Cooking Quest Review

Cooking Quest
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I was looking to see if there might be a sequel to this game (boo hoo, no Cooking Quest 2 yet), but had to put my two cents in because of the negative reviews.
Yes, this is primarily a hidden object game. Yes, a few of those objects are -- horrors! -- cigarettes, beer mugs, and suchlike, but given the vocabulary and syntax of the dialogue boxes, the game was clearly designed for grownups, not kids. You have the option of playing in full-screen or windowed mode, but I've never had to switch modes to click an object like the reviewer below; I've had no issues whatsoever running it on a Dell Optiplex (a business, not gaming, PC) with WinXP and a mere 1G of RAM.
The game is short and easy compared to many popular hidden object titles. I mastered Cooking Quest after completing it twice. That being said, in the year that I've owned this game I've played it at least 100 times, know where every single object is, and can complete it in 10 minutes or less. Yet I'm repeatedly drawn to Cooking Quest because the graphics are appealing, the meal-prep mini-games are unique, playing it is extremely relaxing, and it doesn't demand huge blocks of time or your undivided attention the way more complex/challenging games do.
I've gotten far more enjoyment and replay from this inexpensive little jewel-case game than I ever expected, and would love to have more just like it.

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