The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Now Prue gets paid thousands... to blow up her own baking!

- By Katie Hind and Ian Gallagher

COMPETITIO­N in the Bake Off tent may be genteel, but the success of the Channel 4 cookery show has helped Prue Leith to become the face of a new mobile game in the Clash of Clans series.

The 80-year-old chef has signed a six-figure deal with the makers of the app, which is wildly popular with children.

Clash of Clans, which is played on smartphone­s, involves building a medieval village and amassing an army of wizards and barbarians to fight rivals online.

Created in Finland, it is the highest grossing mobile game of the decade.

It’s makers created a village called Logmas for her to bake – complete with biscuit warriors – which was then turned into an animated trailer and blown up. In a video released on YouTube – and already watched 15million times – she is shown making the village in gingerbrea­d to promote the animated game, whose creators spotted her growing young fanbase.

Writing beside the video on her Twitter page, which has 60,000 followers, she wrote: ‘Tis the season to be jolly ... well in most villages but not this one! #Logmas #clash ofclans #clashroyal­e #ad.’ In the video, shot in her kitchen, she says: ‘I’m Prue Leith and today we’ll be baking a traditiona­l Logmas gingerbrea­d village.’

She is then seen decorating characters and weapons, adding: ‘A little icing on the sword, nice, and on the cannon.’ The village is destroyed at the end of the animated battle – and she eats one of the characters.

Last night, a spokesman for Ms Leith declined to comment.

The game has attracted controvers­y. In 2014, a US paedophile was jailed after flying to Britain to abuse a 14-year-old girl he had groomed while playing it.

 ??  ?? BISCUIT BATTLE: Prue’s village, left. After it blows up, centre, she eats a character, right
BISCUIT BATTLE: Prue’s village, left. After it blows up, centre, she eats a character, right

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