Totally Convenient

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

  • A simple but enjoyable game, made with love with our humble skills

  • Lots of short levels that you can replay for the fun of it or to improve your score

  • Low poly graphics with funny homemade animations

  • A focus on a quality experience, the game will be updated until customers are happy

  • The pleasure of supporting the first commercial game of a gamedev :)

https://store.steampowered.com/app/1636070/Totally_Convenient/


Read More: Best Cooking Puzzle Games.


Totally Convenient on Steam

Cooking Simulator

Cooking Simulator

| Game type | Cooking Simulation |

| Story | - |

| Graphic | ★★★★★ |

| Fun | ★★★☆☆ |

| Difficulty | ★★☆☆☆ |

| Play time | ★★★☆☆ |

Real player with 48.5 hrs in game


Read More: Best Cooking Sandbox Games.


A well designed DLC and enjoyable progression. The problem is that it relies heavily on cutting things into certain size pieces which is nothing short of infuriating. I enjoyed it at first, but as I got more recipes with annoying cutting requirements it just ruined the experience. Also trying to pour 5ml of liquid is annoying as well. At home I use a measuring cup so if I pour too much I can correct it. In game I have to use the mouse and time it right or get gotcha’d. I hate the cutting, and the physics can be annoying when you are moving around with plates and things fly off or bang into the wall. Gameplay that relies on the cutting mechanic ruins this DLC. The Pizza DLC was such a nice step forward, this one would be as well if the cutting was changed or removed.

Real player with 18.1 hrs in game

Cooking Simulator on Steam

Hot Pot VR

Hot Pot VR

I bought this game based on some of the reviews, but I will start off by saying this is THE BEST VR cooking game on the market, if you’re into simulation with a little bit of arcade. It reminds me of when I was in kindergarten playing with one of those life-sized toy kitchens with my classmates.

It’s not as intricate/frustrating as Cooking SImulator can be, but still PLENTY of recipes, ingredients and cooing techniques to keep you busy in EA. This is early access but it really is varied with lots of different recipes from all over the globe and feels satisfying in VR. I haven’t had it that long and the dev has made some QoL improvements thus far and I’m sure it’ll only get better. I highly recommend this game if you like Cooking Simulator and Overcooked.

Real player with 13.4 hrs in game


Read More: Best Cooking Casual Games.


Amazing idea, near amazing execution (so far). Now, I know it is an Early Access game, but sometimes it can be a bit weird. Sometimes, when cutting a piece of meat for example, it will have a really small piece I can cut, but the biggest piece is not possible to cut. Other than small nitpicks like that, this game is amazingly built and can only go up from here.

Real player with 6.2 hrs in game

Hot Pot VR on Steam

Chef: A Restaurant Tycoon Game

Chef: A Restaurant Tycoon Game

This game is quite entertaining if your into the idea of managing a restaurant. Keep in mind, when I mention the negatives, that this game is still being worked on and not even at version 1 yet. I find that the game has a bit of charm and every update addresses something that I feel the game is missing. At first the game seems to progress quickly, giving you lots of skill points and new missions rather quickly, this really helps get you into the game, as there are some tedious issues when your just starting out. At first, you’ve got a lot to do before you can open your restaurant and, as mentioned, that can make the start seem a little slow going and dull. Also, the flow of the game might take some getting used to in order to start making a profit, but it shouldn’t take too long to get the hang of it.

Real player with 379.8 hrs in game

No, not yet. I wouldn’t recommend this to a friend until it delivered more on the depth of creating a successful Menu. For me that’s really the attractive and interesting part of playing this game which separates it from any other kind of similar simulator. That turned out to be a much shallower pool than what I had hoped to find in the game as I progressed.

The system in place for the way that you create a menu item I don’t like at all. You essentially have a talent tree system with points you spend on from XP gained during your shift. each tier such as Starter, Main, Dessert, etc has its own branch in the talent tree to spend your points in. to unlock new recipes to customise you spend your points here to unlock templates that you can customise. The game gives you a lose definition of the dish; it must contain X percent of your Protein, it must meet X criteria of fat, this many vegetables, this much seasoning. The problem for me is that kills the concept entirely.

Real player with 105.4 hrs in game

Chef: A Restaurant Tycoon Game on Steam

Galactic Chef

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.

Galactic Chef on Steam

Neon Noodles - Cyberpunk Kitchen Automation

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

Neon Noodles - Cyberpunk Kitchen Automation on Steam

Mad Restaurant People

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

Hell mode may become pleasantly challenging and skill-demanding.

Real player with 29.3 hrs in game

Mad Restaurant People on Steam

Dangerous sea area

Dangerous sea area

It is big, empty, and tedious.

Building a single piece of foundation takes 30 swings of the hatchet plus crafting time for the planks.

There is literally no point to any of it.

The description below is copy pasted from Survive 2 Thrive.

Play something better.

https://youtu.be/BEHNUQbwUCs

Real player with 0.3 hrs in game

Dangerous sea area on Steam

Make the Burger

Make the Burger

Short version: Basically, this is a fun little game, and given how cheap it is you’re going to get a decent value for your money.

It’s not without it’s faults… And those faults can be annoying, but at the end of the day it’s fun, I enjoyed it for a while, it costs as much as a small snack and lasts way longer.

Something that’s interesting about this game is that your currency is happiness - there’s a money score but that’s just your high score. You buy things with happiness points. Which doesn’t make a lot of sense but is an interesting game mechanic I suppose.

Real player with 16.1 hrs in game

I enjoy the game concept, and actually found myself a bit addicted to serving everyone and unlocking more ingredients. Everyone watching me play and myself couldn’t get over how fast customers walk up, order, sit down, and leave in 10 seconds. I understand wanting a layer of challenge, but we were all like “wow chill why you leaving?” I think if they added the option of a “zen” mode where it isn’t too crazy that would be nice. It becomes almost impossible to keep up. Also, i like having to remember the orders but if they could add maybe a notepad or tickets of the pending orders like a real food truck that would be both realistic and helpful. Hope they have an update soon. Otherwise just felt like a good mobile game on a PC.

Real player with 4.9 hrs in game

Make the Burger on Steam

Don’t Cut Your Hand 2

Don’t Cut Your Hand 2

Its not a bad game. Its actually pretty fun. Some things could be explained better, like right-clicking on a plate to remove items. Also, theres a couple bugs. One of them makes it impossible to beat the game because it won’t give you the right ingredient to finish a recipe. Overall, I feel like I had enough fun for my $2.

Real player with 1.5 hrs in game

Lovely

Real player with 0.6 hrs in game

Don't Cut Your Hand 2 on Steam