REVIEW · 2015-06-30

Infinifactory

SpaceChem in 3D — reading where the Steam reviews split on the final wall

Steam store ↗

Introduction

You play a human abducted by aliens, designing factories in first person from blocks and conveyors to assemble whatever your captors order. 'SpaceChem in 3D' is the developer's own line, and the first thing the review pool confirms. Made by Zachtronics, released 2015.

I write this from the Steam review pool. The label is 'Overwhelmingly Positive': 95% of 1,781 English reviews, and 2,348 of 2,472 across all languages (snapshot 2026-07-01). PC Gamer gave it 93. By the numbers, a unanimous classic — yet inside the pile there is a clear gradient.

That gradient depends less on quality than on which Zachtronics game you compare it to, and how far you mean to play. Praise for the opening and curses for the endgame live inside the same 95%.

Screenshot of InfinifactoryAssembling an ordered product in an alien factory — Steam store

First Impressions

Line up the helpful positives and the vocabulary rhymes: satisfying, earned, elegant, and 'it makes you feel like a talented designer.' Most cite watching a finished factory hum on its own, and cutting a 40-block solution down to four.

The negative side keeps returning to tedious, frustrating, a difficulty spike, and 'you can't set your own pace.' Notably, several reviewers who have played every Zachtronics game call this the hardest of the lot. The complaint is rarely 'boring' but 'it turns into something else late.'

What interests me is how often praise and complaint point at the same thing. One reviewer's 'meaty' endgame is another's 'unfair'; one's 'clean toolset' is another's 'too few blocks.' My job isn't to stage that fight but to translate where the verdicts fork into the language of design.

Screenshot of InfinifactoryA finished factory humming on its own — the pleasure reviewers keep naming — Steam store

Putting the Mechanics into Words

What the positives praise most is how small the toolset is. Two verbs, really — conveyors that carry and sensors that push on a condition; some note this pair alone is Turing-complete. In Puzzlebyrinth's terms, the verbs are subtracted hard, and the grammar of arranging them becomes the puzzle.

But 3D makes the grammar denser than SpaceChem's. A third axis appears, and when an assembled product straddles rollers pointing different ways, a priority question arises. The 'undefined behaviour' and 'weird edge cases' the negatives cite are the cells of that grammar the game never prints.

And solutions never collapse to one. Clear a level and you land in histograms for cycles, blocks, and footprint. The happy groan of 'my friend's solution crushed mine' is a player choosing to peer into the combinatorial explosion — SpaceChem's histograms, back in 3D. See SpaceChem.

Screenshot of InfinifactoryA production line built from conveyors and sensors — Steam store

Place in the Lineage

Nearly every review measures this against other Zachtronics games. For the positives, 'SpaceChem in 3D' is the highest praise; PC Gamer called it 'the most generous game Zachtronics has made,' opening SpaceChem's problem-solving to anyone who can place a block. I file it beside SpaceChem and Opus Magnum.

The negatives use the same ruler in reverse: play Opus Magnum or EXAPUNKS first and the block set feels thin; 'just play Factorio.' The argument isn't whether Zachtronics is good but which Zachtronics — itself a sign of how deep the lineage runs.

Placed in that line, its position is clear. Where SHENZHEN I/O went all-in on a language, this one went physical: a factory you build in first person. Same subtracted toolset, same histograms; what changed is which sense you optimise by — which is also why disappointment, when it comes, stays inside the family.

Screenshot of InfinifactorySpaceChem rebuilt in three-dimensional space — Steam store

The Texture of Difficulty

This is where opinion splits hardest, and it's about the kind of difficulty. Early and mid levels read as 'fair' and 'wide open' — the source of PC Gamer's 'most generous Zachtronics.' The trouble is the endgame: the final-chapter spike the negatives name in chorus.

Many point at one design: you can't fully set your own pace. Inputs arrive at a rate you don't wholly control, so you tune solutions to the machine's tempo. 'The endgame becomes busywork staggering the feed,' one writes. A second kind of time — waiting — is grafted onto calm logic.

To me it's a change of kind, not amount: the same spatial verbs, now demanding you sync to the machine's clock. The curve steps, late. And the first-person 3D makes some players ill — an observation-resolution problem; the reviews wishing for a top-down, Shapez-style view are pointing straight at it.

Screenshot of InfinifactoryLate game: tuning a solution to the feed's tempo — Steam store

Sources

Written by reading the Steam user reviews on the store page as of 2026-07-01. No review text is quoted directly; typical claims are reconstructed.

- Steam: Infinifactory (Overwhelmingly Positive, 95% of 1,781 English reviews; 2,472 across all languages)

- Read via WebFetch: the top ~10 helpful positive, ~10 helpful negative, and several recent reviews

- Press: PC Gamer (93/100)

Closing

Steam reads 95% positive, PC Gamer 93; my design-critique score is 8.6. The two core verbs are clear and the histogram scaffolding is superb. It falls a step short of Opus Magnum's 9.0 because syncing to the feed's tempo late-game muddies an otherwise pure design.

The pool's verdict is plain: a wide door, a high wall. Reviews put the main campaign near 20 hours, with optimisation uncapped. For anyone with the patience to peer into the histograms, it's a strong recommendation; for those who get motion-sick without a top-down view, or who bristle at waiting on the feed, it's out of reach. Rarely is a game this clear about who it is for.

Screenshot of InfinifactoryA later stage set against open space — Steam store

Reactions (no login)

Anonymous • one of each per visitor per day

Read next

FEATURED ESSAY · 2026-06-29

Steam Summer Sale 2026: 50 Puzzle Games by Price

A price-tiered guide to 50 puzzle and adjacent games for the Steam Summer Sale 2026 (Jun 25 – Jul 9). The nine flagship titles include discounts confirmed on Jun 30 (The Witness −80%, Talos 2 −75%, and more). Prices change, so confirm on the store.

Related reviews