![]() You wish it were a more generous game, but it is what it is - a superb dungeon crawler that's definitely worth £1.99, that wants you to pay more before it gives more. It's taken a while to get here, but 100 Rogues is finally finished. Thankfully, everything's now fixed, and to be fair I haven't seen a single bug since, in multiple playthroughs. That was patched, and then the Dinoman couldn't be purchased. This added the Dinoman, and unfortunately also made it crash at startup. That's a considerable ask, and makes an otherwise essential roguelike seem miserly - particularly considering the fact it's been so buggy in the past, and we're talking game-ruining bugs.īut 100 Rogues recently received its very final update. There's no option to, say, just purchase a complete edition. The purchaseable characters make things even better - the Skellyman is all about backstabs and hop-scotching around enemy groups without taking damage, while the Dinoman Bruiser can charge through their packed ranks and cause mayhem.īut for me those have been 69p at considerable intervals for a game I adore - new players face paying £1.99 for the app, £1.38 just to complete the rogues roster, and then have the option of purchasing extra monsters to play as (one is free, and five are 69p each). Hit the magic route and you'll have exactly the tools to waltz into a large group and take them out with AOE, gracefully dodging their attacks by activating the Martyr ability. ![]() If you find a massive axe early on, for example, you can make the Crusader into a heavy-armament-wielding tank, capable of smashing through even the toughest enemies almost instantly but vulnerable to debuffs and crowds in the open. Their numbers basically double with every step you take, Mr Anderson.īut it's the way the levelling curve makes your rogue hardier, and lets you choose custom skills, that gives 100 Rogues its magic touch. If you survive all this, the last stretch of levels before Satan becomes even nastier, with one especially nasty enemy inspired by the Matrix - agents that fire low-damage machineguns that hit multiple times and call in a new agent at the end of every turn. 100 Rogues moves from early cave-like environments with bandits and bats to deeper dungeons that are filled with terrifying and weird enemies - poisonous, flying babies, hulking suits of armour that deal terrible damage, and necromancers that summon endless numbers of skeletons. The Fairy's more indirect, relying on summoning temporary allies and confusing the hordes into attacking each other, all the while buffing herself and taking care of stragglers.Įvery four levels of 100 Rogues there's a boss, and the Pope with his Unbreakable Pope Shield is a bit of a sod. The Crusader is a superbly designed knight class that's all about melee attacks and levelling into a brute that can destroy clumped enemies and heal himself back up. ![]() The two rogues you get with the game are very different types of dungeon explorer. I grind my teeth in frustration, and not always the good kind, but can never stop playing it. It has added tremendous amounts of new content, almost entirely in the form of in-app purchases. It has also, in those two years, swung from incredibly buggy builds to smooth ones and back again, with seemingly every update introducing new problems to go with its fixes. ![]() It is an outstanding roguelike, and even two years since release is easily one of the best-looking and most surprising on iOS. Some games you love and some you hate, but 100 Rogues isn't nearly so simple.
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