
#Lost in random characters full
While you’re going to build up a binder full of cards over the course of the game, you’re allotted 15 cards to add into your deck to use at a time.

To roll your hand, you’ll toss your buddy Dicey, and whatever number he lands on is the number of points that you’re allowed to spend on your current hand.Ĭombat is carried out through the cards that Even collects along her journey. Playing cards are simple but I’ll admit that the in-game instructions weren’t so clear to me when I first started learning its ropes. You can play your hand at any time but I always waited to play one until it was full because that’s how you’ll be sure to get at least one card to play. It comes as a great shame though as I would’ve liked to see more of Even and her sister’s relationship as opposed to the “relationships” she builds with throwaway characters. Because of that, and the fact that the game goes off-course to satisfy side-stories, the main plot seems to get washed out for a lot of the game. There are some RPG elements that don’t feel at home for this type of game at all. On Even’s journey, she’ll come to know very many different characters and I believe that sometimes, the exposition becomes easily tedious. The story has the bones of something really good and for the most part, I think that it comes together great, overall. Odd rolls a 6 which gives her a spot in the same luxurious kingdom of The Queen, the dominant force in Random who controls all. You see, the game’s story takes off by explaining that upon reaching the age of 12, each child must roll a huge die and see which of the six towns they’ll be taken to. There are six different areas that Even will journey through as she seeks her sister, Odd. This Tim Burton-esque world is filled with monstrous-looking characters as well as a society separated in the same vein as The Hunger Games’ districts.

Lost in Random is a tale about a girl named Even as she journey’s through the realms of Random.
