PC (Steam), Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S
Fans of Forager , Stardew Valley players who want more machines, and Factorio veterans looking for a relaxing weekend vacation. Nova Lands
In the crowded world of automation and survival-crafting games, two titles often sit at the top of the throne: Factorio for its obsessive logistical depth, and Forager for its charming, zelda-like sense of discovery. In 2023, developer BEHEMUTT asked a compelling question: What if you took the conveyor belts of the former and the chill, island-exploring vibes of the latter? PC (Steam), Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series
Enemies drop "Hexes," which are essentially crafting ingredients for magical automation. Want a furnace that smelts twice as fast? That requires Fire Hexes. Want a droid that carries double the load? That requires Gravity Hexes. This forces you to engage with the combat system regularly, blending the action-RPG genre with the factory sim genre seamlessly. Let’s address the elephant in the room: Nova Lands is not Factorio . The logistical puzzles are simpler. The map is smaller. The endgame does not involve launching a rocket or calculating throughput-per-minute ratios. Want a droid that carries double the load
In most factory games, automation means building stationary machines connected by belts. In Nova Lands , while belts exist, the primary workforce is a swarm of tiny, customizable floating robots.
Players who want infinite scaling, hardcore survival mechanics (no hunger/thirst), or PvP. The Bottom Line Nova Lands doesn't try to reinvent the wheel. Instead, it replaces the wheel with a swarm of adorable robots that do the work for you. It is a joyful, low-stress, high-reward experience that proves automation games don't need to feel like a second job.