Slay the Spire
Balor Games
| Category | Card |
| Installs | 1,000,000+ |
| Version | 2.6.0 |
| Updated | Aug 1, 2025 |







About this game
Game Overview
Slay the Spire is a single-player card game built around roguelike runs, where each attempt becomes a new climb through a shifting tower. Developed by Balor Games and sold as a paid premium release on mobile, it mixes deck construction with route planning and risk management. The player repeatedly drafts cards, weighs relics against their costs, and adapts to changing encounters rather than following a fixed campaign. That structure gives the game a deliberate rhythm: short decisions during battles, then broader choices between paths, rewards, and bosses. Its appeal comes from how tightly those systems interact. A strong card combo can carry a run, but a poor pick or an unlucky route can end it quickly. For players in Australia, it is available on both Google Play and the App Store, with a 4.44 rating from 29,256 reviews on Android and a 1,000,000+ install range there.
Core Gameplay Features
- Dynamic Deck Building Cards are collected over multiple attempts, and each pick shapes how efficiently the deck can handle later fights. The loop is about assembling synergies rather than chasing isolated strong cards.
- Changing Route Choices Each climb presents a different layout, so the path through the Spire is not fixed. Safer and riskier routes lead to different fights, rewards, and bosses.
- Relic Interactions Relics act as powerful items that can alter a run in major ways. They can strengthen a deck, but some come with a cost that changes the value of the reward.
- Single-Player Runs The mobile release is built around solo play rather than online competition. That makes it suitable for focused sessions where progress is measured run by run.
- Card And Roguelike Mix The game combines deckbuilding with roguelike structure, so failure is part of the design. Each loss feeds into a new attempt with different cards and outcomes.
What Makes It Stand Out
Among mobile card games, this one stands out for how cleanly it turns simple inputs into long-term strategy. The appeal is less about spectacle than about how each run creates a different puzzle from the same ruleset.
- Strong Review History A 4.44 rating from 29,256 Android reviews suggests broad approval rather than a tiny niche following. That volume gives the score more weight than a small sample would.
- Premium Mobile Release It is a paid app on iOS and not a free-to-start grind on either store. That usually means fewer monetisation interruptions and a more straightforward purchase decision.
- Cross-Store Availability The game is available on both the Australia Google Play Store and App Store, which makes it easy to buy on either Android or iPhone and keeps the mobile version well supported.
Things to Know Before Playing
The main trade-offs are practical rather than dramatic. This is a premium card roguelike with a meaningful download size on iPhone, a Parental Guidance rating on Google Play, and a design that can feel punishing when the wrong cards or relics appear.
- Paid Purchase The App Store price is AU$14.99, and the Play Store listing is not free. That makes it a one-time purchase rather than an ad-supported download, but it also raises the upfront cost.
- Large iOS Download The App Store lists the app at 932,757,504 bytes, which is roughly 933 MB. Extra free space for updates and cache is still sensible, especially on older iPhones or iPads.
- Parental Guidance Rating Google Play lists Parental Guidance, while Apple rates it 12+. That is useful context for families, since the game is broadly suitable for older children and teens rather than very young players.