Cooking City - Review
Cooking City

Cooking City

Advertisement

Fast paced cooking fever with endless restaurants and recipes

Cooking City takes the classic time-management formula and turns it into a vibrant culinary marathon, ideal for players who love fast reactions and strategic thinking. From the very first level, it throws you behind the counter of bustling eateries, asking you to tap, chain orders and keep impatient customers happy before they storm out.

The core loop is simple but highly addictive: prepare dishes, combine ingredients in the right order and serve them quickly to maintain combos and earn extra coins. As you progress through its more than 2,000 levels, you unlock new restaurants inspired by cuisines from around the world, each with its own menus, kitchen layouts and difficulty curve. The steady drip of new recipes — over 300 in total — keeps the experience fresh, encouraging you to upgrade ingredients and equipment to handle tougher crowds.

Events like Dinner Peak and the World Chef Leaderboard add a competitive layer, rewarding players who can withstand the most intense rush hours. The fact that Cooking City works offline after the first launch is a big plus for those who like to play on the go without worrying about connectivity.

However, the free-to-play structure comes with the usual caveats. Later stages can feel tuned to push boosters and premium currency, and some levels rely heavily on rapid tapping, which may become repetitive in long sessions. Difficulty spikes also appear when juggling multiple cooking stations at once.

Despite these flaws, Cooking City remains a polished and surprisingly deep cooking game, blending arcade-style reflexes with light strategy. For fans of restaurant management and quick-fire challenges, it offers countless hours of frenetic, flavorful fun.

package name

com.cookingcity.chef.kitchen.craze.fever

language(s)

English

available on

Android

from

MAGIC SEVEN