2-Player Deck-Builder2014
Star Realms box art

Box art via BoardGameGeek

2-Player Deck-Builder

Star Realms

A tiny box of spaceships that turns deck-building into a knife fight.

3.7 out of 53.7/5

Designed by Rob Dougherty and Darwin Kastle · 2014

Players2 (up to 4 with extra sets)
Play time15-20 min
WeightLight-Medium
Ages12+
Check price on AmazonAffiliate link · supports the site, costs you nothing extra
The verdict

This is the deck-builder you keep in your bag for a reason: cheap, fast, and meaner than its size suggests. Just know the trade row will occasionally hand your opponent the game, and you'll have to make peace with that.

Best for: Couples and travel pairs who want a quick, combat-y deck-builder they can replay forever.

The full review

What it is

Star Realms is a head-to-head deck-builder where you and one opponent start with the same sad pile of Scouts and Vipers, then race to buy better spaceships from a shared trade row. Trade points buy cards, combat points punch your opponent's authority down from 50 to zero. Four factions (Trade Federation, Blobs, Star Empire, Machine Cult) reward you for stacking the same color, and that's where the satisfying combos live. It's a 2014 design from Rob Dougherty and Darwin Kastle.

The catch

Here's the honest part. That shared trade row is the whole game, and it doesn't care about you. Players who know the game well say strong play wins maybe 60 to 65 percent of the time, which is real skill but also real luck. If your opponent grabs an early powerhouse and you get fed nothing, you'll lose and it won't feel earned. The base box is two players only, the cards wear out without sleeves, and the pile of expansions invites some serious FOMO.

Who it's for

Make peace with the swing and this is one of the best little boxes you can own. It teaches in five minutes, plays in fifteen, costs almost nothing, and fits in a coat pocket, so it travels better than basically anything. It's a near-perfect game for couples, lunch breaks, and anyone who wants deck-building with actual aggression. If you hate direct conflict or luck of the draw, skip it. Everyone else should grab it.

What other players say

This write-up is grounded in real reviews and player discussion, not just one opinion. A few worth reading:

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