Compare Dream Factory prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by The Tambourine. Published by The Tambourine. Released on 11/2/2015. Available on PC. Genres: Indie, Simulation, Strategy, Early Access.

When a movie studio sim sounds this ambitious on paper, the spreadsheet part of my brain lights up. The reality check arrives fast: this one never left alpha.

I want to like Dream Factory. The concept has genuine teeth for a strategy-minded player: build a studio from scratch, hire and level up a roster of over 30 character types with individual traits, write screenplays, shoot films across multiple genres, run marketing campaigns, and manage actor contracts while dealing with on-set nervous breakdowns and the occasional on-set fatality. That loop, on paper, is closer to a management sim with real systemic depth than the usual idle-clicker dressed up in a film-reel aesthetic. The historical arc from the Lumiere brothers era through to a speculative near-future is a genuinely interesting structural hook, and the ironic tone toward Hollywood cliches could have been a pleasant counterweight to dry resource management. I wanted to run those numbers. The problem is that almost none of it is actually delivered in the product you can launch today. Community feedback from day one was unambiguous: core building placement functions failed the majority of the time, fast-forward speed did not work at all, save states broke after releasing your first film, and the financial model produced results that defied any coherent logic. Those are not polish issues. Those are foundational systems that never reached a functional state. The Steam page itself carries a developer warning noting that no updates have been communicated for over a year, which, combined with a review score sitting below 15 percent positive across a small sample, tells you everything you need to know about where development momentum went. From a strategy-depth standpoint, there is nothing to evaluate here, because the depth never materialized. The feature list promised over 200 hangar objects affecting film characteristics, more than 1000 scenario variations, character skill progression with school and training facilities, and a full actor contract system. In practice, buyers received an alpha build where even starting a new game could trigger a crash. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no active community patching the gaps, and no tutorial to respect or disrespect because the game cannot reliably get past its own front door. Games like Game Dev Story or Two Point series prove the genre has a healthy player base hungry for exactly this kind of systemic creativity. Dream Factory simply is not a functional entry in that category. The honest summary for anyone considering this: the ambition was real, the execution was not, and the developer has been silent for years. This is not an Early Access game still finding its footing. It is an abandoned project that remains on sale. Sim and strategy players who want a movie industry management game have far better options that are both complete and actively maintained. Spending time here is not a calculated risk on a rough gem; it is betting on a production that wrapped without finishing the second act. Diego, Scout Team

Dream Factory
IndieSimulationStrategyEarly Access

Dream Factory

Nov 2, 2015The Tambourine
GamerScout Says

When a movie studio sim sounds this ambitious on paper, the spreadsheet part of my brain lights up. The reality check arrives fast: this one never left alpha.

PC
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Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Dream Factory

I want to like Dream Factory. The concept has genuine teeth for a strategy-minded player: build a studio from scratch, hire and level up a roster of over 30 character types with individual traits, write screenplays, shoot films across multiple genres, run marketing campaigns, and manage actor contracts while dealing with on-set nervous breakdowns and the occasional on-set fatality. That loop, on paper, is closer to a management sim with real systemic depth than the usual idle-clicker dressed up in a film-reel aesthetic. The historical arc from the Lumiere brothers era through to a speculative near-future is a genuinely interesting structural hook, and the ironic tone toward Hollywood cliches could have been a pleasant counterweight to dry resource management. I wanted to run those numbers. The problem is that almost none of it is actually delivered in the product you can launch today. Community feedback from day one was unambiguous: core building placement functions failed the majority of the time, fast-forward speed did not work at all, save states broke after releasing your first film, and the financial model produced results that defied any coherent logic. Those are not polish issues. Those are foundational systems that never reached a functional state. The Steam page itself carries a developer warning noting that no updates have been communicated for over a year, which, combined with a review score sitting below 15 percent positive across a small sample, tells you everything you need to know about where development momentum went. From a strategy-depth standpoint, there is nothing to evaluate here, because the depth never materialized. The feature list promised over 200 hangar objects affecting film characteristics, more than 1000 scenario variations, character skill progression with school and training facilities, and a full actor contract system. In practice, buyers received an alpha build where even starting a new game could trigger a crash. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no active community patching the gaps, and no tutorial to respect or disrespect because the game cannot reliably get past its own front door. Games like Game Dev Story or Two Point series prove the genre has a healthy player base hungry for exactly this kind of systemic creativity. Dream Factory simply is not a functional entry in that category. The honest summary for anyone considering this: the ambition was real, the execution was not, and the developer has been silent for years. This is not an Early Access game still finding its footing. It is an abandoned project that remains on sale. Sim and strategy players who want a movie industry management game have far better options that are both complete and actively maintained. Spending time here is not a calculated risk on a rough gem; it is betting on a production that wrapped without finishing the second act. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayertrading-cardstier:sub-5Abandoned Early AccessMovie Studio ManagementActor ManagementFinancial SimulationStudio BuilderHistorical Progression

Steam Deck & Linux

Steam Deck Playable

Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows XP SP3
Memory
256 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
76 MB available space
Graphics
Nvidia GeForce 6600GT
Processor
AMD Athlon X2 7750 or Intel Core 2 Duo E6700
Additional Notes
Mouse

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Reviews & Ratings

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Game Info

Developer
The Tambourine
Publisher
The Tambourine
Release Date
Nov 2, 2015

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Price History

2026-06-102.49(lowest)

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Frequently asked questions about Dream Factory

How much does Dream Factory cost?

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What platforms is Dream Factory available on?

Dream Factory is available on PC.

When was Dream Factory released?

Dream Factory was released on 2 November 2015.

Who developed Dream Factory?

Dream Factory was developed by The Tambourine.