-31.