![spacechem gameplay spacechem gameplay](https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/spacechem/images/8/8f/Challenge_-_Going_Green.png)
The game is available on Windows, Mac, and Linux, with a demo on the website for all. Aways bear in mind that youll require an input direction to start each option. Then it even starts to get more complex when you move to an overworld view and have to arrange multiple reactors with their own inputs and outputs for an end result, when timing starts to become an issue on multiple levels. All without having any of the atoms from any molecules touch each other or the sides. But it slowly starts to grow in complexity, going from Split the NaCl molecule from Alpha, take the Chlorine atom and combine it with a single Hydrogen which you split from H2O to create HCl and drop it off in Gamma. Take an oxygen atom from Alpha, combine it with another to create O2 and drop it off in Gamma. You have two tracks (Red and Blue) which can overlap with each other, and the main goal is to assemble the required molecule using what's on the Input side and drop it off on the Output side.
![spacechem gameplay spacechem gameplay](https://jeuxpc.cloud/uploads/posts/2020-12/1607894426_spacechem-wallpaper-5.jpg)
Your tools to make the molecules are a list of commands that you can lay down on a track (Pick up, Drop off, Turn Left, Rotate, etc) which a small moving piece called a Waldo runs on and executes the command as it passes over it. So the game grid has two sides, Input and Output, and they are divided into two units each as well, separated out by quadrant (Alpha, Beta, Gamma and I don't remember) in what's called a Reactor.
![spacechem gameplay spacechem gameplay](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Z62eYFssmq4/maxresdefault.jpg)
So I'm a long time fan of puzzle games, and today Ladies and Gentlemen I'm going to give a bit of a bump to the independent game I just learned about tonight.īasically, in the game you play a molecular engineer and your job is to make the required molecules for your company.