Concept and Setting
The Lost Glitches blends card-driven combat with role-playing growth inside a gritty, neon-drenched cyberpunk metropolis. Instead of treating cards as isolated tools, the game treats them as extensions of your avatar — each match advances your character’s arc as much as it tests your tactics.
Core Mechanics
- Deck creation merged with character advancement, so choices in both arenas matter equally.
- Modular factions that can be combined for surprising synergies and offbeat strategies.
- Three active progression trees that customize how your character performs and interacts with cards.
- An emphasis on mastering systems through play rather than tutorials; experimentation is the primary teacher.
Strategy and Flow
Matches reward careful planning and long-term thinking. The pacing feels closer to a cerebral board game than a quick card skirmish: every decision is meaningful, and victory comes from superior positioning and timing rather than luck. Expect gameplay that resembles “strategic programming” — planning moves several steps ahead and adapting to evolving states.
Progression, Difficulty, and Onboarding
Progress is deliberately gradual. The game favors a slow climb over instant gratification, which makes each upgrade feel earned and story beats more satisfying. That said, newcomers can find the learning curve steep; there’s minimal hand-holding and the initial onboarding can feel unforgiving. Players who enjoy honing skills over many sessions will find this rewarding.
Aesthetic and Presentation
The visuals are striking and atmospheric, supporting the world-building and enhancing immersion. Art and lore work together to make each card and character feel like part of a larger digital subculture.
Who Will Enjoy It
This is aimed at thoughtful players who enjoy building atypical decks, testing theorycraft, and refining strategies over time. If you prefer quick, hand-holding experiences, this might be frustrating; if you like deep systems and narrative flavor, it’s a strong fit.
Strengths and Trade-offs
- Deep customization and creative deck possibilities make repeated play engaging.
- Rich storytelling and standout art amplify the mood and motivate persistence.
- The learning curve and sparse guidance can be off-putting to casual players.
- Matches are intentionally demanding, rewarding skill and foresight over shortcuts.
Alternative Suggestion
If you want something nearby in spirit, consider Sailaway (paid) as an alternative offering a different take on tactical progression and persistent systems.
Technical
- Windows
- Mac
- English
- French
- German
- Russian
- Portuguese
- Full