The Chef's Shift Has The Chaos Of Overcooked, But With Typing
Briefly

The Chef's Shift Has The Chaos Of Overcooked, But With Typing
"The Chef's Shift begins simply, largely serving different coffees and cakes in the bustling pizzeria. Soon, customers will begin asking for pepperoni pizza, fried rice balls, or different noodle dishes. It quickly becomes chaos: Touch typing-without looking down at the keyboard-becomes essential in making sure your pizzas don't burn and customers stay happy. Mice scuttle in here and there looking to steal food and disrupt service-so type the two letters above their head to shoot them with a gun."
"From the pizza restaurant, The Chef's Shift opens up into a Chinese dumpling house, a Mexican restaurant, and a Korean barbeque house. Underlying it all is a dramatic soap opera story that starts with a criminal disguising himself as the Italian chef and blooming into a wide-ranging story involving international crime, love (and love triangles), lost memories, and family drama."
The Chef's Shift requires players to perform every action by typing words for ingredients and dishes. Orders appear above items and heads; typing those words assembles and delivers meals and handles payment. Early levels feature coffees and cakes, then progress to pizzas, rice balls, and noodle dishes that demand touch typing to prevent burned food and unhappy customers. Mice scuttle in and must be shot by typing two letters above them. Levels include a Chinese dumpling house, a Mexican restaurant, and a Korean barbecue. A soap-opera storyline about a disguised criminal, international crime, love, lost memories, and family drama underpins gameplay. It joins a wave of inventive typing games.
Read at Kotaku
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