CloverPit turns you into a demonic Mr. Jackpots
[Evil Kyle MacLachlan voice] HELL-OOO-O-O-O-O!!!!

There has been an absolute deluge of "it's this thing you know but it's a roguelite now" games over the past few years. But as Balatro has already proven, if it's done well, even roguelite Solitaire can be fun. Well, how do you feel about slot machines? And how do you feel about Satan? Great with both? Well then you should probably take a look at CloverPit.
CloverPit is the Balatro of gambling games. And maybe that sounds a bit reductive, but they really are remarkably similar in how you should think about breaking them.
The idea with CloverPit is that you're a human trapped in a room that's about three times the size of your body. You stand in the middle and in front of you sits a bloody slot machine filled with wheels depicting clovers, cherries, bells, lemons, diamonds, treasure chests, and, of course, Lucky 7s.

Behind you is a phone where you can unlock powerful perks, a computer that acts as an encyclopedia, and a store where you can purchase lucky charms that can add multipliers and other bonuses to your pulls. And to your right is essentially a coin-slot ATM, which displays your debt and your current interest (based on how many coins you've given to the machine this run.
And under your feet is a trap door to hell.
Anyway, the goal of the game is simple. You have three rounds with the slot machine each deadline, and a certain amount of debt you must pay off once your three rounds are up. If you can make your payment, you move on to the next, more expensive deadline. If you can't make a deadline, you get dropped into the pit and get to start all over again.