In Cooking Mama 4, you can prepare over 100 new dishes with Mama, combine recipes, help Mama out around the house and even play with friends - all in stereoscopic 3D. To cook with Mama, just select the recipe you’d like to make and touch, slide, rub, or drag with your stylus on the Touch Screen (and maybe blow into the microphone) as.
'All the fun of cooking, without the washing up!' was Cooking Mama's famous tagline on many a TV advert back in the day - although it neglected to mention that the best part of cooking is eating what you've made afterwards... That said, pixels probably aren't the tastiest food imaginable, and neither, for that matter, is the 3DS, so maybe it's for the best.
In Cooking Mama 4: Kitchen Magic, due to the innovations of the 3DS system, this game provides new ways to play besides using the stylus.Some of the steps may include a magnifying glass on the top left corner that indicates that there is another way to play that step. Besides completing all recipes with a gold medal, finding all the ways by inputting new actions onto the steps is also. Cooking Mama 4 (EU) Number of Players 4 Genre Other, Puzzle Release Date. 20th Nov 2011 (USA) 25th Nov 2011 (UK/EU) 1st Dec 2011 (JPN) Series Cooking Mama Tags Food Controller Support.
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There's an awful lot of recipes on offer - and two hundred mini-games total.
Cooking Mama 4 is no drastic departure from past iterations - you choose a recipe, then tackle a series of Touch Screen-based mini-games centred around aspects of the preparation of said recipe. Whether it's whisking eggs, frying onions or washing persimmons; mincing meat, chopping vegetables or kneading bread, there's plenty of variety across the two hundred plus mini-games included - although you will find a fair few use decidedly similar concepts, just with different ingredients.
Upon starting the game, you're presented with six different options on the menu:
- 'Let's Cook!' is where the meat of the game is found, letting you select a recipe to play through
- 'Let's Combine!' lets you serve any two recipes alongside each other
- 'Let's Help!' gives you a few non-cooking related mini-games to try - vacuuming, recycling, putting away toys; that sort of thing.
- 'Let's Play Together!' is home to the multiplayer options, whether your friends own a copy of the game or not
- 'Mama's Gallery' has the various outfits, accessories, cookware colour schemes and kitchen décor you've unlocked
- 'Options' is where you'll find the demo-sending option, along with a few other things
The main part of the game takes part in the 'Let's Cook!' section, where you get to choose one of your unlocked recipes and work your way through it. Each recipe has multiple steps to it, which means only one thing - multiple mini-games, for each aspect of the preparation. There's a real range of recipes too, from Japanese gems like Natto and Tamagoyaki to Western favourites like Popcorn and Pancakes, along with ones you wouldn't think would take much like Toast and Rice. And by-gum Rice is more complicated than I'd ever imagined - first, you apparently need to 'Polish the rice!', which involves mashing it with a chopstick down the neck of a glass bottle, but if you go too fast, the chopstick flies out the top and you'll need to catch it before you can carry on. Then you need to 'Measure and pour it!', by using a machine that dispenses set amounts of rice, followed by you needing to 'Wash the rice!' by pouring water in from the tap, swishing it around a bit with your hands, then pouring the excess water out again. Then you need to measure out the correct amount of water from the selection of water bottles to fill the pot up to the indicated line. Finally comes the cooking, where you'll need to chop loads of firewood to put in the stove and get the flame hot enough to start the rice cooking... Five stages for a bowl of rice?? All I usually do is bung half a cup of rice, a whole cup of water and a pinch of salt into a pan, cover and walk off for ten minutes...
Mama Inc. Pancake makers - kind of disappointed we didn't have to flip pancakes in a frying pan...
Making pancakes had just as many steps as the rice did, and they're more complicated to make in real life (although they're still insanely easy). First you need to 'Break the eggs!' by tapping them on the side of the bowl to crack the shells, before tapping them over the bowl to release their eggy goodness into the depths below; after that, you need to 'Pour the wheat flour!' by filling three cups up to their (differing) lines, by tilting the bag of flour. Then you were tasked with having to 'Pour while mixing!', which is kind of false advertising, seeing as you don't actually pour the ingredients into the bowl at all - all you need to do is ensure you're not stirring them up (by scribbling round and round circles on the touch screen) when the time comes to add the sugar, milk, melted butter and vanilla extract. Next comes the time to 'Cook a feast!' by pouring the batter into a series of five pancake makers emblazoned with Mama's face - poke them to tip the mixture in, swipe down to close the lid, then wait until they beep/flash before swiping up to take out the cooked pancake. Having five of the makers is a bit like spinning plates, as you'll need to keep an eye on all of them - although, you can use as many as you think you can cope with, as there's nothing forcing you to use all five at once. Finally comes the gyroscope-using 'Balance the pancakes!' mini-game, where you need to balance a plate piled high with pancakes on the short trip to the table, either by tilting your 3DS or by tapping each side of the plate with your stylus.
