It’s my duty as a child of the early 2000s to let you know a Beyblade-inspired roguelike was released on Steam last month

It’s my duty as a child of the early 2000s to let you know a Beyblade-inspired roguelike was released on Steam last month


The closest I ever came to ascending to godhood was on Christmas day in 2003. I was nine and a half years old, and I had been given a weapon. Beyblade was at the height of its popularity in my hometown, and I’d asked my parents for an imported Driger V2 from a website selling toys from overseas, becauseโ€”as Pokรฉmon cards had taught my generationโ€”Japanese collectibles possess an inherently greater potency.

It was a sinister implement: a two-tiered engine of plastic-bladed violence. In its first match against my older brother’s Beyblade, it detonated his feeble bit of Toys “R” Us fodder on contact. Once the ensuing shrapnel settled, I knew I had gained command of a terrible power. I wielded a battle top that should not be. And thanks to From the Top, a recently-launched top-battling roguelike, it’s a feeling I can once again relive.


(Image credit: Junkfall33)

From the Top released last month on Steam, and despite the fact that “Beyblade roguelike” seems like it should be an activation phrase for millions of online millennials, nearly nobody noticed. In it, you play as the captive of a top-obsessed tyrant who forces you to perpetually battle whirling bits of bladed plastic for his own amusementโ€”an experience not unlike what I expect many parents had to endure in the early 2000s.

After starting a run by choosing an initial loadout of battle tops, you navigate a Slay the Spire-like path, battling enemy tops between opportunities to upgrade, repair, and even fuse together your own. Tops consist of three components, each of which affect their movement behavior, collision force, and spin stamina. And, crucially, each has an active ability that lets the top do the kind of wild combat sorcery Beyblades could do in the show that always made playing with the physical toys a little bit of a bummer in comparison.


(Image credit: Junkfall33)

In a couple hours with From the Top, I’ve seen some absurd combinations. One of my legally distinct Beyblades had a heavy, sturdy driver that kept it spinning in place in the center of the arena while its active ability let me fire clones of itself on cooldown. Another could periodically become intangible before emitting a kinetic pulse, letting it phase through attacking enemy tops and counterattack by launching them out of the arena.



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