Software:Hand of Fate 2

From HandWiki
Hand of Fate 2
Hand of Fate 2 cover.jpg
Developer(s)Defiant Development
Publisher(s)Defiant Development
EngineUnity[1]
Platform(s)
Release
  • Lin, Mac, Win, PS4
    • WW: November 7, 2017
  • Xbox One
    • WW: December 1, 2017
  • Switch
    • WW: July 17, 2018
Genre(s)Action role-playing, deck-building
Mode(s)Single-player

Hand of Fate 2 is a 2017 video game developed and published by Defiant Development. It combines action role-playing games with deck-building video games. It is the sequel to Hand of Fate.

Gameplay

Players progress through an overworld consisting of twenty-two levels, each of which has different goals. Each level must be cleared by facing challenges posed by cards dealt by the Dealer, a mysterious antagonist. Players also have their own deck of cards, as in deck-building games. Players can augment their decks with recruited companions, each of whom has their own story and associated quests. When cards indicate combat, players engage in third-person action sequences, as in action role-playing games. If players die, they must start the level over from the beginning.[2]

Development

Defiant Development released it for Linux, macOS, Windows, and PlayStation 4 on November 7, 2017; for Xbox One on December 1, 2017; and for Switch on July 17, 2018.[3]

Reception

Hand of Fate 2 received positive reviews on Metacritic.[4] Although PC Gamer felt the combat was weak and repetitive, they said the strategic elements and storytelling make up for it.[2] IGN called it a major improvement over Hand of Fate and praised the added depth, though they said it can still be repetitive.[5] GameSpot said it is "a realization of the first game's promise" and praised the combination of genres. However, they said some quests rely too much on luck, and dying during a quest can be frustrating.[6] Game Informer said the combat is "often boring or laborious", but they called the gameplay otherwise "fantastic and unique".[7] Rock Paper Shotgun said it has more variety than Hand of Fate, but they said they missed that game's larger role for the Dealer.[8]

References