Mad Restaurant People
This game is fun and challenging at the same time.
The beginning starts “easy” but after the first levels you will see how stressfull the game can get.
Edit: I played through all of the levels, exept for the last two, which are in my opinion too hard to complete them.
– Real player with 30.1 hrs in game
Read More: Best Cooking Family Friendly Games.
Hell mode may become pleasantly challenging and skill-demanding.
– Real player with 29.3 hrs in game
Totally Convenient
In a small town filled with restaurants, the waiting time for people to get food is way too long. The answer? A conveyor belt, a set of weird machines and a skillful operator to make everything work. That’s totally convenient!
BRAIN-MELTING MULTI-TASKING EYE-HAND COORDINATION
Playable with only 4 buttons, you are in charge of controlling a set of machines attached to a conveyor belt and your goal is to make use of them at the right time to feed the customers. Keep an eye on the timer, the orders, the clients, the dishes… Don’t worry if you fail your first attempt, you can always retry later to improve your score.
SHORT SESSIONS OF FAST PACED GAMEPLAY
In each level, you have 45 seconds to fulfill as much orders as possible. The conveyor belt who brings the food won’t slow down, so your brain has to speed up in order to give every customers their dish of choice! Demanding and hungry clients will rate the restaurants based on your performances, so do your best to help them get the best rating possible.
EACH MECHANIC BRINGS A NEW CHALLENGE
Mechanics that seem easy at first sight might reveal themselves as more difficult than you expected. As you progress through the city, you will discover new restaurants and new ingenious machines to feed the clients as quickly as possible. However, each machine work differently and you will have to stay focus to satisfy the customers. With more than 75 differents levels, your nerves, your logic and your reflexes will be put to the test in many different ways.
CONTENT AND QUALITY : WHAT TO EXPECT
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A simple but enjoyable game, made with love with our humble skills
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Lots of short levels that you can replay for the fun of it or to improve your score
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Low poly graphics with funny homemade animations
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A focus on a quality experience, the game will be updated until customers are happy
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The pleasure of supporting the first commercial game of a gamedev :)
https://store.steampowered.com/app/1636070/Totally_Convenient/
Read More: Best Cooking Singleplayer Games.
Galactic Chef
Galactic Chef is a fast-paced cooking competition show game with procedurally generated ingredients and voxel-based cooking simulation. Your dishes are scored by alien judges on flavor, texture, ambition, technical execution, and the unique requirements of each challenge. Can you make it to the finale and win the ultimate title of Galactic Chef?
Procedurally Generated Content
Each season of Galactic Chef comes with new ingredients, challenges, judge preferences, and NPCs who will generate never-before-seen dishes. Every game is unique if you want it to be, or you can share your RNG seed so you and your friends can play with the same ingredients and challenges.
Dynamic Simulation
Behind the pixel art is a complex voxel-based cooking simulation. The unique properties of each substance determine how voxels react to heat, moisture, damage, and more. Solids can melt, liquids can boil, and you can even sculpt your foods in 3D with the laserboard.
Tastelize Everything
You Tastelizer will tell you everything you need to know, from flavor balance and texture variety to hazards you’ll need to address before serving the food. Just don’t use your actual tongue - we don’t know how many of these ingredients are toxic to humans.
Beat the Clock!
Each challenge lasts 5-10 minutes, so you’ll have to think fast to plan and execute a better dish than your opponents within the time limit.
Unlockable Content
Every season you win will earn you new prizes - new equipment, guest judges, ingredients, kitchen skins, and more. No DLC, no microtransactions.
Read More: Best Cooking Sci-fi Games.
inbento
a really lovely little puzzle game with cute theming and a cute story to go with it ♥
I completed about 90% of the puzzles in inbento on mobile over a handful of hours before my attention was pulled to other things - I’m happy to be supporting the team by buying a second copy on PC for a couple dollars to finish up those last few levels and see the ending.
– Real player with 15.6 hrs in game
This is one of the best puzzle games I have ever played. Not my ### 1 but definitely in my top 5. While there were a few levels I found frustrating enough to need a guide, it wasn’t too many (4-5) and I was able to work out the solutions of most puzzles on my own. Some really good puzzles in this mix. It’s a unique approach to how you solve puzzles in this game, but it also feels like a natural evolution from the developer’s previous title Golf Peaks. Looking forward to their next game.
– Real player with 11.8 hrs in game
Cupcake Remember
– Real player with 0.3 hrs in game
Campfire Cooking
A perfect little puzzle game with a lot of variability and increasing challenge! Took me about 20 hours to 100%. A perfect game for anyone who likes puzzle games even a little bit, or anyone who wants to work on something while listing to a video or podcast.
