
Astrea: Six-Sided Oracles rethinks the deck-building roguelike by trading cards for dice. Instead of drawing a hand, you assemble a dice pool, and at the core of every run sits an unusual dual system: Purification and Corruption. Your goal is to build a pool strong enough to cleanse Astrea's runaway corruption and rescue the Star System from ruin.
That dual system is what makes the strategy tick. Purification can wound enemies or heal you, while Corruption cuts both ways, damaging you or mending your foes. A dynamic health bar ties skills directly to your Corruption, so embracing a little danger unlocks powerful abilities, though tip too far and you'll be consumed. With more than 350 dice across three types, ranging from reliably safe to gloriously risky, and the ability to edit die faces with new actions, you can bend fate toward the results you want.
Six distinct Oracles round out the experience, each arriving with their own dice sets, abilities and playstyles, from clever spellcasters to hard-hitting brawlers. For fans of casual-yet-thoughtful strategy on PC, it's an indie roguelike that turns luck into something you actively engineer.