장단점
- Nice casino-style visual and sound effects
- Unique blend of Plinko mechanics with deckbuilding
- Relaxing, low-stakes gameplay
- Heavy reliance on extreme RNG
- Limited content pool leads to repetitive runs very quickly
- Broken infinite builds
- No mid-run save feature
상세 리뷰
Classic Plinko with a roguelike kick
Plinbo: Roguelike Plinko is a roguelike game and blends the physics of a classic pegboard with the strategic depth of a deckbuilder title. This game invites you to upgrade your balls and build a collection of tarot and luck cards to influence where their coins land.
In Plinbo: Roguelike Plinko, you’ll navigate a series of high-stakes challenges while attempting to reach specific targets to progress. Visually, the game leans into a modern-retro aesthetic, complete with a satisfying CRT filter and flashy coin effects. It is a title that tries to capture the addictive “numbers go up” thrill.
Who could’ve known that Plinko can be fresh
Plinbo: Roguelike Plinko’s core gameplay loop focuses on choosing cards between rounds that either provide stable income or late-game scaling potential. You can experiment with different ball types and peg modifiers to find synergies that hopefully mitigate the heavy reliance on luck. When a build finally clicks, the screen fills with a visual feast of cascading balls and exploding coin values.
While its price is alright and the game offers a low-pressure environment perfect for quick sessions or braindead relaxation, the simulated ball physics are predictable, meaning that while it feels random, there is a logic to how the balls bounce. It successfully captures the gambling-adjacent excitement of a casino floor without requiring real money, making it a tempting distraction for strategy fans.
However, the game struggles with significant balance issues, as players can stumble upon “infinite scaling” builds that turn the roguelike challenge into a laggy, passive endurance test. The content pool is also shallow, with many players seeing every card and ball type within just two hours. Additionally, the lack of a mid-run save feature and inconsistent probability descriptions on cards can make the experience feel unpolished.
Rough around the edges
In conclusion, Plinbo: Roguelike Plinko is a fun, budget-friendly experiment that offers a few hours of genuine excitement before its mechanical cracks begin to show. While it lacks the deep complexity and polish of genre leaders like Balatro, it provides a satisfying sensory experience for its price. It is a promising prototype that needs more content and tighter balancing to achieve its full potential.