Metascore
76

Generally favorable reviews - based on 12 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 8 out of 12
  2. Negative: 0 out of 12
  1. Apr 21, 2026
    70
    Minos is an excellent blend of tower defense and puzzle game with roguelite soul, allowing us to design the deadliest labyrinths of classical Greece. It works better as a puzzle game than a roguelite, with uneven progression and a somewhat sloppy narrative, but it's incredibly satisfying when our most complex creations deliver the knockout blow.
  2. Apr 15, 2026
    70
    Minos is a maze-based roguelite featuring gameplay that is, all things considered, engaging—simple in structure yet remarkably deep in its mechanics. Its roguelite nature ensures that you are constantly facing new challenges within a system best described as a blend of strategy and tower defense. The goal of the game is not to hunt down aspiring heroes and tear them to shreds while playing as the Minotaur; rather, it is to devise the right strategy to funnel them toward traps and crossbows that will fire a few darts too many (much to your delight)...We believe Minos is well-suited for more contemplative players—those who enjoy experimenting with mechanics rather than adhering to a typically more linear, guided formula. If you value strategic planning, appreciate an intriguing storyline, and remain undeterred by repeated failures, then the Minotaur awaits you within that labyrinth—a maze that has become his very reason for being.
  3. Apr 9, 2026
    70
    Minos is an engaging game, offering both accessibility and challenge, with cleverly designed levels that encourage experimentation. Strategically laying paths and equipping them with traps is something to behold. However, the narrative falls flat, some scenarios feel repetitive, and the roguelite system does hurt the overal experience—but if you can overlook these, Minos is a solid Taurus Defense experience.
  4. Apr 27, 2026
    60
    Minos shows promise when it hands the player a myriad of options. Pacing, however, isn't optimal, and creativity is not always rewarded.
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  1. Apr 9, 2026
    Game designers can be the world’s biggest pranksters, and you’re the victim of their sick sense of humor. Minos lets you in on the joke and lets you laugh along with the villains for a change.
  2. Aptly for my deficient problem-solving skills, if this is something the developers wanted to address, I don't know what the solution would be. More onscreen information, such as the ability to know how long it will take a group to reach a certain point in the maze, would make it easier to plan out your traps, but it might dispel all of the game's difficulty. Total information works in games like Into The Breach, but it doesn't mean every tactical game should be 100% predictable. In many games, the fuzziness and opportunity for mistakes is where you find the fun. Maybe then, instead, there needs to be a greater set of options for what you can do as a player when something does go wrong. Snatching a messy victory from a mistake-triggered defeat may be more enjoyable than a clean victory where you're watching your complex machine of interlinked traps do exactly what you planned. For that, Asterion will need to be more capable, because once your trap sequence is broken, it's already too late to fix.