Vault Of The Void [portable] Jun 2026

She sat before the door for three days, not picking its lock—because there was no lock—but listening. On the third night, she pressed her palm to the cold stone and spoke not a command, but a confession.

Your active deck is always exactly 20 cards. You can freely swap cards from your collected "backpack" into your deck at any time outside of combat. Vault of the Void

For centuries, treasure hunters, mages, and emperors had tried to breach it. Spells shattered against its surface. Siege weapons crumbled. One conqueror even threw a thousand prisoners at the door, hoping their combined death-rattle might whisper the password. The door did not open. She sat before the door for three days,

Vault of the Void flips this script entirely. Before you even begin a run, you have access to a "Void Deck." This is a pool of cards you have unlocked. When you start a new run, you draft your starting deck from this pool. More importantly, when you defeat enemies and are offered card rewards, you are drawing from a fixed pool that you have constructed. You can freely swap cards from your collected

The UI is brutally efficient. There is no fluff. Card borders are sharp, attack animations are snappy, and the sound design—specifically the thud of a card being Voiyed—is deeply satisfying. This is a game for people who want to play fast; the animation skip options are generous, meaning a full run can take 45 minutes rather than 2 hours.