
XenoBloom
If Conway's Game of Life ever made you wish you could tweak the rules mid-run, XenoBloom scratches that itch, but its thin content ceiling will stop most players cold within two hours.
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 XenoBloom
My instinct when I loaded up XenoBloom was to treat it like a systems puzzle, something to reverse-engineer until I had a reproducible build order. The core idea is legitimately clever: cellular automata govern whether each organism lives or dies, so the screen is essentially a Conway's Game of Life variant where you get to meddle with the ruleset. You draw soil, adjust water, sunlight, and oxygen levels, and watch pixel flora either colonise the screen or collapse. That emergent behaviour loop has a real pull to it in the first thirty minutes. The three main modes carve out meaningfully different experiences. Normal mode functions closest to a light god-game, where you harvest mature plants for "power," spend that power to unlock new organisms and shift environmental conditions, and try to maximise total biomass on screen. Scientist mode hands you direct control over the cellular automata parameters themselves, making it a pure sandbox for anyone who wants to stress-test ecological rules. Observer mode strips your input entirely and cranks random events to ten times the standard rate, turning the whole thing into a passive screensaver with a pulse. A later-added Deduction mode asks you to answer questions based on what you observe in the ecosystem, which nudges the experience toward something almost educational. That range is genuinely commendable for a solo indie project. Where XenoBloom struggles is depth past the initial discovery phase. The behaviour toggles, things like switching a species between Hostile, Solitary, and Friendly, are documented so poorly that several Steam reviewers spent multiple hours unsure whether changing them did anything at all. The tutorial amounts to a handful of hints and then silence, which reads less like intentional mystery and more like an unfinished onboarding pass. Community feedback from launch pushed for basic tooltips and a proper introductory window, and it is worth checking the current build to see how much of that has landed. The modding support the developer flagged is a bright spot if you are willing to dig into it, but the vanilla content runs dry fast. For the strategy-and-sim crowd I normally write for, the honest comparison is something like a stripped-down Equilinox or a very early-stage Ecosystem sim. The cellular automata engine underneath is the most interesting thing in the room, and if you have ever lost time watching a Game of Life pattern evolve, you will find at least an hour of fascination here. The problem is that a proper sim gives you levers that matter at the two-hour mark and beyond. XenoBloom's levers feel thin by then, and the mixed Steam reception reflects that tension between a genuinely novel engine and a content layer that never fully caught up to it. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Vista or later
- Memory
- 2 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 250 MB available space
- Processor
- 2.0 Ghz
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 7+
- Memory
- 4 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0c
- Storage
- 250 MB available space
- Processor
- 2.7 Ghz
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on XenoBloom.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- IBOLOGY LLC
- Publisher
- IBOLOGY LLC
- Release Date
- Sep 23, 2015