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    dkirschner's Astrea: Six-Sided Oracles (PC)

    [February 11, 2025 02:21:02 PM]
    Hidden gem! This was free on Epic a few months ago, and I'd never heard of it, but it sounded cool. Astrea is like Slay the Spire but with dice instead of cards. It's a "dice builder" instead of a deck builder and has some other novel mechanics.

    Here's how it works. Imagine the set-up is the same as Slay the Spire. Instead of cards, you have dice. Each die is really like six potential outcomes. Some outcomes are positive and others are negative. This is referred to as "purification" and "corruption." You are healed by purification, but damaged by corruption, and vice versa for the enemies. You and enemies both have a "corruption meter" (which functions as a health bar for you). If your corruption meter fills, you lose a heart. You get three hearts per level, and if you beat the level boss, your hearts refill. If the enemy's corruption meter fills, then they trigger a corruption action, which could be dealing corruption damage to you or buffing themselves or whatever.

    So, you are generally trying to kill enemies by doing purification damage to them, while making sure not to do too much corruption to them because it heals them and eventually triggers corruption actions. And you are also trying to manage your corruption level. Corruption needs to be "managed" instead of necessarily prevented because you trigger abilities called "virtues" when you receive enough corruption. So, taking damage is necessary for using powerful abilities. Virtues vary depending on the character, but could include rerolling x dice, dealing purification, converting a die from purification to corruption or vice versa, and so on.

    Dice will generally be focused around some particular action, such as dealing purification or rerolling or any one of the many actions associated with various characters, and there are three categories of dice: safe, balanced, and risky. Imagine a purification die. The safe version might have all six faces dealing a small amount of purification. The balanced version might have four faces dealing a moderate amount of purification but two faces dealing some corruption. The risky version might have two faces dealing a large amount of purification, but four faces dealing a fair amount of corruption. You build your deck around being safe, balanced, risky, or whatever combination. If you find a risky die that aligns with your build, then you will be more inclined to take it, but if it doesn't seem to align with your build, then you might decide that the chance for the strong positive faces doesn't outweigh the potential drawbacks of the negative faces. Oh yeah, I should mention that during your turn, you can pass on playing dice with purification and other positive effects, but if a die lands on corruption, you have to play it. So if your deck is full of risky dice, then you are constantly going to be forced to play dangerous corruption...but you're also going to have some powerful purification and other actions. The trick is being able to manipulate dice to increase your chances of positive outcomes.

    There are a lot of factors that go into this, from choosing a character (there are six to unlock) to wisely choosing your dice (based on risk, having a good amount of dice in your pool), to choosing good sentinels (up to two little robot dudes that you control and that each roll a die each turn). You also need to be strategic about pathing, which involves getting into fights, choosing dice, getting blessings, and spending cash on upgrades. I eventually determined that a strong strategy was to focus on landing on nodes where you can modify dice and then duplicating those dice. This lets you, for example, take a risky die and replace the worst corruption faces with really good actions. If you get lucky, you can, for example, stack one die with six strong faces and then duplicate that die three or four times. The logic here is replacing corruption with, well, anything else. I also enjoyed trying to keep my dice pool small and to accumulate blessings. This is really well done by aiming for the node that lets you destroy four non-starter die to receive one blessing.

    There are so many different strategies for builds, multiplied further by the six characters, each of which has a unique play style. One focuses on converting dice; another focuses on damaging himself for strength; another focuses on doing damage over time; another plays like that robot in Slay the Spire that has orbs; another leans into randomness even more; another emphasizes managing sentinels.

    Regardless of your choices though, one unique thing about Astrea is the amount of math you have to do. The game handles calculating base damage, but beyond that, you need to be able to calculate in your head to plan optimal moves. So for example, you might have a blessing that adds one purification to safe die, that deals five purification to an enemy whenever you deal corruption damage, that adds two purification when you have only one heart, and on and on and on. But the game doesn't adjust values to reflect all these modifications. You'll use a die that deals three purification, the outcome will be like 10 purification to two enemies, 11 to another enemy, 4 purification to your sentinels, and 8 purification to you, and you're like..."what...?" There is a lot to keep track of, and by the end of a run, when you have like 15 blessings, it's so complicated! But if you've made it to that point (at least on Astrea 0 or Astrea 1, the lowest of the difficulty levels), you are steamrolling enemies, so it doesn't really matter. But while I was learning, before I got the hang of things, I spent a lot of time doing math in my head. I liked it though; it felt that the game was challenging me to think.

    I eventually did get pretty good at it and beat the game with all the characters, and then beat Astrea's Heart with one (which is like the actual final boss when the credits roll). By that time, I was one-shotting bosses. You can increase the difficulty level, and I am sure it gets ridiculous as you go on! I can't imagine the complexity ramping up when the difficulty also ramps up in a run.

    So, this was definitely a happy find. I'm glad I gave it a shot and didn't ignore it just because I'd never heard of it and it sounded like a Slay the Spire clone. It really is unique with the dice. The presentation and all that isn't up to Slay the Spire standards or anything. There's a story that didn't do anything for me. But, I really enjoyed the dice-rolling and ability to harness the randomness. It's a thoughtful game, definitely recommend if you like these.
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    Status

    dkirschner's Astrea: Six-Sided Oracles (PC)

    Current Status: Finished playing

    GameLog started on: Sunday 2 February, 2025

    GameLog closed on: Monday 10 February, 2025

    Opinion
    dkirschner's opinion and rating for this game

    Neat so far with the randomization of dice and the purify/corruption. ---------- Really solid game with unique mechanics.

    Rating (out of 5):starstarstarstarstar

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