
Factory Planner
If you keep a mental throughput table while watching conveyor belts spin, Factory Planner was made for you. The card-link format is genuinely fresh, but Early Access roughness is very real right now.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Factory Planner
I've been poking at factory builders long enough to know when a UI gimmick adds actual decision-making versus window dressing, and Factory Planner's card-linking system earns its keep. Instead of dragging belts across a grid, you wire together Facility, Organization, Engineer, and Resource cards by connecting their input and output nodes. Link an Iron Mine card to a Miner card and ore starts flowing. Connect the wrong node types, misread a capacity limit, or forget to route power from a thermal generator, and your whole line goes into red alert. That cause-and-effect loop is tighter than it sounds on paper, and the first few hours of tracing bottlenecks back to a single mismatched card connection have real satisfaction to them. The progression arc runs from wood and iron all the way through sulfur and uranium, with a technology tree gating advanced machines. Engineer cards are the real wrinkle: you slot them into production or storage units to boost throughput, reduce energy draw, or unlock new recipes, but the assignment only kicks in after the current production cycle completes. That one-cycle delay forces you to plan assignments before problems arrive rather than firefighting after the fact. It is a small mechanic with large strategic implications, and players who enjoy squeezing marginal efficiency gains will get genuine mileage from it. The alert dashboard, which tracks active card counts, engineer assignments, and the in-game Facredit currency, keeps information accessible without burying you in menus. Now for the honest part. Community feedback since the January 2026 Early Access launch has been mixed, and the recent review trend is sliding toward that mixed label on Steam for a reason. Performance is the loudest complaint: users with older hardware report significant frame drops and input freezes once card counts climb past the low hundreds. A 25 percent efficiency bump per building upgrade has also been flagged as too marginal to justify the material cost, and the card limit cap frustrates players chasing the genre's usual promise of unlimited scaling. Perhaps the bigger concern is that update cadence appears to have stalled after February 2026, with community threads questioning whether active development is continuing. For an Early Access purchase, patch velocity matters as much as the base design. That said, if you approach this as a low-pressure sandbox rather than a deep-scaling automation sim, the experience lands differently. There are no enemies, no timers, and resources respawn indefinitely, so you cannot brick a save by making the wrong production choices. The free prologue, Factory Planner: First Sparks, is still live on Steam and collected very positive reception on its own, which means you can validate the card-link feel before committing to the paid Early Access build. Anyone who bounced off Factorio because of combat pressure or Satisfactory because of the three-dimensional layout will find this 2D card canvas less intimidating to start. The gap between what Factory Planner is right now and what it could be with consistent patching is visible and frustrating. The core card-linking design has real legs. The throughput logic, engineer assignment timing, and power distribution through splitter and merger cards give a strategy player enough to chew on. But the optimization issues and the uncertain update schedule make this a conditional recommendation at best until Lebleby Games demonstrates they are back in active development. Try the free prologue first. If the card-link click feels right, the Early Access build adds more progression, just be prepared for rough edges that may or may not get smoothed out on a predictable timeline. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
Steam Deck & Linux
Valve rates this game Steam Deck Playable.
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 10 x64 (Version 1909 or newer)
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 6 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 960 (2048 MB) / AMD Radeon RX 470 (2048 MB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-4670K (4 * 3400) / AMD FX-8350 (4 * 4000)
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10 x64 (Version 1909 or newer)
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Storage
- 6 GB available space
- Graphics
- GeForce GTX 960 (2048 MB) / AMD Radeon RX 470 (2048 MB)
- Processor
- Intel Core i5-4670K (4 * 3400) / AMD FX-8350 (4 * 4000)
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Factory Planner.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Lebleby Games
- Publisher
- Red Axe Games
- Release Date
- Jan 19, 2026