Slice & Dice is a dice-based roguelike dungeon crawler from developer Tann that has been out in early access on PC and Android for the past few years, and this week it received a massive version 3.0 update alongside a very long-awaited and much-requested iOS release. I know Android folks have been able to play this for a while now, but Iām an iPhone person, so forgive me if Iām late to the party in saying: Slice & Dice is just about a perfect mobile game.
Weāve been down this road plenty of times before. A developer takes a well-known mechanic and implements it into an roguelike game making for something thatās easy to grasp and immediately accessible but also filled with layers and layers of depth. The closest parallel I can draw is the King Cashing games which used slot machines as the core of its battling system. Slice & Dice works very similarly. Each member of your party has its own dice that is rolled before each turn. Whatās on each side of the dice can vary wildly, but generally youāll be looking for an attack or defense action.
You can lock in a diceās action after a roll or you can try to re-roll and get something else. You have limited re-rolls so if you arenāt careful you can get stuck with something you didnāt really want, but thatās also part of the strategy. Once youāve rolled and locked in your choices for each party member you then perform each of their actions on the enemy or enemies in front of you. Once each member has taken their turn itās the enemyās chance to go, and things go back and forth like that until one side is wiped out. Hopefully the enemyās side.
This isnāt necessarily Earth-shaking stuff here! Itās a very competent set of base mechanics built around the novelty of dice rolls, but that could describe just about every RPG in existence. No, where Slice & Dice truly shines is in its mind-boggling depth in terms of character builds, items, abilities, and weapons. It just does. Not. End. Each face of each of the dice can be upgraded or customized, thereās a seemingly endless stream of class types for your party members, thereās practically always some new item or spell or something happening after every battle. Itās almost unbelievable.
This is a game you can just kick back and playā¦ forever, I guess? I mean, itās a game you can ābeat" by making it through all 20 battles including a ferocious final boss battle, but like any roguelike worth its salt itās not really about the destination but the journey. With so many directions your party can grow, with so much reliant on the RNG of rolling dice, with so many varieties of enemies to learn and plan around, this is just a game that doesnāt seem like itās going to get old anytime soon.
Slice & Dice was originally a landscape-oriented game, and it does feel most natural in that position, but this new iOS release does feature portrait orientation support and holy smokes does that make this an easy āgo to" game. It switches on the fly so pick your poison depending on your current mood. You also can try out the game completely for free, with access to the āEasy" route which features just 12 battles instead of 20, and WAY less stuff like items and enemies and whatnot. But itās more than enough to decide if this is a game for you, and a one-time unlock of $8.99 gets you the full enchilada, so not hesitate to give Slice & Diceās free version a go.
Weāve been down this road plenty of times before. A developer takes a well-known mechanic and implements it into an roguelike game making for something thatās easy to grasp and immediately accessible but also filled with layers and layers of depth. The closest parallel I can draw is the King Cashing games which used slot machines as the core of its battling system. Slice & Dice works very similarly. Each member of your party has its own dice that is rolled before each turn. Whatās on each side of the dice can vary wildly, but generally youāll be looking for an attack or defense action.
You can lock in a diceās action after a roll or you can try to re-roll and get something else. You have limited re-rolls so if you arenāt careful you can get stuck with something you didnāt really want, but thatās also part of the strategy. Once youāve rolled and locked in your choices for each party member you then perform each of their actions on the enemy or enemies in front of you. Once each member has taken their turn itās the enemyās chance to go, and things go back and forth like that until one side is wiped out. Hopefully the enemyās side.
This isnāt necessarily Earth-shaking stuff here! Itās a very competent set of base mechanics built around the novelty of dice rolls, but that could describe just about every RPG in existence. No, where Slice & Dice truly shines is in its mind-boggling depth in terms of character builds, items, abilities, and weapons. It just does. Not. End. Each face of each of the dice can be upgraded or customized, thereās a seemingly endless stream of class types for your party members, thereās practically always some new item or spell or something happening after every battle. Itās almost unbelievable.
This is a game you can just kick back and playā¦ forever, I guess? I mean, itās a game you can ābeat" by making it through all 20 battles including a ferocious final boss battle, but like any roguelike worth its salt itās not really about the destination but the journey. With so many directions your party can grow, with so much reliant on the RNG of rolling dice, with so many varieties of enemies to learn and plan around, this is just a game that doesnāt seem like itās going to get old anytime soon.
Slice & Dice was originally a landscape-oriented game, and it does feel most natural in that position, but this new iOS release does feature portrait orientation support and holy smokes does that make this an easy āgo to" game. It switches on the fly so pick your poison depending on your current mood. You also can try out the game completely for free, with access to the āEasy" route which features just 12 battles instead of 20, and WAY less stuff like items and enemies and whatnot. But itās more than enough to decide if this is a game for you, and a one-time unlock of $8.99 gets you the full enchilada, so not hesitate to give Slice & Diceās free version a go.