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Williams Lopez

Juegos De Cosina - 1 views

juegos de cocina cocinar comida cosina hacer

started by Williams Lopez on 21 Nov 13
  • Williams Lopez
     
    Serving the perfect meal in Cook or Be Cooked is a process that requires equal parts motion controls and careful planning. You start every meal with basic preparations, including chopping vegetables, pouring ingredients into a mixing bowl, or coating a pan with extra virgin olive oil. These tasks are executed with simple gestures like swiping down with all the Wii Remote to mimic a knife's chop, twisting it in circles to blend ingredients, and tilting it in multiple directions to allow juegos de cocinar flow evenly to uncoated parts of a pan. For the most part, these controls are extremely easy, but the way the sport combines these motions to convey the sensation of your meal coming together bit by bit keeps you feeling much like your work is really coming up to something.

    Adding some technique to those breezy motion controls will be the timing system. Each meal is made up of multiple dishes, most of which have to be served up nice and hot. That means you have to plan ahead and pace your cooking so the hot dishes all wind up at roughly the same time, ensuring that nothing gets cold about the serving plate as you finish up the rest from the meal. This keeps you thoroughly dedicated to your preparations, resulting in alert and dedicated to all the timers. There's also a scoring system that judges your technique and measurements at each turn, ranging from how quickly you can peel and dice garlic to how quickly you take pancakes from the griddle if they turn that perfect shade of golden brown. Much of this comes in the form of quick little pop-ups telling you how slow or great something was, though you can also hear the game's two hosts offering you constructive, mostly interesting feedback and finally a final analysis on the finished meal. That this wait for judgment can often feel quite nerve-wracking says a whole lot about how invested you become in these meals.



    This scoring system does a good job of alleviating the tedium of basic tasks and causing you to feel attached to the food, however the system isn't without its faults. It will score yourself on everything you do in and that comprehensiveness can seem to be downright absurd occasionally. Having a host tell you that the speed at which you punch in numbers with a microwave could "use some work" or getting negative feedback for adding pasta to boiling water a half second far too late goes a considerable ways toward ruining the illusion for being in a kitchen. Likewise, contrived minigames much like the rhythm challenge necessary to assemble a pan of lasagna also help ruin that feeling of immersion.



    The basic controls, like tilting the Wii remote to coat a pan with essential olive oil, go quite a distance toward feeling like you are in the kitchen.
    The meals you make in Cook or Be Cooked run the gamut from a simple plate of fried eggs and bacon to elaborate entrees like Tuscan lasagna and grilled ahi tuna having a Caribbean mojo sauce. Though the sport's visuals are not remarkable, the foodstuff itself looks realistic and appetizing, likely leaving your stomach rumbling with hunger once a meal is complete. Unfortunately, the "30+ recipes" advertised for the box actually figure to a paltry 12 in-game meals from which to choose. For example, the overly easy fried eggs and skillet bacon meal counts counts the eggs and bacon as two different recipes, that is still only one meal in the overall game no matter how much it pads the figure for the outside in the box.

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