![]() ![]() I just hope this game doesn't over take my actual real world love for cooking because it's so hard to put down. The international foods are really cool too. I like how I can build and upgrade my own restaurant too. The only limitation is my imagination, so I try to go over the top trying different mixes as well as cooking utensils. The game has a lot of ingredients and I get to just mix and match and try all different sorts of recipes. ![]() Aside from that it truly helps me improve my cooking skills as ridiculous as it may sound. Cooking Fever is a lot of fun and best of all it's very, very addictive. In my spare time I'm also reading about recipes and also just playing cooking games on apps from my iPhone. Yes, I watch all the cooking shows, Top Chef, the restaurant ones, and my favorite Iron Chef. I've gotten so much into making my own dishes as well as trying to replicate some dishes I've w atched on TV. I pride myself as an amateur chef from my own kitchen. I’ve been really impressed with how David Galindo managed to pull all of this off.Īs it was the case with the first game, Cook, Serve, Delicious! 2!! too is an amazing mix of casual and hardcore that should appeal to anybody with hands and a keyboard (it can be played with a mouse or a gamepad, but with a keyboard is just so much funnier).By Russell Stanley reviewed on March 14, 2019 The player’s restaurant of the first game is now the arcade/hardcore mode, and most of the day-to-day game is spent working in pre-built restaurants with fixed menus.Ĭompleting them unlocks new restaurants to work in, and an astounding amount of furniture to decorate our own restaurant. On top of all this, there are a ton of different dishes to prepare, including a lot of sides which grant tips and increase the customers patience, and a sort of “story” mode (for lack of a better term). This slows down the pace of the game a bit, but it works surprisingly well all the same.Īt the same time, some of the more annoying dishes (damn kebab skewers) and tasks of the first game have been streamlined, and they are now both funnier and more realistic. Now almost every preparation is nested in multiple pages, each resembling a separate step of the preparation.įor example, to prepare a pizza we could need:Įven if we already knew the keys for all the ingredients, we are still forced to change page, sort of to simulate a sequence in the preparations. In the first game, we had something like the lasagna, which required strictly ordered sequences of PSCR ( pasta, sauce, cheese, pa rmesan). ![]() Cook and serve delicious, fluffy rice in minutes with the Donabe. And it feels amazing.Īnother big change is that now most dishes require a certain order of preparation. Color: 1 Black, 1 White - Dimensions (per mug): 6.02 x 5.20 x 5.08 in - Capacity (per. You enter in a zen state, and start hitting keys by muscular memory and reflexes only. You don’t get many customers, and you can afford mistyping some ingredients, or missing some orders.īut as the difficulty level increases, you get more and more customers simultaneously, and with much less patience waiting for you to prepare their food.Įventually, the game is so fast that you can’t really think of what you’re doing anymore. T is tomato, C is cheese).Īt first is kinda relaxed. Customers come in and order something, and you prepare it by hitting keys on the keyboard (each key is an ingredient, e.g. But just play it for five minutes and you’re hooked forever.įor those who don’t know what the hell I’m talking about, Cook, Serve, Delicious! is an arcade/hardcore restaurant simulator. Neither the title, nor the visuals, nor even the premise, were really that enticing. That game wasn’t really something you’d buy just by stumbling upon it on Steam. Hit the road in this massive sequel to the million-selling Cook, Serve, Delicious series as you travel across the United States to participate in the Iron Cook National Foodtruck Championships with your trusty robot crew Whisk (voiced by negaoryx) and Cleaver (voiced by havanarama). If I recall correctly, I obtained a Steam key of Cook, Serve, Delicious! directly from its developer, David Galindo, during a giveaway on NeoGAF, and it was an astounding surprise. Cook, Serve, Delicious 3 Normal price: 15.49. I’m sure people who know me have been pestered by my enthusiasm and excitement for hardcore typing games such as The Typing of The Dead: Overkill and, especially, Cook, Serve, Delicious!, one of my favourite games of all times. ![]()
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