Sunday, 19 January 2014

‘Cook, Serve, Delicious!’ for iOS and Android game review.


Cook, Serve, Delicious! is a restaurant sim. You are given charge of a new restaurant and it’s your job to turn it into a place worth of a five star rating.

Cook, Serve, Delicious! has you taking orders from customers and then crafting those dishes in the kitchen. Along with catering for your customer’s appetite, you also have to look after the place, manage your inventory steadily increase your restaurant’s rating. Sounds interesting? Let’s take a closer look at it then.
Title
Cook, Serve, Delicious!
Developer
David Galindo
Platform
iOS
Android
Content rating

12+
Medium Maturity
Size
88.5MB
45MB
Price
$4.99

Gameplay

Cook, Serve, Delicious! has you doing many things, but the primary thing you will be doing is cooking. But before we get to that, we first have to decide on what items we will have on our restaurant’s menu. You get to choose from a range of quick and not so quick recipes that you can have on your menu and each comes with a host of pros and cons. Some are quick and easy to make, could give you a lot of tip if done right, will be ordered regularly at all hours or won’t generate a lot of trash at the end of the day. On the other hand, they could be too fatty, which will put some people off, complicated to make and time consuming, not get you enough tips, will go stale if you have it on the menu for too long and generate a lot of waste and dirty dishes for you.

Your job is to carefully consider the pros and cons of each dish and have a balanced menu that is beneficial for you and your customers. Depending upon what you choose, you earn money as well as generate buzz, the latter giving you that higher star rating that you are after.

The depth and intricacies to the gameplay is really quite amazing. You need to have the right equipment to cook particular food items. Some food items don’t work in a particular time of the day and work better during other times. You can’t have too many of a certain type of food item as it may get you negative buzz from a certain group of people. You have to keep rotating the menu or else people will get bored of eating the same things every day. Along with cooking the food you also have to regularly clean the toilets, do the dishes, take out the trash and place mouse traps to keep the mice away. And this you have to do while serving orders. There are often inspections in the restaurant and you better be at your best behavior then; that means making sure your customers get their orders on time and the way they ordered and that you keep the place clean and well maintained.

You can also upgrade your skills, such as get a dishwasher to cut down the time to wash dishes or a better toilet to reduce the amount of toilet cleaning or a gun to protect you from robberies, which also happen later on in the game. Other than that, you can also participate in optional events, where you can put your cooking skills to test.

One nice touch is an inbox where you get mails from people, telling you about your food or a upcoming inspection, at times even weather reports so you know which items to have on the menu that would work well for a particular weather. There is also amusingly spam sometimes, and you can purchase an item from the game store to curb it. Note, all items in the store can be purchased from the money you earn in the restaurant. There is no exchange of real money here. Basically, no IAP, at least not for purchasing any items.

It does sound overwhelming at first and really when you first start the game it seems like there is a lot to learn. But it doesn’t take long before you understand the intricacies of the game and are cooking like a boss. That is when the real thrill comes. Managing a restaurant might sound like a dull thing to do in a game but the breakneck speed at which the game moves sometimes is really thrilling. During the rush hours, especially, the orders come in thick and fast and you better be quick on your fingers if you want customers to leave a good rating and tip. Not only do you need to get it done quickly but also get it done to their exact preferences. And then there are the chores that you need to do as well. Skip those and you automatically offend the customers who’ll just walk away.

It’s all really incredibly addictive and it never really feels repetitive. You can keep switching and adding new items to your menu and upgrade your skills and equipment. As you earn more, you spend more to make the place better. Eventually you get really good at it and then it gets easier to get a good rating and earn a lot more from your customers.

Graphics and Sound

Cook, Serve, Delicious! has a simple hand drawn look to everything. The drawings are actually very good and I’d be lying if some of the food items didn’t make me feel hungry. Only complaint with the visuals is that on the iPad with Retina display, the images look slightly blurred, as if they are low resolution drawings being upscaled for the higher resolution display. The game works best on a tablet but I was surprised at how playable it is even on a comparatively smaller screen of a Nexus 5.

Sound-wise, again, Cook, Serve, Delicious! is pretty good. The background music is the kind of stuff you’d expect to hear in a restaurant and sounds quite nice. I especially liked the sound effects for everything, from the sound of chopping to cooking to something being poured. The little audio cues of the customers mumbling their satisfaction or dissatisfaction to you getting their order right or wrong are especially amusing. Overall, the game is satisfactory on both the audio and visual fronts.

Oppo N1 gains a dark blue version.

Oppo has officially unveiled a new dark blue version of its flagship phablet, the Oppo N1. The device is now available in two color options – the original white and the newly introduced blue.

Apart from the new paintjob, the hardware specifications of the Oppo N1 are unchanged. To remind you, the smartphone comes with a 5.9-inch FHD display and is powered by a Snapdragon 600 chipset, featuring a quad-core Krait processor clocked at 1.7 GHz.
Oppo N1 features 2 GB of RAM, 16GB or 32 GB of internal storage and a 13 megapixel rotatable camera. The device packs a 3,160mAh battery and gives a choice between the home-baked ColorOS based on Android 4.2 Jelly Bean or an official CyanogenMod 10.2, which is based on Android 4.3.

