Here's a tactical spaceship deckbuilder that's about to leave early access
There's usually at least one game in early access I'm waiting on the full release of before I try. At the moment, I'm holding off on anime finance sim Stonks-9800. But it's easy to miss a release when there are so many games coming in and out of early access all the time, often without advance notice. So let me give you a heads-up on one of them: board game-esque deckbuilder Takara Cards, which leaves early access on January 17.
Each hand of Takara Cards represents a single jump in your spaceship's journey, with a variety of enemies to defeat before you can accelerate to hyperspeed. You can see what each ship, drone, and cluster of asteroids is about to do on the next turn, but you've got a limited amount of power to spend on cards that might counteract that. Maybe you fire the forward gun and then barrel roll out of danger, or maybe you power up the shields and ram someone.
In the early access version I've found myself doing a lot of ramming. While I can shoot fore and aft with the cards in the starter deck, there are plenty of times where I can't line up a shot and it's easier to just ramp up the shields and suffer a collision. Hopefully later decks will let me play it in a less pinball way.
Each ship's deck is themed around fantasy folk, beginning with dwarves, and with elves and humans unlockable later. The story has you on the hunt for space dragons who stole from the Federation, and the climax of each run is a showdown with one of those dragons. It gives Takara Cards an FTL-like structure, and between jumps are pick-a-path choices that might boost your various flavors of karma or, as happened to me, force you to pay your taxes.
There's voice acting for these interludes, but I gotta say, it's not great. Fortunately you can turn it off in the options, and hopefully it'll get replaced in the full release, or a subsequent update. You can find Takara Cards on Steam.
Best laptop games: Low-spec life
Best Steam Deck games: Handheld must-haves
Best browser games: No install needed
Best indie games: Independent excellence
Best co-op games: Better together