Fights in Tight Spaces (Prologue)

Play the first mission of Fights in Tight Spaces for free! A stylish blend of deck-building, turn-based tactics, and thrilling fight sequences in action-movie settings. Learn to balance your hand, momentum, and positioning to overcome the odds to defeat your adversaries. Full game OUT NOW.

Card-based Tactical Fighting!


Fights in Tight Spaces (Prologue) allows you to get hands on with the first mission of Fights in Tight Spaces absolutely free! If you enjoy the Prologue, the full game is available now!

The game blends deck-building, turn-based tactics, and thrilling animated fight sequences in classic action-movie settings. Learn to balance your hand, momentum, and positioning to overcome the odds to defeat your adversaries.

Pick from over 150 cards as you build a deck to suit your play style and your opponents’. Encounter random events, acquire enhancements (or injuries), and make critical choices about how best to upgrade your agent for the fights ahead.

Features

  • Control the Space: Use the environment against your adversaries
  • Train your Abilities: Build a deck to suit your play style, upgrade your moves, and equip your agent with a range of enhancements
  • Protect High-Value-Targets: Use your skills and abilities as you act as bodyguard to VIPs
  • Endless Threats: With a new mission each time your play, evolve your tactics, unlock new possibilities, and perfect your strategy to defeat the criminal underworld

Summary

In an era where espionage is handled largely by data-packets being pored over by teams of analysts, Section Eleven’s approach is more hands-on, dealing with the sorts of criminal organizations who live and operate outside the realms of electronic communication. When the rest of the intelligence services have failed, they call Section Eleven.

As a Section Eleven agent, it is your job to find direct solutions to emerging threats… largely by smashing people’s faces into things.

Reviews

“Fights in Tight Spaces wonderfully reimagines action movie showdowns”
Eurogamer