Have you ever played with Lego Technic or mechano where you spend hours building something like a vehicle or crane and enjoy just the minutes if not seconds or playing with it finished?
It's that on a wider scale, it's that part of the largely male mind that LOVES land management, taking some area of land, claiming it and making highly productive under your watch. It's why I can confidently say most of the men on this board would be happier if they had a garden big enough to grow things on.
It's pretty standard that you get more advanced functionality than simple A to B belts as you progress through those kinds of games.
Filters, splitters, programmable switches etc. Then there's separate fluids, logistics and power networks with their own tricks and restrictions to figure out too
They are technically restrictive in that there non-functional possibilities, that's the basic premise of an open ended puzzle game. But they're not restrictive in that there's not much you can do with them. After all a processor is just a handful of types of logic gates and an absurd number of connecting lines, which are the same basic tools as conveyor belt games.
Have you ever played with Lego Technic or mechano where you spend hours building something like a vehicle or crane and enjoy just the minutes if not seconds or playing with it finished?
It's that on a wider scale, it's that part of the largely male mind that LOVES land management, taking some area of land, claiming it and making highly productive under your watch. It's why I can confidently say most of the men on this board would be happier if they had a garden big enough to grow things on.
It's pretty standard that you get more advanced functionality than simple A to B belts as you progress through those kinds of games.
Filters, splitters, programmable switches etc. Then there's separate fluids, logistics and power networks with their own tricks and restrictions to figure out too
They are technically restrictive in that there non-functional possibilities, that's the basic premise of an open ended puzzle game. But they're not restrictive in that there's not much you can do with them. After all a processor is just a handful of types of logic gates and an absurd number of connecting lines, which are the same basic tools as conveyor belt games.
My brother-in-law is an appliance engineer, and he plays Factorio in his spare time. It's just his thing.