There are temperature issues to be taken into consideration. There is not only ingredient management to be taken into account, there are expiration dates and storage solutions. The cooking is very procedural, but not satisfying: the first-person burger, pizza, sushi assembly is sloppy. Recipe for frustration … Food Truck Simulator. The driving of the truck from location to location is unsteady and occasionally glitches jarringly: with a little more polish this could have been a delightful mechanic. Coupled with the realistic graphics – which had the potential to be impressive – it’s a little like running a burger truck in some unnamed drag of Grand Theft Auto’s Los Santos. Our protagonist inherits the titular food truck after the death of his father, and receives guidance from an almost-maternal figure called Carol, who talks you through a long and humourless introduction. Food Truck Simulator, however, before it even presents us with glitchy technical issues, has a strangely heavy tone. Other cooking-themed titles such as Overcooked, or the long running Cooking Mama series, have a high-paced spirit, undercut with silliness or charm. Food Truck Simulator, from the title alone, seems as if it should be a riot. There are few thing more frustrating than playing a broken game: perhaps only playing a broken game with a promising premise.
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