APC Australia

Overcooked 2

A second helping of madcap meal-making.

- Chris Schilling

Like the original, Overcooked 2 is a cheerful, nonviolent co-op game that’s simple enough for the whole family to enjoy. It also happens to be one of the most stressful games you’ll ever play.

As before, your goal— whether you’re playing alone, or with up to three other chefs—is to successful­ly serve as many dishes as you can within four minutes: chopping, mixing, frying and steaming ingredient­s according to the recipe. There’s a wider variety of orders this time, including sushi and nuggets and fries but the processes themselves are still very simple. Multitaski­ng so you can fulfil as many orders as possible in good time is where it gets tricky. On top of that you’ve got stage hazards that force you to adapt your processes, and that’s when your careful planning starts to fall apart.

One of the big changes this time is that you can now throw raw ingredient­s, whether they’re fresh from the pantry or just chopped. Often it’s simply a useful time-saver, but sometimes you’ve no other option: on one stage, your ‘kitchen’ is actually two rafts hurtling down a river, while another forces you to lob items back and forth between a pair of hot-air balloons. Elsewhere, a rotating partition can split you up from a fellow chef, forcing them to pass over a half-completed dish so you can finish the job. It’s incredibly satisfying to find your range and lob a patty into a pan—or a tortilla directly into the hands of your partner to finish one final burrito with a second to spare. In reality, you’re as likely to end up inadverten­tly lobbing some tomatoes away in your confusion.

It’s a reminder that there’s a degree of awkwardnes­s baked into Overcooked that can frustrate, but is ultimately the making of it. The interface is far from perfect: each dish is a mass of icons, sometimes obscuring whatever’s in the space next to it. As such, it can be a struggle to tell when you’ve inadverten­tly taken a pan off the heat too soon, or why the game won’t let you put one ingredient on a plate with something else. But that’s the point. Kitchens are cluttered, chaotic places. If it was neater it wouldn’t be nearly as funny: there would be fewer moments where you accidental­ly put fried meat in the sink, or place a saucepan of rice in the wrong place and wonder where the cheese has gone.

Online play is slightly underwhelm­ing. The implementa­tion is fine— public and private matches are available in both the standard arcade and competitiv­e modes. But it’s not quite the same as when you’re sharing couch space and screen space with three others. Overcooked was made for good-natured bickering with people you know. As long as you’re cooking with friends, you’ll have a riotous time with a sequel that still offers one of the most deliciousl­y chaotic multiplaye­r experience­s on PC.

Verdict

Do you have a long online friends list, but are short of local multiplaye­r pals? This sequel was made for you.

 ??  ?? It helps to know where the fire extinguish­er is.
It helps to know where the fire extinguish­er is.

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