Club des arriérés: Tuez la flèche, deuxième partie – Une histoire de frustration, Obsession, Et Poison


STS
Image: Kate Grey

Cet article fait partie de notre nouvelle série expérimentale, Club des arriérés, où nous (La vie de Nintendo!) choisissez un jeu susceptible de figurer sur notre liste de “jeux auxquels nous devrions nous mettre à jouer”, et puis nous (NL + you!) passer le mois prochain à jouer à ce jeu.

This is the final part of April’s game, J'ai tout un baratin sur combien l'art de, a fantastic roguelike deckbuilder that combines luck, stratégie, and perseverance

Lire Part Zero et Partie un if you need a refresher!


STS
Image: Kate Grey

Friends, pals, Backlog Club attendees: I have a confession. I did not, en fait, J'ai tout un baratin sur combien l'art de. I know! Je suis désolé! I’ve had a whole month to do it, and believe me, it wasn’t through lack of trying.

I actually caught COVID in the middle of April, and spent about a week and a half being able to do nothing but hack out my lungs, complain about being cold, and lie on the sofa feeling sorry for myself — the last of which involved a lot of video games, because that’s about all I had energy for. So believe me when I say that I’ve played a lot of Slay The Spire. Far more than I intended to, même. I’ve played for 20 hours on Xbox, and a further ten hours on Switch when I couldn’t get out of bed.

Oh, since this is a Book Club-style feature, by the way — have you tried the biscuits? I made them specially. They’re gluten free, would you believe! Allez sur, have one with your tea.

STS
Image: Kate Grey


I realise that it’s slightly embarrassing to play 30 hours of a skill-based strategy game and not actually finish it, but in my defence, it’s vraiment dur. There are three levels, each increasing in difficulty, each with a challenging boss battle at the end, and a lot of your successes will be dictated by the cards and relics you get along the way. Sometimes you’ll make tough choices, like whether to keep your deck small and powerful or large and unpredictable, or whether you should take acursecard that usually accompanies a boon, but can hurt your run.

Multiply all those individual choices together, and you can either have a surprisingly good run, or a terrible one, and both can hinge on a single decision.

Alors, here’s how you actually beat Slay The Spire, if all those choices work in your favour:

  1. Beat the game with the Ironclad character (focused on Strength/Block)
  2. Beat the game with the Silencieux character (focused on Poison/Shivs)
  3. Beat the game with the Defect character (focused on Passive Damage/Orbs)
  4. Beat the game again (with any character), making sure to get three keys along the way, which will grant you access to un autre boss final, who is very hard
The lovely keys, which you HAVE to remember to pick up along the way
The lovely keys, which you HAVE to remember to pick up along the way

Oh, do you want more tea? I can put the kettle on if you like. Oui, there are more biscuits. I see you ate them all already. Non, that’s fine, that’s what they’re for, I just wasn’t expecting you to eat them so… vite.

Beating the game sounds facile. And sometimes, il est. I had some fantastique builds, and I’m both proud of my ingenuity and incredibly impressed by the flexibility of the game in offering all of these options, so get ready for another list:

  • Le “Stop Hitting Yourself” build: A build that relied on my deck being filled with status and curse cards, because every single one would deal a total of 26 damage to all enemies
  • Le “It Doesn’t Even Hurt” build: Combining the Tungsten Rod (reduces all damage by one) with a bunch of cards that dealt one damage to myself, in exchange for various effects (draw one card, damage all enemies, gain more energy) and a card that gave me +2 Strength whenever I lost HP, so I ended up being super buff
  • Le “I Can Do This All Night” build: Nothing special, just TONS of energy, achieved through various relics or The Defect’s Plasma Orbs, which allowed me to just play every single card in my hand
  • Le “Trash On Purpose” build: A deck built around discarding cards, where every discard would get me extra cards and energy, so I could just discard things until I got the cards I wanted
  • Le “1-2-Punch Power” build: The Defect’s incredible Echo Form card lets you play the first card every turn twice, which means that you can play some really powerful cards multiple times. I combined this with Buffer (negates all damage, once) and another Echo Form to basically avoid death over and over again

And those are just the ones I remember! I had most success with The Defect, who was my first successful run all the way up to the third boss on Xbox, and The Ironclad, who beat the third boss first time sur le commutateur, but strangely, I enjoy the runs with The Silent the most. I just really like poison, Je suppose.

There she is!
There she is! (Image: Kate Grey)

But even with all these awesome, creative builds, I’ve not managed to beat the game. The closest I came was with The Ironclad, who got all the way to the final, finale patron (the literal beating heart of the Spire), and I even had two Fairy In A Bottle potions which would negate death and heal me to 30% of my max HP, so I was feeling confident. But that final boss has 750HP, and it hits hard, making it more of a war of attrition and avoidance than a fun, strategic, and fast fight.

Qu'est-ce que c'est? MORE biscuits? Do you want me to just make you a lunch or something? I think I’ve got some pizza in the fridge.

The thing with Slay The Spire is that you end up preparing for certain enemies with your card choices, which can end up biting you in the bum later on. My nemesis is the Spheric Guardian, who appears in Acts 2 et 3, and just keeps stacking shields on itself; The Defect’s Melter card does a great job mitigating this, and so does The Silent’s poison, but The Ironclad is out of luck. But other enemies — especially large groups — are easy work for The Ironclad, who excels in dealing damage to all enemies at once. Buuuut if you build your deck around large groups, then you won’t do well with bosses… et ainsi de suite. It’s all a delicate balancing act that begins as soon as you choose your character.

RIP me
RIP me (Image: Kate Grey)

Alors, I’m left wondering what I can do to make it all the way back to the Heart. Do I need a longer strategy, or just better luck? Should I hurl myself at the wall until cracks appear? Should I give the extra-hard Ascension Mode a try, or is that just asking for trouble? Is there some secret I don’t know about, like never taking a specific relic, or avoiding curses at any cost? That’s where you come in, gens: Unlike a Book Club, we can discuss tactics, Conseils, and tricks in the comments, so let me know what your suggestions are — I’m definitely going back to Slay The Spire whenever I fancy a quick run, and I’d love to beat it for real.

Et since this is a Book Club-style thing, here are some more discussion topics for you all!

Slay The Spire Questions

  • Which is your favourite character?
  • I haven’t mentioned the optional character, Le guetteur, du tout (she’s way too complicated for me) — did you play with The Watcher? What do you think?
  • Who is your nemesis in the game, et pourquoi?
  • Which boss do you find hardest (not counting the Heart)?
  • Do you think strategy or luck is more important in Slay The Spire?
  • Would you rather have one extra energy per turn, or two extra cards per turn?
  • Did you like the biscuits?

And that’s it for this month’s Backlog Club! We’ll be putting up the next game on Sunday, which will be chagrins (grâce à vos votes!) — you can pick it up through the Nintendo Switch Online service, or buy it on the 3DS, the Wii U Virtual Console, or any other means you can find. We’re not picky.

Thanks for joining me for this fun new experiment, and I hope you enjoyed Slay The Spire!