Compare Industry Empire prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Actalogic. Published by rondomedia GmbH. Released on 7/30/2014. Available on PC. Genres: Simulation, Strategy.

Production-chain promise, execution problems. Industry Empire has over 160 goods and a land-purchase system that sounds smart on paper, but a hostile UI and shallow decision loops undermine it fast.

My spreadsheet instincts were primed the moment I read about raw-material extraction feeding into factory processing, which then routes finished goods by truck to regional cities. That loop, on paper, is exactly the kind of multi-stage supply chain I want to spend an evening optimizing. Industry Empire is part of Actalogic's German 'Der Planer' lineage, a series that drifted from pure simulation toward economic strategy over successive releases. The pedigree exists. The execution, however, does not hold up. The game gives you sandbox, scenario, and tutorial modes to start with. The scenarios include objectives like rescuing a region from bankruptcy or modernizing aging infrastructure, which should create focused pressure and meaningful decision points. The tutorial gets you through the basics logically, walking you through the research tree, land acquisition, and production setup step by step. But it uses static text boxes and golden arrows throughout, and it communicates about as warmly as a tax form. For newcomers to economic sims, that first impression is going to be punishing, and the game never really compensates with later clarity. The production side has genuine width. Over 160 industrial products span lumber camps, mining operations, and processed goods that feed further up the chain. Traffic actually creates delivery delays, which means route planning matters and is not purely cosmetic. You can automate a good portion of the micromanagement once you understand the flow, and a small number of players who stuck with it found genuine satisfaction in the mid-to-late-game production juggling act. Those are real positives. The problem is structural: the skill system gates industries you actually want behind grinding through industries you do not want. The supply chain distribution only moves goods when an active sell order is in place, meaning you cannot warehouse stock and wait for better market conditions, which kills any real commodity timing strategy. Roads are locked to straight lines regardless of terrain. The UI is dense, button-heavy, and not intuitively arranged. These are not rough-edge complaints; they are core design decisions that close off the kinds of strategic choices that make this genre worth playing. The broader community verdict landed at roughly 32 percent positive on Steam across 175 reviews, and critics largely agreed the game felt dated against its own release year. The comparison that keeps coming up is Transport Tycoon, a game roughly two decades older, which illustrates just how far short Industry Empire falls on depth and feel. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch content that restructured any of these systems, and developer activity on the forums went quiet without a meaningful patch roadmap. For strategy and sim players who have exhausted stronger titles in the genre and are specifically curious about the production-chain angle, the game is technically functional and runs without crashes. For anyone else, the hours-to-satisfaction ratio is not defensible when alternatives exist at comparable or lower price points. Diego, Scout Team

Industry Empire
SimulationStrategy

Industry Empire

Jul 30, 2014Actalogicrondomedia GmbH
GamerScout Says

Production-chain promise, execution problems. Industry Empire has over 160 goods and a land-purchase system that sounds smart on paper, but a hostile UI and shallow decision loops undermine it fast.

PC
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $1.97

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

Screenshot

About Industry Empire

My spreadsheet instincts were primed the moment I read about raw-material extraction feeding into factory processing, which then routes finished goods by truck to regional cities. That loop, on paper, is exactly the kind of multi-stage supply chain I want to spend an evening optimizing. Industry Empire is part of Actalogic's German 'Der Planer' lineage, a series that drifted from pure simulation toward economic strategy over successive releases. The pedigree exists. The execution, however, does not hold up. The game gives you sandbox, scenario, and tutorial modes to start with. The scenarios include objectives like rescuing a region from bankruptcy or modernizing aging infrastructure, which should create focused pressure and meaningful decision points. The tutorial gets you through the basics logically, walking you through the research tree, land acquisition, and production setup step by step. But it uses static text boxes and golden arrows throughout, and it communicates about as warmly as a tax form. For newcomers to economic sims, that first impression is going to be punishing, and the game never really compensates with later clarity. The production side has genuine width. Over 160 industrial products span lumber camps, mining operations, and processed goods that feed further up the chain. Traffic actually creates delivery delays, which means route planning matters and is not purely cosmetic. You can automate a good portion of the micromanagement once you understand the flow, and a small number of players who stuck with it found genuine satisfaction in the mid-to-late-game production juggling act. Those are real positives. The problem is structural: the skill system gates industries you actually want behind grinding through industries you do not want. The supply chain distribution only moves goods when an active sell order is in place, meaning you cannot warehouse stock and wait for better market conditions, which kills any real commodity timing strategy. Roads are locked to straight lines regardless of terrain. The UI is dense, button-heavy, and not intuitively arranged. These are not rough-edge complaints; they are core design decisions that close off the kinds of strategic choices that make this genre worth playing. The broader community verdict landed at roughly 32 percent positive on Steam across 175 reviews, and critics largely agreed the game felt dated against its own release year. The comparison that keeps coming up is Transport Tycoon, a game roughly two decades older, which illustrates just how far short Industry Empire falls on depth and feel. There is no mod ecosystem to speak of, no post-launch content that restructured any of these systems, and developer activity on the forums went quiet without a meaningful patch roadmap. For strategy and sim players who have exhausted stronger titles in the genre and are specifically curious about the production-chain angle, the game is technically functional and runs without crashes. For anyone else, the hours-to-satisfaction ratio is not defensible when alternatives exist at comparable or lower price points. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementstrading-cardstier:sub-5Production ChainTycoonEconomic SimScenario ModeTruck LogisticsLand AcquisitionResearch TreeSandbox Mode

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows Vista/7/8
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 8.0
Storage
450 MB available space
Graphics
Graphics card with minimum 256 MB (GeForce 7600 GT series, comparable or higher)
Processor
Dual core CPU 2.4 GHz (or higher)
Sound Card
Sound card

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Industry Empire.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Actalogic
Publisher
rondomedia GmbH
Release Date
Jul 30, 2014

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

Price History

2026-06-101.97(lowest)

More from Actalogic

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Looking for more? See games like Industry Empire

Frequently asked questions about Industry Empire

How much does Industry Empire cost?

Industry Empire pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock key and store offers across 50+ verified shops, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Industry Empire cheapest?

Compare Industry Empire prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Industry Empire available on?

Industry Empire is available on PC.

When was Industry Empire released?

Industry Empire was released on 30 July 2014.

Who developed Industry Empire?

Industry Empire was developed by Actalogic and published by rondomedia GmbH.