
To put it simply, playing Dungeon Bowl is almost identical to playing the second (and current) season of Blood Bowl. Despite the lower price, fans of the Blood Bowl franchise would be better off just investing their money in the older Blood Bowl Legendary edition.Finally at the bottom of the box we have all the dungeon tiles, dice, tokens and bases for your minis. Getting a match usually involves carpet bombing challenges to the few players that are listed and hoping that one accepts. Community involvement is still very light, which makes getting in matches difficult as there is not usually a lot of players on at any one time. Room-by-room design takes a long time due to scrolling through the list of pieces to work with. The dungeon maker is surprisingly robust, a lot of options are available to allow the community to make some very detailed and involved maps, but the list system used for elements makes it difficult to jump between elements, which lends towards picking an element and adding it dungeon-wide before moving on to the next element. Interested in fielding an all Halfling squad? Maybe just adding Elves, Undead, Orcs, or Lizardmen to your team? Nope. The team customization is limited to three "colleges" to choose from, and are made of predefined players/races. There are no single player and campaign modes. The game is multi-player only, either online, over LAN, or as hot seat games.

The game is multi-player Dungeonbowl is the next step in the Blood Bowl franchise on PC, but it is a step backwards instead of forwards. Dungeonbowl is the next step in the Blood Bowl franchise on PC, but it is a step backwards instead of forwards.
