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Kickstarter Tabletop Alert: Put Your Dice to Work in ‘Fantastic Factories’

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Fantastic Factories cover

Time to get to work! Create the best pipeline to manufacture goods, and you’re headed for success. Train up your workers, gather resources, and build some Fantastic Factories.

What Is Fantastic Factories?

Fantastic Factories is a dice-placement game for 1 to 5 players, ages 14 and up, and takes 45 to 60 minutes to play. It’s currently seeking funding on Kickstarter, with a pledge level of $29 for a copy of the game. I’ve played with both adults and kids (as young as 11) and I think it’s easy enough to learn that younger kids—especially those with a little gaming experience—shouldn’t have any trouble picking it up.

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Fantastic Factories components
Fantastic Factories components. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

Fantastic Factories Components

Note: My review is based on a prototype copy, so it is subject to change and may not reflect final component quality. Most of the artwork is complete, but there were some cards that weren’t complete. Also, the dice spaces on the illustrations will be a little more visible in the final version (as you can see in the images on the Kickstarter page).

  • 28 dice (4 red, 4 blue, 4 green, 4 yellow, 4 purple, and 8 white)
  • 50 Energy tokens
  • 30 Metal tokens
  • 85 Goods tokens
  • 4 Tool tokens
  • First Player token
  • 78 Blueprint cards
  • 18 Contractor cards
  • 5 player boards
  • 5 Player Aid cards
Fantastic Factories utility buildings
Utility buildings produce resources—energy or metal. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

The blueprint cards have great, colorful illustrations, and for the most part are fairly easy to understand. Each card has building costs in the top left, prestige values in the top right, and an effect at the bottom. Some cards have spaces to place dice on them; the types of dice required are marked both in the spaces and in the effect area below. There are a few of the illustrations—like the Motherlode shown above—that really make me smile: let’s mine for metal by attaching a drill to an upside-down space shuttle! I sort of wish there were more of the goofy illustrations, but I still like the more conventional buildings, too.

The prototype I received looked very polished—clear iconography, good illustrations, and fairly simple resource and goods tokens. I expect the finished version will look very similar, with only a few minor adjustments and completed illustrations.

How to Play Fantastic Factories

You can download a draft of the rulebook here.

The Goal

The goal of the game is to score the most points by building valuable buildings and manufacturing goods.

Fantastic Factories market setup
The market area setup: contractors (top) and blueprints (bottom). (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

Setup

Shuffle the blueprint cards and deal 4 to each player. Give each player a player board, a set of 4 colored dice, 2 energy, and 1 metal. Choose a player to be first player and give them the first player token.

Place the tool tokens in a row and deal one contractor card below each one, and then deal 4 blueprint cards face-up in the market area. Place the two decks nearby, as well as the resource and goods tokens and the white dice.

Gameplay

Each round has a market phase and a work phase.

Fantastic Factories contractor cards
Contractors may give you resources, cards, or even extra dice. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

During the market phase, each player in turn order may either take a blueprint card from the market (for free) or pay to hire a contractor. To hire a contractor, you must discard a blueprint card from your hand that matches the tool token next to the card. Some contractors have additional costs that must be paid. You may, before taking a card, spend 1 resource (metal or energy) to clear one of the rows and replace the cards.

After taking a card, replace it from the top of the deck.

The work phase is simultaneous—everyone can do their actions at the same time. First, everyone rolls their dice, and then may use their dice and resources to take actions.

Fantastic Factories player board
Spend dice on your player board to draw cards or gain resources. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

Your player board has 9 slots for dice, which will allow you to research, mine, or generate:

  • Research (any value die): draw 1 blueprint card for each die placed
  • Mine (values 4, 5, 6): gain 1 metal for each die placed
  • Generate (values 1, 2, 3): gain energy equal to the value of the die placed

In addition, there are matching bonuses: if you place a pair of the same number in the same action, you get 1 extra reward; if you place three of the same number, you get 2 extra. In the photo above, the two (different) dice placed in “research” allows me to draw 2 cards. The single die in “mine” gives me 1 metal. The dice in “generate” give me 2 energy each because that’s the value of the dice; in addition, because I placed a pair, I gain 1 extra energy as a matching bonus.

Fantastic Factories training cards
Training cards let you spend energy to manipulate your dice. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

To build a blueprint from your hand, you will need to spend the resources shown in the top left corner and discard a second blueprint card that has a matching tool icon. For instance, to build the Dojo shown above, you would need to discard another blueprint with the orange gear icon and spend 1 metal.

Each building may only be used once per work phase, and typically you may only build one of each blueprint unless otherwise specified. There are many different types of buildings:

  • Training buildings let you manipulate your dice.
  • Utility buildings produce resources.
  • Prestige buildings are just worth points.
  • Production buildings produce goods (and sometimes other bonuses).
  • Special buildings have various effects, from gaining extra dice to giving you building bonuses.
Fantastic Factories work phase
I’ve used my Aluminum Factory to generate goods (and metal), my Power Plant to generate energy, and “research” to draw cards. The extra white die came from activating my Robot. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

During the work phase, you may take your actions in any order. You can build blueprints, activate building effects, and use your player board to gain cards and resources.

