![]() If you're not in the mood to cook an entire recipe, or if you're having difficulty with a particular step, you can play any of the mini-games separately, allowing you to practice and hone your touch screen skills to perfection. Get good enough scores, and you will be awarded with new recipes and other goodies. You are awarded a medal for each step depending on how well you cook, and once you're finished, you are rewarded with a final score and medal (not to mention congratulations from Mama). Cooking in Kitchen Magic is done in this manner: once you choose a recipe from one of the many you have access to, you begin a sequence of touch screen-driven mini-games, each one representing a step in the process of cooking the meal (chopping, grating, scrubbing, spreading, etc.). Despite this freedom, the best place to start is with the cooking. From the get-go, you have free reign to play any of the available modes in whatever way you want. There is no tutorial to be found in Cooking Mama 4: Kitchen Magic, nor are you expected to go about it in any order. As you may expect, the time has come for me to judge for you all, whether this game is worthy of your time and money. But first, an explanation of the game itself. In the era of the 3DS, I have finally expanded my horizons towards Majesco's cooking series with its fourth numbered title, Cooking Mama 4: Kitchen Magic. Even with all the different iterations and variants they've released with Mama as a protagonist, my curiosity had never been piqued. It's these tastes of mine that have kept me from trying out the Cooking Mama games in favor of other titles on the DS. Me, I prefer games with insane action and wild adventures through unknown worlds. ![]()
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