cooking
Gamertell Exclusive: Diner Dash: Grilling Green iPad trailer
The iPad’s international debut is May 28, 2010, and PlayFirst wants to be ready with Diner Dash: Grilling Green. The $4.99 app first made it’s US debut on April 1, 2010 on iTunes. PlayFirst is now localizing it so iPad adopters in the UK, Canada, Japan, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Switzerland will have something to play.
In order to help promote the forthcoming international Diner Dash: Grilling Green iPad release, a brand new trailer has been released. The video not only shows what Diner Dash: Grilling Green looks like in action, but also gives viewers an idea of what it’s like to actually play the game.
Check out the Diner Dash: Grilling Green trailer for yourself…
Club Nintendo updates rewards, adds Ultra Hand WiiWare title, Games & Watch 2 for DS
Nintendo recently updated its Club Nintendo rewards, adding a DS game, A WiiWare game and (yawn) another poster set.
Club Nintendo is Nintendo’s way of rewarding loyabl customers who also compelte surveys about their gaming experience. By inputting game and console registration codes, you earn Club Nintendo Coins that can be redeemed for Club-exclusive, Nintendo-themed products.
Gamertell Review: America’s Test Kitchen: Let’s Get Cooking for DS
America’s Test Kitchen: Let’s Get Cooking is more of a tool or resource than a typical video game.
For those who have played and are expecting a rip-off of the Cooking Mama games, America’s Test Kitchen is completely different. In Cooking Mama, you make the food in the game and get points according to how well you performed the steps whereas America’s Test Kitchen is really a cooking guide where the steps are given but all cooking actually happens in your physical kitchen.
Burger King’s Spongebob kids meal toys, Beach Party Cook-Off coupon
This must be the month to promote video games at fast food restaurants. If you head to Burger King for the next couple weeks, you can pick up a cheap Kids Meal with a Spongebob Squarepants toy and a video game coupon.
The coupon is for US$5 off THQ’s Cooking Mama-esque SpongeBob vs. The Big One: Beach Party Cook-Off for DS when purchased at Toys R Us. The game retails for $29.99 and was released march 3, 2009. The coupon is good April 6, 2009, through May 31, 2009, and is part of the mini booklet that comes with each toy.
As for the toys, there are 12 Spongebobs in the “set,” although the only differences between each toy is
Gamertell Review: Order Up! for Wii
Title: Order UpPrice: $39.99System(s): WiiRelease Date: July 22, 2008Publisher (Developer): Zoo Games (SuperVillain Studios)ESRB Rating: “Everyone” for Comic MischiefPros: It expands upon the “cooking” game genre by adding in restaurant management.Cons: Strange character art isn’t for everyone. Cooking can quickly become a chore. Instructions for using new items isn’t always provided. Occasional loading glitches.Overall Score: Two thumbs sideways, 70/100, C-, ** out of 5
Order Up! is a game that will often be mistaken for a Cooking Mama rip-off. While the minigames have some similar elements, they go in two different directions when it comes to gameplay and execution. Also, while Cooking Mama can actually be entertaining, Order Up! becomes quite tedious. Order Up! tries to be lighthearted and offer a new gaming experience but it gets old quick…
Click through for the full review!
Eat in tonight with Order Up!
The cavalcade of cooking games continues – Zoo Games has just released Order Up! for the Wii. The new game will allow players to multitask and focus not only on cooking, but also on manage a restaurant and hire more chefs to help out.
It seems like Order Up! is a collection of cooking mini-games, organized in a manner that offers some story for players. Perhaps it will impart a sense of purpose which the Cooking Mama games didn’t possess. The game comes with 80 different recipes to cook up and four different restaurants to manage.
Forget Rachael Ray: Why food games are so popular
Once upon a time videogames were all about blasting space aliens, breaking bricks, kicking ass as a ninja and/or saving a princess. Now, it seems like every activity imaginable has a videogame, from cheer leading to dog grooming to gardening. This is best exemplified by the insane popularity of cooking/food-based games, a genre that was practically single-handedly invented by a little DS game three years ago called Cooking Mama.
The title was immediately popular on the casual-friendly DS, and went on to spawn several sequels and tons of similar games, including other TV tie-ins like Hell’s Kitchen and Iron Chef, paved the way for more novel ideas like the cookbook software Cooking Navi, upcoming restaurant sim Order Up, and the more casual imitators, like the Cakemania series. Right now, cooking games are everywhere you look – you can hardly shake a rolling pin in a game aisle without knocking down something tasty-looking. But why the sudden kitchen invasion? I have a few theories.
Atari tells DS users they’ll be cooking with the Naked Chef
Cooking Mama frustrated quite a few people because it provided fun dishes to make, but never told exactly how they were created. Apparently Atari decided that it needed to remedy that situation, and it has – with the help of The Naked Chef Jamie Oliver. At E3 the company announced the forthcoming DS “game”, What’s Cooking? with Jamie Oliver. It will be available Winter 2008.
What’s Cooking? with Jamie Oliver is more like an educational program, with some occasional mini-games tossed in. There are 100 of Jamie Oliver’s recipes included in the game, with pictures of each one, voice recognition so you can find out what is next without having to touch the DS with dirty hands, a built in shopping list, cooking mini-games, the ability to put 100 of your own recipes in the game and the ability to share your personal recipes with others over the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection.















