
While chances are you can puzzle out a solution, Infinifactory, like all Zachtronics games, is about doing so as smartly and elegantly as you can, with as few blocks as possible to maximize efficiency. Other puzzles will add wrinkles to the formula by requiring you to, say, set up a point that welds two types of crates together. Hit again to turn things off, and hold to fast forward. When you hit, the factory turns on, and so does all the machinery you've placed.

Make sure you're paying attention to the symbols on the teleporters so that you're only sending each one the type of crate that matches it. Most levels revolve around setting up ways to get crates to the appropriate teleporters in the required numbers. they need to be attached to something to stay up in the air, for example. Note, however, that blocks are still beholden to the laws of gravity. Left-clicking places your current equipped block on the highlighted area your cursor is pointing at, while right-clicking destroys blocks, and tapping and will rotate the block you have highlighted. Holding left will display all available blocks, and allow you to equip different ones by clicking their icon, or assign them to numbered hotkeys. You'll do this by placing different types of blocks, such as the conveyor blocks you can link up in tracks to move things around.
INFINIFACTORY REVIEW SERIES
After the tutorial, the game is broken up into a series of levels where your goal is to meet the conditions by crafting a machine that delivers things where you want them to go. hold the key down to fly higher, or hold left to fly down. Tapping the once lets you jump, while holding it activates your jetpack. Infinifactory is actually played from a first-person perspective, with you exploring with or the keys, and using the mouse to look around and interact. Infinifactory is fun, morbidly funny, and mentally engaging in the way few games ever manage, making it a fantastic puzzle experience for new fans and old.

It might sound like a bad situation, but look on the bright side. You're stuck in a tiny room with nothing to eat but food pellets, and nothing to do but solve the various puzzles and problems you're presented with from your monitor, which in turn zaps you to various alien locations to do so. reasons? Surprisingly, being burbled at in alien lingo isn't particularly enlightening, though the fate that could await you if you fail should provide sufficient motivation to learn.

While driving home one night from work, after spotting a bright light in the sky you find yourself aboard a spaceship, outfitted with a suit and a nifty jetpack, the apparent prisoner of a bunch of aliens who want you to. Currently available in Steam's Early Access is their latest title Infinifactory, which takes all those clever, cerebral puzzle concepts somewhere out of this world. Known for developing some of the smartest and most satisfying logic-based programming puzzles around, like The Codex of Alchemical Engineering and SpaceChem, they're creators of games that challenge you in the best possible ways. If you don't know Zachtronics, my friend, you have a wonderful journey ahead of you.
