Satisfactory is coming to consoles on November 4, Coffee Stain Studios has announced. The arrival of the game’s console ports will mark a major milestone for the hit project following nearly a decade’s worth of development, and it likely won’t be the end of the road for Satisfactory.
A Satisfactory screenshot taken with the game’s photo mode introduced in the 1.1 update. It shows a character sitting on a concrete structure, with a factory being visible in the distance. A semi-transclucent variant of the game’s logo is visible in the foreground.
One of the biggest indie success stories in recent history, Coffee Stain’s factory building sim originally launched in early access in March 2019. Over half a decade later, Satisfactory version 1.0 was released in September 2024. Around that time, Coffee Stain announced it was shifting development resources toward the game’s console versions.
Satisfactory Console Edition Gets a Release Date
The Swedish studio has now revealed a concrete release date for the game’s console editions, committing to launching them on November 4. Apart from the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S, Satisfactory will also be released for Sony and Microsoft’s last-generation consoles, even though both the PS4 and Xbox One are pushing 12 nowadays. The day-one ports will launch with the Satisfactory 1.1 update, offering the same content currently available to PC players.
Satisfactory Console Ports Will Include Platform-Specific Features
The upcoming console versions of the factory management sim will offer multiple platform-specific features, including the ability to suspend games. The PlayStation 5 port will also take advantage of the DualSense controller’s haptics and integrated speaker. Both sets of consoles will offer cloud saving support as well. Cross-play will also be supported from day one, though it will be limited to PlayStation and Xbox users, with the PC version still treated as completely separate.
Satisfactory logistics highway
As is typical for modern console games, Satisfactory will feature several graphics modes, including Quality and Performance, targeting 30 and 60 frames per second, respectively. A Balanced mode will also be part of the package, targeting 40fps as a compromise between the two. Coffee Stain has not specified whether supported modes will vary by console, though such differences seem likely, with last-generation hardware potentially limited to 30fps due to performance constraints.
Since leaving early access, Satisfactory has received multiple minor patches, as well as the major 1.1 update, which rolled out in June 2025. Coffee Stain has yet to clarify what the game’s roadmap will look like following the release of its console ports, though it has given no indications that it intends to stop working on Satisfactory. Under these circumstances, update 1.2 appears likely. In the meantime, console players interested in large-scale factory building may find the upcoming release worthwhile, finally giving them a chance to play one of the highest-rated games of 2024.