For every recipe you successfully complete, you get a present or two, which is nearly always a new recipe, but there's also accessories, outfits and various kitchen-related colour-schemes to unlock too, which are all stored under the 'Mama's Gallery' section of the menu. Here you can change Mama's outfit, add hair bands, glasses and the like, as well as changing how your kitchen looks, from different designs for pots and pans, to new wallpapers and counters.
With 'Let's Combine!', you get to choose from a series of 'original' dishes - Pizza, Curry, Pancakes, Spaghetti, Toast, Soba, Udon and Rice - and then one of the recipes you've unlocked in the main game, and serve them alongside/on top of each other. First, we decided to go for a relatively safe option of Rice and Umeboshi, in which we were spooning rice into a series of bowls, before the Umeboshi dumplings dropped in on top when we were done. Then, just to be daft, we tried Pizza and Ice Lollies - which, much to our surprise and merriment, it let us do. Having a circle of plates on the table with a pizza on one of them, it was up to us to rotate the plates so that the pizza was directly below the incoming ice lollies as they fell from the sky, ready to be unceremoniously plonked on top of the pizzas.
Can't help wondering how long those ice lolly's will last, piled on a warm pizza like that...
They say a woman's work is never done, and the 'Let's Help!' hints at all the other stuff busy Mama's need doing besides cooking, and gives you the chance to lend a hand - by, you guessed it, playing a few mini-games. There's housework related activities like 'Use the vacuum!' where you're navigating a vacuum across a carpet littered with bits and pieces; and 'Use the duster!', where you need to repeatedly touch objects to dust them, but not to vigorously, lest they fly off the screen. There's one's where you need to put toys away, in a game of keepy-uppy by tapping teddies etc to bounce them across the screen to the toybox, and one where you need to unwrap a box by moving the stylus over them. With some seventeen activities to unlock, there's some stuff to do that's not related to cooking, although they do still seem rather similar in style.
Having starred in a whopping three DS main games, two Wii titles and four spin-offs tackling other pursuits, Mama's definitely had her work cut out for her - yet she's come back for another go, in Cooking Mama 4, the first 3DS game of the series. It's no real change from her previous outings - you're still mixing, chopping and frying foodstuffs in a variety of Touch Screen-based mini-games, but it still has it's place in your growing 3DS collection for short, simple, uncomplicated fun.
Format Reviewed: Nintendo 3DS
Cooking Mama 4: Kitchen Magic
by Lauren Ronaghan - December 15, 2011, 11:40 am EST
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'Don't worry! Mama will fix it!' I hope so, Mama. I hope so...
Mama has been around the block, with three DS games, two Wii games, and four spin-offs (including the baby-shaking epic Babysitting Mama). Her fourth mainline portable entry, subtitled Kitchen Magic, is the series’ 3DS debut, and outside of making use of 3D and the system’s controls, it’s not all that different from the predecessors.
That’s not that much of a bad thing, as the quick-paced mini-games are fun, even if some recipes seem to take forever to complete. The game takes real cooking techniques and gamifies them into timing-based games. The touch screen is primarily used to mix ingredients or cut them up with simple swipes. Occasionally, the system’s microphone and gyroscope are used, with the former being annoying and the latter being kind of fun.
The biggest problem with Cooking Mama is that everything feels the same. Yes, you’re using different ingredients to make different dishes, but they all require the same touch screen movements, performed in a similar rhythm. It never truly evolves throughout the 50+ included recipes. Performing these tasks is pretty intuitive (you can practice before you do it for real if you’re worried), but tapping furiously to dice vegetables can only be done so often.
Kitchen Magic does have two other modes, though, that attempt to vary things. One involves picking a previously unlocked recipe to mix with another dish. These are all unlocked at the beginning, and are short mini-games that allow you to make meals such as steak curry or corndog pizza. Additionally, unlockable mini-games, usually based around household chores, are available. They are all forgettable.
Cooking Mama 4 is nothing more than a new iteration of a played out series. This game is for fans of touch screen-based mini-games and references to cooking only. Oddly, despite the term being in the title, there is little actual learning about the craft. For most players, you’re better off skipping this title, as it is just more of the same.
Summary
Pros
- Gyroscope is fun
- Occasionally fun stylus-heavy gameplay
Cons
- Iterative
- Microphone is not fun
- Repetitious
- Tautological
Talkback
Game Profile
Cooking Mama 4 Nintendo 3ds
Worldwide Releases
Cooking Mama 4 3ds Cia Eur
Cooking Mama 4: Kitchen Magic | |
Release | Nov 15, 2011 |
Publisher | Majesco |
Rating | Everyone |
Cooking Mama 4 | |
Release | Dec 01, 2011 |
Publisher | Office Create |
Rating | All Ages |
Cooking Mama 4 | |
Release | Nov 25, 2011 |
Publisher | 505 Games |
Rating | 3+ |