The complaints about this game in other reviews almost kept me away from it, but as someone without a lot of people to play this with in real life Gloom Digitial Edition is a welcome addition to my library of board/card games. If you're looking at this review it's because likely you already know what the game entails and you'd like to know if it's worth your money and for this reviewer, I believe it is. First off the pros - This game is utterly macabre and delightful, the animations the characters make when you afflict them with a malady are cute, and the gameplay is smooth. Any reviewer saying the game runs slow isn't being honest with their definition of slow, the animations the characters take are 3 seconds at most, and there is even an option to turn off this feature for quicker more streamlined gameplay. The game plays well and it's well worth your money. The cons - While this game has an online function, currently, the rooms are ghost towns and you'd be lucky to get in one ...
Gloom: Digital Edition
- Release Date:
- Oct 31, 2018
- Developer:
- Sky Ship Studios
- Publisher:
- Sky Ship Studios
- Platforms:
- Windows Mac
Game Tags
About This Game
Do you think good things are better than bad things? You’re wrong again!
In Gloom, the more miserable you are the better things are going for you, and the very worst thing you can do for your friends is to bring them joy.
Each player controls the fate of an eccentric family of misfits. Your goal is sad, but simple: make your family suffer the greatest tragedies possible before allowing them to pass on to the well-deserved respite of death.
Ask penguins to poison them, make them starve in a storm or get written out of the will… The more miserable they are, the better!
That’s not all, if you want to win, you’ll have to make your rival’s family as happy and annoyingly alive as you can: delighted by ducklings, having picnics in the park, finding love at the lake… These are some of the worst things that could happen to them!
HOW TO MAKE EVERYONE SUFFER?
From 1 to 4 players. Each player gets two moves per turn.- Play modifier cards on top of character cards, describing the horrible mishaps you inflict on your own characters to lower their Self-Worth scores, while trying to cheer up your opponents’ characters with happy occasions that pile on positive points.
- Event cards will give you other chances to alter fates: draw cards on stormy nights, give a character a second chance in life or mess with another one by discarding its top modifier card… What a twist of fate!
- Finally, kill your family or your rival’s family by using the Untimely Death cards! Baked into a pie, eaten by bears or just dying old and alone… There are so many ways to die.
When the last character in any family dies, the game ends. The player with the lowest Family Value wins the game!
Who will be devoured by weasels and who will be wondrously well wed? Find out in Gloom…
Screenshots
User Reviews
I like this game as a card game, and the dialogues given the the Addams Family style characters is entertaining (and Mr. Giggles is properly disturbing). However, the game needs a back-up function. It is incredibly easy to accidentally drop a card on the wrong character (aka YOUR character) when you were aiming to make your opponent's life difficult. There is no confirm function at the end of the turn or a back up button to say "No, Game. You put that card in the wrong place." So, the game in principle is fine. The video game controls are not.
I'm a big fan of the card game so I was looking forward to playing this. On the one positive note, the game has a charming interface and does bring some of the fun of the card game to the screen with some cute animations. However, this is not enough to recommend this game. It has several fatal flaws that really hurt game play significantly: [list] [*]The game uses another third-party service for online game matches instead of Steam, which apparently does not have much of a userbase. As a result, its difficult to ever find a match, simply nobody is playing online. [*]The AI has one setting "stupid," and can't be adjusted for harder play. This means you'll have to suffer through its decisions to do things like players ending the game when they are losing or helpfully taking out your last player when you are ahead of everyone else. [*]The game is incredibly slow for no good reasons. The game still slows to a crawl between turns, not allowing you to do things like look at your...
I bought this game to play multiplayer with friends during the pandemic. The developers have decided to remove the multiplayer feature making the game useless to me. Not impressed.
Don't buy this game they've removed multiplayer support.. i bought this because i wanted to play multiplayer with a friend, barely had it 5 months.... really sad
Pulled multiplayer now from this game, bought this over 2 weeks ago so no refund Don't waste your time buying this, the bots are useless and the game is crippled
Summary: Digital version of a great storytelling card game that left out the storytelling. Overview: Gloom is a card game from game designer Keith Baker (creator of the Eberron campaign setting in D&D 3rd Edition, among other things). The goal is to make your family have the most depressing storyline, ending with their untimely deaths, while also trying to make your opponent's family cheerful. The setting is very much based on macabre dark humor, there's a kind of Addams Family feel to it all. The digital version nails the look and feel of the card game nicely, with the interface comparable to other Asmodee board game adaptations - nothing is well explained, nor is it very complicated. The music is melancholic and the characters speak with a flat voice of disinterest, appropriately. So far as the gameplay goes, it plays like the real card game, and looks fine doing it. But the problem is that the fun of Gloom isn't in the mechanics of the game, really. Gloom is fun becau...
Discontinued multiplayer. Literally useless
They removed multiplayer after we bought it to play with our friends. I would recommend not buying anything from this company.
Don't bother. The real, physical card game, with real people at a real table... that is fun. This, however, is a disaster of a game. Navigating anything is a chore, and actually anger inducing after a while, since you can't see more than one other person's played cards at a time, you have to click through other players individually to see. Often leading to repeated switching back and forth before you make a decision.. and it makes no effort to explain anything if you don't understand how the cards work. The removal of online multiplayer is a major kick in the pants. Why the hell would anyone want to play a multiplayer card game alone with the shittiest of bots? If you're looking for a good game to play with friends, just buy the real thing and, hell, put the cards under a camera and stream it to friends and play that way.. you'd essentially get the same, if not better experience except, you'd still technically have online multiplayer unlike this ****-show of a game. I can't recomme...
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System Requirements
Minimum
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 7
- Processor: Low range Dual-Core 2.4 GHz CPU
- Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Graphics: nVidia GeForce 7 series or ATI Radeon HD 2000
- DirectX: Version 9.0
- Network: Broadband Internet connection
- Storage: 1 GB available space
- Sound Card: Any
Recommended
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 8
- Processor: Mid to High Range Dual-Core 2.5GHz CPU
- Memory: 4 GB RAM
- Graphics: nVidia GeForce GTX 285 or AMD Radeon HD 5830
- DirectX: Version 9.0
- Network: Broadband Internet connection
- Storage: 1 GB available space
- Sound Card: Any
FAQ
How much does Gloom: Digital Edition cost?
Gloom: Digital Edition costs $6.99.
What are the system requirements for Gloom: Digital Edition?
Minimum: Minimum: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 7 Processor: Low range Dual-Core 2.4 GHz CPU Memory: 4 GB RAM Graphics: nVidia GeForce 7 series or ATI Radeon HD 2000 DirectX: Version 9.0 Network: Broadband Internet connection Storage: 1 GB available space Sound Card: Any Recommended: Recommended: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 8 Processor: Mid to High Range Dual-Core 2.5GHz CPU Memory: 4 GB RAM Graphics: nVidia GeForce GTX 285 or AMD Radeon HD 5830 DirectX: Version 9.0 Network: Broadband Internet connection Storage: 1 GB available space Sound Card: Any
What platforms is Gloom: Digital Edition available on?
Gloom: Digital Edition is available on Windows PC, macOS.
Is Gloom: Digital Edition worth buying?
Gloom: Digital Edition has 41% positive reviews from 100 players.
When was Gloom: Digital Edition released?
Gloom: Digital Edition was released on Oct 31, 2018.
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