Battle Chef Brigade Reminds Us Why Food Games Are So Great
The best part of The Legend of Zelda: Breath of The Wild is the cooking. There’s something deliciously absurd in the sheer number of meals Link can make for himself. It’s more than roasted apple or maybe a steamed fish. With a simple cooking pot and a few ingredients, Link can make pies, omelets, soups, and risottos. After a difficult battle, Link can indulge in egg pudding, or something a little more filling like a hearty salmon muenière.
Despite my personal indifference towards cooking, I absolutely adore games about food. Food games are diverse in their gameplay and in their relationship to food. Games like Diner Dash focus more on managing a restaurant than cooking for one. Order Up! tasks players with creating speedy and delicious dishes for picky customers and climbing the rank from fast-food cook to culinary chef. The Cooking Mama series, meanwhile, walks players through the basic steps of food preparation, without all the pesky specifics. While some may view these games as menial time wasters, food games have proven themselves to be an incredibly creative genre.
Food games have flourished on the Internet in part thanks to sites like Kongregate or Shockwave. My earliest memory of a food game I played incessantly was called Taco Joe on Shockwave. Players must help Joe sell enough tacos to bribe the health inspector. Rather than cooking under a time limit, Joe cooked based off rhythm. Tacos move at a fixed speed on a conveyor belt, so players must add ingredients just at the right time before the taco surpasses that ingredient’s station. Customers all want the same type of taco, so players aren’t faced with specific orders, nor do the customers leave if players take too long. They simply have to stay in rhythm with the conveyor belt, which is easier said than done.
Taco Joe is a bit more innovative than other food games, which can be as identical as the vast as the thousands of hairstyling games geared towards young girls. Maybe you’ve played Papa’s Pizzeria, but you’re bored of pizza. Well, try wings (Papa’s Wingeria), or pancakes (Papa’s Pancakeria) or hot dogs (Papa’s Hotdoggeria). Tons of franchises, like Cake Mania, Let’s Get Cooking, or Diner Dash provide a steady stream of sequels to satisfy whomever wants a slight twist on an established format.
This isn’t to say most browser cooking games aren’t fun, but that they brought upon the sense that cooking games were casual time-spenders. Their stories are minimal, and their gameplay quick to learn. I will always love these games, and no matter how many times Papa comes out with a new game featuring a new food item, I will play them all. But in the past few years, the genre has only proved itself to be a form that means more than wasting a little time.