Fury of the Elements Review: When Tactical Card Combat Gets Thrilling

Review by Lincoln Hoppe: The Game Bard

INTRO

Sometimes you think you don’t like a specific genre of games, and then along comes a game that makes you think, wait a minute! Now let’s be clear – you may already love this world of LCG, TCG, BCG, GG, ABC, etc. battling card games. I don’t dislike this genre, I just don’t really love it. Give me Eurogames, tokens and meeples.

But this two-player elemental strategy game from Time Infinite Games grabbed me with its tactical directional, card-based combat and that brilliant moment when the entire deck’s tactics reverse with the flip of a single card each turn.

This is a paid collaboration with Time Infinite Games, but the opinions are my own.

“It’s like the elements themselves are having an argument, and when they can’t agree, they just flip the whole world around. It’s awesome.”

Fury of the Elements board game components showing elemental cards with directional arrows on neoprene play mat

GAME OVERVIEW

Fury of the Elements is a tactical two-player card game where you play elemental cards onto a grid, trying to capture your opponent’s cards through strategic combat. The cards you capture become your points at the end of the game.
Each card features power levels from 1 to 4 and directional arrows indicate where they can attack and defend. The game follows an elemental hierarchy: Fire beats Earth, Earth beats Air, Air beats Water, and Water beats Fire. You’re essentially positioning weapons on a battlefield where each card becomes a mini fortress with specific attack and defense points.
The game offers two modes: Fury mode (5-10 minutes on a 3×3 grid for learning basics) and the full experience (45 minutes on a 5×5 grid with spell cards, Elemental Titans, and the Void).
Black Forest board game components showing resource wheels, wooden meeples, and medieval artwork by Uwe Rosenberg

CORE MECHANISM DEEP DIVE

Here’s where Fury of the Elements gets absolutely crazy. When two equal power opposing elements clash – Fire vs Air or Water vs Earth with the same number – instead of capturing each other, both cards stay on the field and something magical occurs. The entire elemental hierarchy flips upside down!
Fire used to beat Earth? Now Earth beats Fire. The player who caused this chaos also gets rewarded with a powerful clash spell card. It’s like the elements themselves are having an argument, and when they can’t agree, they just flip the whole world around. It’s awesome.
This elemental flip mechanic is genius, doubling the strategic possibilities of each deck and turning your entire strategy inside out multiple times per game.
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GAMEPLAY & SCORING

The tactical puzzle starts with a blank grid, and each player adds to the complexity as they place cards. When you create an affinity match by lining up three or more cards of the same element (regardless of which player owns them), you’ve disrupted the elemental balance.
The darkness strikes back by summoning a void card to consume a card on the field. Each void card corresponds to a specific grid space like A1, B3, C2. When placed on top of a unit, that card gets consumed and sent to the corruption zone – unless it’s a power level four card, which is immune.
You can track which spaces have already been consumed and calculate the odds of where the next void might strike, turning every elemental match into a calculated risk. In my game with designer Mark Symanski, I had several turns where I pushed my luck and watched my cards get gobbled up by the void. It was electrifying!
Best Eleven 2025 board game components showing soccer player cards, manager boards, and formation layouts for strategic tableau building gameplay

COMPONENTS & EMOTIONAL IMPACT

The graphic design feels a little old-fashioned to me, but the elemental character art on each card and the Titans are fantastic. The neoprene play mat keeps the grid clean and easy to pick up, and those directional combat arrows on each card are clear and functional.
What really grabbed me was the emotional journey. I found myself genuinely thrilled by the risk-taking with the Void. There’s something delightful about being punished for pushing your luck, and the power clash mechanic creates these incredible “everything just changed” moments that keep you on the edge of your seat.
Best Eleven 2025 board game components showing soccer player cards, manager boards, and formation layouts for strategic tableau building gameplay

VERDICT

Fury of the Elements seems perfect for tactical gamers who love spatial puzzles, people who want TCG-style combat without the deck building commitment, and anyone who enjoys games where the rules can dramatically shift mid-game.
Who might not find this game a good fit? People looking for deep narrative and story, those who prefer cooperative experiences, and people who hate cards. You probably should not be reading this if you hate cards lol. 
I really enjoy how this game is fairly easy to learn, but the tactics keep getting deeper as you add spell cards, Elemental Titans, and the Void. It’s great having the option to play a quick 3×3 game or dive into the crisp challenge of the full 5×5 mode.
At its core, the strategic puzzle is dynamic and challenging. Surprisingly, I found Fury of the Elements thrilling – and I don’t use the term “thrilling” often. The power clash mechanic, the looming specter of the void, pushing my luck and being punished, and diving into a game I didn’t think I’d like only to be completely won over – that’s just fun.
If this sounds exciting to you, you must check out Fury of the Elements!

 

 

Video Preview/Review Link

by Lincoln Hoppe

 

Original Music by Lincoln Hoppe: The Game Bard

 

This is a Paid Kickstarter Preview. The opinions are my own.

 

Publisher: Time Infinite Games

Designed by:

Art by: A-Ravlik, Mat Gimeno

Board Game Geek Page: Fury of the Elements

My Board Game Geek Page: Lincoln Hoppe

 

Lincoln Hoppe

Lincoln a professional film & Television actor based in Los Angeles, California.

He has a family with 5 kids, and one of his joys in life is playing games together as a family.

He's on a mission to spread the love and mental health benefits of play and board gaming to the world.

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