– Real player with 21.2 hrs in game
This is a nice lil indie puzzle game I picked up a while ago and I’m ready to write my review on it. The concept is pretty simple so this review won’t take too much of your time.
The story is a grandfather is taking his grandchildren camping. The kids come up with a way to make camping more interesting by toasting the marshmallows in a very particular way.
Campfire Cooking is a neat puzzle game in which you have to figure out how to toast both sides of a marshmallow on both of its sides. Each stage is in a grid like pattern and will have different hazards and challenges. As you complete each world, you will unlock new play style options. For example, on the first world, you can only move metal sticks left to right, up and down. However, on the second world they introduce wooden sticks in where you can now rotate the sticks and now the puzzles become slightly harder.
– Real player with 16.3 hrs in game
CooKing
Help. I do not know which combination is needed for Pancake Soup in this game
Edit says
Never mind. Some guide helped me figure it out but now I don’t know which combination is needed for French Toast
– Real player with 11.2 hrs in game
I believe cooking only takes time away from eating (not to mention the shopping before and washing up after), but was happy to finally see a food-based puzzler that isn’t time-management nonsense.
cooking is very similar to doodle god, but with actual sense, not just combining random stuff to create more random stuff. at least that’s what I thought at first, then blamed myself for being a big-time eater with zero idea about cooking, then realized that part of my being dumbfounded is because everything consists of 2 or 3 ingredients, which may sound easy, but it really isn’t.
– Real player with 3.8 hrs in game
Ramen or Jail
No one said the Forest Justice System was great.
After a questionable arrest, the judge gives you an ultimatum: It’s Ramen, or Jail. You can pay off your debt to society working at the local ramen shop (which the judge just happens to own… so that’s a little questionable too) or spend the next 70 years in the slammer. And since raccoons typically only live three to four years, well, there doesn’t seem to be much of a choice.
Serve piping hot bowls of soup to the woodland customers and chip away at your fines so you can earn your freedom in this combination Match 3/Restaurant Management game from Weekend Panda. Grab ingredients, fill orders, and don’t be against giving out a freebie or two if your patrons start to get impatient! After all, unhappy customers mean unpaying customers, and it’s profit-or-prison for this plucky raccoon… Good luck.
Neon Noodles - Cyberpunk Kitchen Automation
So much that I like about this game. I liked the idea of Overcooked, but it was always too frantic for me and in Neon Noodles I like taking time to plan and be an efficient chef. Designing the layout and instructions is intuitive and works well even with a controller. The UI is clean and clearly communicates, while still looking really good. Building something that works first, and then optimizing it based on the 3 categories (roughly space, time, and complexity) adds additional challenges. It makes me want to cook all of these delicious recipes.
– Real player with 13.3 hrs in game
Selecting to play a new game from the main menu screen will take you to the level screen. Choosing to continue a previous game from the main menu will take you to the game level you’re currently on. On the first level Sliced Avocado, you’ll be welcomed to Neon Noodles! From here you’ll continue an existing program and be instructed on what to do. You will also get more information as you progress through the levels.
– Real player with 10.9 hrs in game
Automachef
While I recommend the game, take it with a grain of salt. Automachef is a perfectly palatable automation game, straightforward to understand and encompassing the Conveyor Belt Spaghetti type of logistics. However, it has a lot of half-baked ideas that just take up space in the pantry and don’t add much, if anything, to the game.
For instance, kitchen disasters are something you have to deal with eventually, such as fires and infestations. However, because one of these occurring typically ruins a recipe AND reduces your reputation (if it hits 0 you fail the level) it spoils the level anyway, so the machines that fix these problems (doubly so as they will almost certainly happen more than once) won’t save you from a restart. An extra helping of shame goes to the Sprinkler which puts out fires but ruins ingredients in its radius.
– Real player with 50.0 hrs in game
Have you ever wanted a game that mixes both cooking and coding to create meals in the most efficient way? I didn’t think I did either. That was, until I started playing through Automachef.
Automachef is an indie puzzle game developed by Hermes Interactive and published by Team17. In it, you take control of a human trying to create automated kitchens using the tools at your disposal. You aren’t alone though, as you have a trusty sidekick who is definitely a human named Robert Person. He helps to introduce you to a lot of the game’s core mechanics, along with talk about his plan to feed the world. That plan definitely does not involve taking over the human race as he is definitely one of us. All jokes aside though, here’s what I thought of Automachef.
– Real player with 29.3 hrs in game