I beat Slay the Spire with a family of slimes, and you should too
You and ooze army.
Say hello to my beautiful oily children. There are the brown bruiser slime twins, who dish out a solid amount of damage to my enemies at the start of each turn. They're tough lads, but to be honest I prefer my quadruplet of cultist slimes. They are purple, and they have little claw arms, and they gain two attack every turn until combat is over. Towards the bottom of the class we have acid slime, who damages and poisons people just a little bit every turn. That one is a real brat. I think I might eat him soon.
I'm playing Slay the Spire with Michael Mayhem's awesome fan-made character class, The Slimebound, which you can get on the Steam Workshop for free. It comes with 75 cards, new events, and even adds lines of dialogue when you meet other slimes in the Spire.
In case you're not familiar with the game, slimes are a common enemy you encounter in the first few acts. Now you can become the blob, and make tiny angry blobs in your image. The slimes kids seem to get on with each other well enough, though I have my worries about greed ooze, who I found in a puddle of shit halfway through the first act. Every time I rest at a campsite greed steals 50 gold and grows stronger, and when I consume him, he just comes right back.
Yes, sometimes, in times of need, I have to regretfully eat the kids. Sometimes it helps me to block enemy attacks. Sometimes I do it to spawn different children who might deal more damage. The Spire is a tough place, and if I don't have enough bruiser slimes to wipe out a foe, I'm going to have to sacrifice some of my wobbly babies for an advantage.
This is a well-executed mod. The cards are nicely illustrated and have a suitably drippy effect. You start off with just a few slots you can grow slimes into, but like the Defect's orb slots, you can use cards to create more. A LOT more. Though it has a smallish health pool the Slimebound's default power regenerates health for every slime you have active at the end of combat, so you can create loads of minions, use cards to have them deal damage, and then eat them at the end of combat to get right back to full health.
I love minions, so I pressed on with the slime-generating synergy in my playthrough, and ended up reaching the heart. I was able to sacrifice multiple slimes to generate tons of energy and good card draw. In panicked moments I could generate a few slimes for extra block, but otherwise I was able to let the kids autoattack enemies each turn until the cultist slimes became massive enough to delete every enemy health bar.
It's a really fun combo to build, and I saw other potential synergies on my journey to the top. You can stack a special 'slime' status effect on enemies that you can attack to deal bonus damage and heal up. There are also cards that trigger extra damage off 'tackle' moves. You can also use classic slime moves against your foes, like 'lick' and 'SLIME CRUSH!!!', though the latter leaves you exhausted for a turn after you use it.
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This is exactly the sort of update I was hoping for from Slay the Spire's Steam Workshop page. The mod fits perfectly into the game and builds on the design ideas behind the three official classes. I got lucky on my first run, so it's hard to tell if it's a little too powerful at the moment, but it looks like the creator is making balance passes and tweaking the mod over time.
Slimebound is now part of the Downfall Expansion mod. You need a few other supporting mods for it to work, which are linked from the Steam Workshop page. All you have to do is click 'subscribe' on each of them and then select 'play with mods' when you launch Slay the Spire. The mod's co-creator, Michael, is a game developer who has released a party game called Sumo. If you're curious you can find it on Steam early access.
Part of the UK team, Tom was with PC Gamer at the very beginning of the website's launch—first as a news writer, and then as online editor until his departure in 2020. His specialties are strategy games, action RPGs, hack ‘n slash games, digital card games… basically anything that he can fit on a hard drive. His final boss form is Deckard Cain.