The new unveiled dark blue edition adds a touch of class to the Oppo N1 and looks a lot cooler than the original white hue. The pricing and the availability details of the device are unknown at the moment, but we expect the new addition to carry a price tag that is similar to the white option – CNY3,498 (about $575).

Samsung Galaxy Note Pro and Tab Pro hands-on: First look

Traditionally Samsung hasn't been the most exciting company to watch at CES, but this year the Koreans are really making their presence felt. Bringing the big tablet guns, the company definitely has some of the hottest hardware of the show at its booth.
As a welcome change of pace, we aren't just treated to TVs and Smart home appliances. Samsung has the Pro range of tablets on display, which spans across two families of ultra-high-res powerhouses.
The Samsung Galaxy Note Pro leads the charge and there are three Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro slates to cover its back. Here's the kicker - we have a new tablet size in town - 12.2 inches. That's not very surprising of Samsung, as the company has been keen on experimenting with new form factors and sizes, some of which have yielded amazing results - take the Galaxy Note line-up of phablets, for example.
The new standard is offered on two different slates - the S Pen-enabled Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 and the conventional Galaxy Tab Pro 12.2. Those two are joined by the more straightforward Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 and another new size for Samsung with the Galaxy Tab Pro 8.4. The latter is a direct competitor to the LG G Pad 8.3 and we're eager to see whether it's a worthy one.
Anyway, we have met with all of them at the CES 2014 and we're ready with our first rundown. Before that though, let's take a look at what the Samsung Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 and the variously sized Galaxy Tab Pro slates offer.

Samsung Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 at a glance:

  • Form factor: Tablet
  • Size: 295.6 x 204 x 7.95 mm, 750 g
  • Display: 16M colors 12.2" Super Clear LCD capacitive touchscreen of 2560 x 1600 pixel resolution
  • OS: Android 4.4 KitKat with TouchWiz UI
  • Chipset (LTE): Quad-core 2.3GHz Krait 400 CPU, Adreno 330GPU, 3GB of RAM, Snapdragon 800 chipset
  • Chipset (3G, Wi-Fi): Quad-core 1.9 GHz Cortex-A15 & quad-core 1.3 GHz Cortex-A7, Mali-T628 MP6 GPU; 3GB of RAM, Exynos 5420 chipset
  • Camera: 8MP main camera; 2MP front-facing camera
  • Video camera: 2160p@30fps, 1080p@60/30fps, 720p@120fps video capture
  • Memory: 32GB/64GB of inbuilt storage, microSD card slot, up to 64GB
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac, Wi-Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 4.0, microUSB 3.0 port with backwards compatibility with microUSB 2.0, GPS receiver with A-GPS, 3.5mm audio jack, NFC, Ethernet connectivity via adapter
  • Battery: 9500mAh
  • Extra features: S-Pen support, S Note, Scrapbook, Action Memo, Air Commands software to take advantage of S Pen, free subscriptions to various services including Dropbox, Evernote, Bitcasa, NY Times, LinkedIn, Remote PC, Cisco WebEx Meetings and more

Huawei quietly launches Ascend P6 S with minor changes

Huawei quietly put out an S version of its super-thin Ascend P6 smartphone. The Huawei Ascend P6 S is 0.3 thicker, but still only goes as high as 6.5mm, though it has the same battery capacity of 2,000mAh.

The chipset has been bumped up a bit and now features a quad-core 1.6GHz processor (up from 1.5GHz). It’s not clear if it’s Huawei’s own chipset again, but there’s no LTE support either way. It’s a dual-SIM, dual-standby phone, the original P6 had a dual-SIM option.
The rest of the specs are identical - 4.7” LCD with 720p resolution (the display works with gloves), 2GB RAM, 16GB storage, 8MP main camera and a 5MP front-facing camera.
The Ascend P6 S runs Android 4.2 Jelly Bean with Emotion UI 2.0 on top. The phone is currently available on Vmall (Huawei’s own web store) and is available only on China Unicom.
The price is CNY 2,700 ($446 / €330), but is temporarily CNY 300 off (until tomorrow). This puts the price at the same level as the 8GB Ascend P6 (CNY 2,400). The regular price is the same as the Ascend Mate 2, which went on sale a couple of days ago.

Dual-SIM Moto G hits Malaysia too, priced at $210

Just a day after the dual-SIM version of the Motorola Moto G went official in Australia, the phone has reached Malaysia. Thankfully, this time around, we also have a price for the phone.

In Malaysia, the dual-SIM Motorola Moto G carries a price tag of $210 and $240 for the 8GB and 16GB models, respectively. The phone was announced at a joint event of Motorola and local carrier Brightstar.
The extra SIM card slot has added a just over $30 to the cost of the 8GB model and $10 on top of the price of the 16GB one. Originally, Motorola priced the Moto G at $179 for 8GB and $199 for double the storage.
Malaysian online retailer Lazada Malaysia is already taking pre-orders and promises to fulfill them on January 21. Early adopters will be treated to a screen protected and a Motorola Flip Shell free of charge.