Slay the Spire – The Game That Defined a Genre
Slay the Spire may seem deceptively simple—right up until you realize how much of modern game design it quietly reshaped. There were roguelikes before Slay the Spire , and there were deckbuilders before it as well. But when MegaCrit released Slay the Spire in 2017 (early access) and fully in 2019, it felt like something clicked. The game didn’t invent the idea of combining roguelike structure with card-based combat—but it refined and popularized it to such a degree that it effectively defined a modern subgenre. In the years that followed, we saw an explosion of deckbuilding roguelites: Monster Train , Griftlands , Inscryption , Across the Obelisk , Menace from the Deep , and even oddball hybrids like Balatro . Some lean toward spectacle ( Inscryption ), others toward complexity and long-term systems ( Across the Obelisk ), or speed and efficiency ( Monster Train ). But the underlying rhythm—fight, reward, adapt—remains unmistakably rooted in Slay the Spire. It even inspired a fr...