Cooking Mama: Cookstar is a cookery simulation-styled minigame compilation video game, and the sixth installment in the Cooking Mama series of video games. The game was briefly released before its official release date on the Nintendo Switch eShop on March 26, 2020,[6] but was taken down just a few hours later due to legal issues between the publisher, Planet Entertainment, and the owner of the Cooking Mama intellectual property (IP), Office Create. Office Create publicly issued a statement condemning the breach of contract on April 15, 2020. The game was eventually re-released by the publisher Ravenscourt in March 2021, who also published it in Europe and Australia in 2020.
Cooking Mama: Cookstar | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Developer(s) | 1st Playable Productions |
Publisher(s) | Planet Entertainment (first North American release) Ravenscourt (European, Australian, and second North American releases) |
Composer(s) | Sara Sakurai Satoshi Okubo Masayoshi Ishi |
Series | Cooking Mama |
Engine | Unity |
Platform(s) | Nintendo Switch PlayStation 4 |
Release | Nintendo Switch PlayStation 4
|
Genre(s) | Simulation, minigame |
The game is the first entry in the Cooking Mama series since 2014's Cooking Mama 5: Bon Appétit!, and the first Cooking Mama game on console since 2008's Cooking Mama: World Kitchen. It is also the first entry to be released on a non-Nintendo console, having been released on the PlayStation 4; this version was promoted alongside the original Switch release but was not released until over a year later.
Cooking Mama: Cookstar plays similarly to previous entries in the series. New in Cookstar is the introduction of a vegetarian mode, as well as the ability to share photos of completed recipes on social media.
Cookstar was initially revealed as Cooking Mama: Coming Home to Mama in August 2019, with an estimated release date for Q3 of that year. Its publisher claimed that it was the first implementation of blockchain technology on a major video game console, using the technology to implement a form of digital rights management.[7] The game was developed by American[8] studio 1st Playable Productions, but the company later removed all mentions of the game from its website.[9]
Cookstar ostensibly released on March 31, 2020. The game was briefly made available on the Nintendo Switch eShop, but pulled shortly after its release.[10] Additionally, the PlayStation 4 version was not released at the time despite being listed on several storefronts. Unconfirmed rumors that the game acted as a cryptocurrency miner emerged shortly after its release.[11] 1st Playable responded that the implementation of blockchain technology was only "hypothetical" and explained that the game's removal from Nintendo eShop was due to an ongoing legal dispute between the publisher Planet Entertainment and IP rights holder Office Create.[12] Office Create stated it has started taking legal action against Planet as Office Create had terminated their license to use Cooking Mama on March 30, 2020, after which Planet had started selling the game.[13]
The game finally received a full North American release in 2021 on both Switch and PS4 platforms. As of April 2022, Office Create still features a warning against Planet on its homepage.[14]
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | 46/100[15] |
Publication | Score |
---|---|
IGN | 3/10[16] |
Nintendo Life | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Nintendo World Report | 4.5/10[18] |
Cooking Mama: Cookstar received generally negative reviews from critics.[15]
Travis Northup of IGN gave the game 3 out of 10, praising the detailed recipes featured in the game, but criticizing the monotonous gameplay, poor motion controls, "nightmarish" voice acting, and lack of meaningful progression. He also noted that the game does not offer anything new compared to past entries, which combined with the flaws, make Cookstar a "tedious game that does almost nothing well."[16]
Conversely, TheGamer's Bella Blondeau gave Cookstar a 4 out of 5. She praised the game's variety and amount of content, as well as the "nuance" to mastering the mechanics. In addition, she praised the game's photo mode and Yoko Nishino's "charming" performance as Mama, stating that the character felt "like a tangible, adorable dork of a mother."[19]
PETA, the American animal rights organization, praised the game for including a vegetarian mode.[20]
Cooking Mama series | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Video games |
| ||||||
Related articles |
|