Most buildings have some sort of cost to use, whether in resources, cards, or dice. For dice, the card will generally show what numbers are required—you might need a pair of matching dice, or a single die of a particular value, or three dice that hit a particular total.

Fantastic Factories prestige buildings
Prestige buildings are just worth points. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

The work phase ends when everyone is done with their actions. Everyone must discard down to 12 total resources and 10 blueprint cards.

Pass the first player token clockwise, and start a new round!

Game End

The game end is triggered when somebody has produced 12 points of goods or built 10 buildings. Finish the current round, and then play one more full round, and then the game ends.

Total up your points from goods and buildings (the yellow hex at the top right of the cards)—the highest score wins. Tie-breakers are leftover metal, then energy, then blueprint cards in hand.

Fantastic Factories production buildings
Production buildings make goods, which are worth points. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

Solo Rules

There are solo rules included as well. You play against the Machine, which starts with a set of blueprint cards. You’ll play your turn as normal, using white dice, and the Machine will use a set of five different colored dice, which will indicate which card it takes from the market and whether or not it produces goods. Your goal is to score more points than the Machine, which has slightly different scoring rules than usual.

Fantastic Factories designers Joseph Chen and Justin Faulkner
Fantastic Factories designers Joseph Chen and Justin Faulkner (from Kickstarter video).

Why You Should Play Fantastic Factories

If you’ve attended a game convention in the past couple years, you might have seen these two guys wearing hard hats. Joseph Chen and Justin Faulkner, the designers of Fantastic Factories, have been working on the game for a few years now, running demos and playtests, getting feedback, and refining it. All that work really shows: Fantastic Factories hits that tricky balance of being easy enough not to overwhelm your casual gamers, but with enough depth to keep your strategy gamers engaged.

I like that the rules themselves are pretty simple. The market phase is usually very quick, because each player will only take one card, and then you get to the meat of the game. Because the work phase is simultaneous, it means that a lot of the strategizing and planning happens all at once, which keeps the game at an hour or less without sacrificing meaningful choices during play.

And there are a lot of decisions to make. If you’ve got bad luck with dice, maybe you build several different training facilities so that you can re-roll, flip, increase, or decrease dice. If you like engine-building, maybe you’ll hit on a great combination of utility and production cards that you can use as a pipeline to make goods. Or, maybe you just pour all of your workers into harvesting resources so you can build high-value prestige cards.

Fantastic Factories special cards
Special cards have a variety of effects. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

Because the game end is triggered when somebody reaches 10 buildings, you do have to balance how many 0-point buildings you create. There are a lot of really helpful powers that can get you more resources or cards or even dice, but many of those buildings aren’t worth points in themselves. It’s not enough just to amass resources—you need to spend them wisely, too.

Likewise, it doesn’t help to build a bunch of production facilities if you can’t generate the resources (or roll the dice) to run them. Since many of the production facilities require sets of dice to activate, you’re limited by the number of dice you have (4, unless you have bonuses), which means that you might not be able to use all of them in the same turn. But having a variety does give you flexibility if you can’t manipulate the dice rolls.

And I can’t stress enough the importance of getting blueprint cards. Every building you build requires you to discard a matching blueprint card, as does every contractor you hire. You’ll often find yourself wishing you could build every card in your hand and wanting to hire a contractor, but you simply can’t. In addition to managing your resources, you have to manage your cards. Sometimes you may take a blueprint during the market phase just so you can get a particular tool symbol into your hand, regardless of the building itself.

Fantastic Factories game in progress
Game in progress. (Prototype shown) Photo: Jonathan H. Liu

One criticism that may come up, depending on your gaming group’s preference, is that it doesn’t have a lot of direct player interaction. The market phase is drafting from a common pool, so there can be some competition over specific cards, but once the work phase begins, nothing you do really affects anyone else. The game is a race, not a battle. For players who love engine-building games and getting their pipeline up and running, Fantastic Factories is a great fit. If you want to be able to throw a wrench into somebody else’s gears? Well, that might be coming in the future…

I’ve played the prototype several times with a variety of players—there have been really close games, with somebody winning by a single point, and there have been games with a wide point spread at the end, but I’ve had fun each time. I like the way that my kids have been able to play against adults (and hold their own: my 11-year-old won a game against three other adults, and once I came in third in a game playing against four other kids).

Although the gameplay is pretty simple, the strategy isn’t. You’ll get better as you learn what types of cards are available in the decks, because then you can try to plan out supply chains. If you like games that involve logistics, Fantastic Factories is right up your alley. I’ve enjoyed trying out different approaches: going for prestige cards, looking for building bonuses, trying to produce goods right from the start. It’s fun to see all the different ways people approach the game.

For more information or to make a pledge, visit the Fantastic Factories Kickstarter page!


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Disclosure: GeekDad received a prototype copy of this game for review purposes.

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