A cheeky blend of action roguelike and cute-but-sinister cult management. Recruiting followers, sacrificing them, heading out to fight: the loop hooks hard, even if it runs a little thin late on. Charming and unsettling at once.
Your verdict
Category
Roguelike1 player12+
Description
A resurrected lamb founds a cult in its own name and sets out to purge rival sects. Published by Devolver Digital, released worldwide in 2022. Managing a village of followers and rituals, action runs through generated dungeons, and a cute style tinged with the occult.
Cult of the Lamb review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"From the very first seconds"
Running a cult by day and clearing procedurally built dungeons by night makes for a surprisingly seamless rhythm. You farm, preach and fight through snappy crawls, then return to recruit followers, decorate your camp and plan the next raid. The cute-macabre tone disarms instantly, and "just one more crusade" keeps pulling you back long past bedtime.
Addictiveness
"Obsessive"
Between the action of clearing dungeons and the upkeep of a flock to tend, two loops interlock and feed each other. You return from a crusade to build, preach and recruit, then set off again at once to gather what will improve your cult. Rituals, decrees and cosmetic upgrades stack up short goals that chain together. The blend stays delicious; just be mindful of a certain repetitive flock-tending over the long run.
Difficulty
"Easy"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾1,5 GB📅11/08/2022
Published by Devolver Digital
Cult of the Lamb (Nintendo Switch) price, value & rarity
Behind the cuteness hide twitchy roguelike clashes where reading the Bishops' tells and dodging on the beat decides survival. Patterns chain fast, difficulty climbs, and the macabre-adorable art gives each duel a sharp personality that contrasts deliciously with the gentler cult-management loop surrounding it.
An underrated gem
It's easy to reduce it to its cute-occult art and its adorable lamb, but that overlooks how clever its structure is. The back-and-forth between procedurally built dungeon runs and the patient management of a flock of followers makes for a wickedly moreish loop. Lost in the flood of roguelikes, it stands out for a genre marriage rarely this coherent, and suits anyone who enjoys juggling twitch action and steady organization.
A questionable morality
Beneath its adorable looks, the adventure is about founding a cult, indoctrinating cute little animals, demanding their devotion and, on occasion, sacrificing a few to grow stronger. We tend this flock of followers with the clear conscience of a caring shepherd while exploiting it shamelessly. The contrast between the charming art direction and the opportunistic-guru mechanics is downright delightful.
Is Cult of the Lamb still worth playing in 2026?
Cult of the Lamb pulls off an unlikely marriage between Animal Crossing-style community management and a brisk action roguelite. Its cute occult-tinged aesthetic seduces at once, and alternating dungeon purges with tending your flock creates a moreish rhythm. The action half stays a notch below the genre's benchmarks, and repetition eventually creeps in over time. But the strong visual identity and dark humour give the title a rare personality. For anyone after an original, polished roguelite, it is well worth the trip.