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Culdcept Begins revives a 1997 Sega Saturn cult classic on Switch 2
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Culdcept Begins revives a 1997 Sega Saturn cult classic on Switch 2

Culdcept Begins lands on Nintendo Switch and Switch 2, bringing back OmiyaSoft's dice-driven deckbuilding board game that first debuted on Sega Saturn back in 1997.

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

โ€ข

Updated Jul 16, 2026

Culdcept Begins revives a 1997 Sega Saturn cult classic on Switch 2

The Sega Saturn era is not exactly known for producing games that get sequels in 2026. Yet here we are. Culdcept Begins is out now on Nintendo Switch and Switch 2, marking the first entry in OmiyaSoft's long-dormant deckbuilding series since Culdcept Revolt shipped on 3DS a full decade ago. If you're hunting for something genuinely different in this week's crowded Switch 2 release window, this is the one that deserves a second look.

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Thirty years of history most players never knew existed

The series has a genuinely wild origin story. OmiyaSoft first released Culdcept in Japan on Sega Saturn in 1997, blending deckbuilding, RPG elements, and a dice-based board game into something that had no real equivalent at the time. A PlayStation port followed in 1999, then a Dreamcast sequel called Culdcept Second in 2001. Western players didn't get their first taste until 2003, when that sequel arrived localized on PlayStation 2.

From there, the series bounced around platforms in a way that made it nearly impossible to follow. Culdcept Saga landed on Xbox 360 in 2006 under Bandai Namco. A Nintendo DS remake arrived in 2008. A 3DS version came in 2012. The last entry before this one was Culdcept Revolt in 2016. That's seven entries across six platforms over nearly 20 years, which goes a long way toward explaining why so few people have played it.

Magic: The Gathering meets Monopoly, and it actually works

Here's the thing: the core concept is easier to grasp than its history suggests. Players move around a board using dice rolls, with the goal of accumulating enough gold to hit each stage's target amount. The twist is that you carry a deck of cards into every match. Those cards let you summon monsters onto tiles, which then act as toll stations. Opponents who land on your tile either pay up or challenge your monster with one of their own.

The strategic depth comes from the elemental system. Tiles are split into four colors tied to elements, and placing a monster on a matching tile gives it a stat buff. Chain multiple same-element monsters together on adjacent tiles and the toll bonuses compound quickly. Deciding when to spend gold upgrading a monster versus holding reserves for spells is a constant tension. One example that captures the design well: a spell that forces the next dice roll to land on 8 can be used either to rush your own character toward the starting square for a gold payout, or cast on an opponent sitting exactly 8 tiles away from one of your monsters. That kind of dual-use decision-making runs through the whole game.

Starter decks get you through the first few battles, but they won't last long. Swapping in the right mix of offensive monsters, defensive buffs, and battlefield-control spells becomes necessary surprisingly early in the campaign.

important
Culdcept Begins does carry a meaningful luck factor tied to dice rolls. Even a well-constructed deck can stall out if the rolls go badly at the wrong moment, which is worth knowing before you commit to a long story session.

The timing makes more sense than it looks

Deckbuilding games have never been more mainstream. Magic: The Gathering has a larger competitive footprint than at any point in its history, and indie titles like Slay the Spire have introduced the genre's core loop to an entirely new generation of players. Culdcept Begins arriving now, rather than five years ago, puts it in front of an audience that's already comfortable with card-based strategy.

The game isn't without its rough edges. The story drops players into a lore-heavy world involving Culds, Cepters, and an academy setting without much onboarding, and the character art style is inconsistent in ways that stand out against the genuinely sharp card illustrations. These are real friction points, especially for newcomers the game is explicitly trying to court.

Still, the board game underneath holds up. The series has spent almost 30 years being too niche to find its audience, and the Switch 2's install base gives it a better shot than most of its predecessors had. A PC version is also confirmed for later this year, which should widen that window further.

If you're into multiplayer games with deep strategic systems and don't mind a dice roll occasionally humbling your best-laid plans, Culdcept Begins is worth your time this week. For a broader look at what else is worth playing right now, the gaming guides hub has you covered on everything from build optimization to getting started in new releases.

Eliza Crichton-Stuart author avatar

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Head of Operations

Announcements

updated

July 16th 2026

posted

July 16th 2026

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