

Once unlocked, they stay active for the rest of the game. Unlike the first game, your major improvements this time come in the form of heirlooms that are placed in each biome.

In runs, you can find blueprints that can be used to acquire new equipment pieces with a set bonus for wearing them all. These additions become progressively more expensive, but they will unlock new classes, raise stats, add new quality of life features, and more. Gold, earned by killing enemies and finding treasure chests can be used after a run to add additions to your castle. If you missed the first one, the progression of the game comes in the form of your estate/castle. The upgraded visuals are impressive, with improved lighting that makes everything pop. A Kingdom has fallen to a mysterious corruption, the guardians have been taken over by a strange force, and you once again sign away your life and your descendants to Charon to figure out what’s going on. The basic gameplay of the original returns with a new story. With all these new flavors, Rogue Legacy 2 has recently left early access and now asks the question: can the original roguelite show these newcomers some new tricks? The Liter Side Since its release, the roguelike and lite genres have blown up across the board. Rogue Legacy is the game that popularized what would become the sub-genre known as “roguelite” - the idea of having a focus on persistence as progression in a roguelike.
