When comparing Buildbox vs OpenBOR, the Slant community recommends Buildbox for most people. In the question“What are the best game engines for beginners and non-programmers?” Buildbox is ranked 18th while OpenBOR is ranked 33rd. The most important reason people chose Buildbox is:
Drag - and - drop editor without writing any line of code.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros

Pro Drag - and - drop editor
Drag - and - drop editor without writing any line of code.
Pro Easy to learn
Buildbox is a drag and drop engine, making it easy for beginners to pick up. There are many tutorials available to help get you started.
Pro Has many game templates
Buildbox has 20+ different game templates including templates for platformers, racing games and Flappy Bird clones.
Pro Built-in support for ads
You can add banner and interstitial ads from multiple ad networks, including AdMob, RevMob, Facebook. They can work with Amazon's, Microsoft's, Google's and Apple's app stores.
Pro Develop once publish everywhere
Exporting iOS/Android/macOS/Windows/Steam/Amazon
Pro Cross-platform
Pro With a bit of tweaking, it's also possible to create a platformer
It's possible for a non-programmer who is comfortable with text-based designing to tweak the engine in order to create a platformer. Almost all the parameters needed can be found in the OpenBOR wiki, so it's easy to find anything a new developer needs.

Pro Great genre-specific engine
OpenBOR can quickly help create a good Beat-Em-Up game without programming.
Pro Great, supportive community
OpenBOR community is highly active and very helpful.
Cons
Con Incredibly Expensive
$99/mo for full functionality probably makes this the least accessible piece of game development software in regards to price, all with a very limiting feature set.
Con You are restricted by it's limitations
For example, you can only make certain kind of games.
Con Not very powerful
You will be limited to using templates to build games.
Con Subscription Model
The two more reasonable price points limit the functionality of a software already far less powerful than many more cost effective alternatives.

Con Very expensive
Buildbox has a 15-day trial version, after that a $2675 license to use it must be bought.
Con Stability Issues
The software has stability issues on Windows, with the preview window causing program crashes when simple functionality is added.
Con Text-based parametric editing
Heavy reliance on text-editing. No visual editor to edit characters and levels (although there are a few community-built ones that do the job).
