Crazy Kitchen is an interesting game with several design problems. The game is available on the Google Play Store, Apple App store, and Amazon app store. Currently rated more than 4 stars on all three stores, Crazy Kitchen is a popular puzzle game. Brought to you by Zindagi Games, the developers of Crazy Kitchen and Yummy Gummy, Crazy Kitchen is an entertaining social based puzzle game.
Crazy Kitchen is such a cool game to play, but it requires a lot of lives and coins in order to be successful. You can get the lives and coins through the app store, but these items cost real money, and that can get expensive quite quickly. If you would like to get unlimited coins and lives for free, then download the Crazy Kitchen hack tool, which you can find right here on our website.
The picture you see below is of the Crazy Kitchen hack tool, and if you look at it, you will see just how simple it is to use. All you need to do is enter the amounts of coins and lives you would like to add to your gaming account by using the options menu.
First, download the Crazy Kitchen hack tool, which should take 20 seconds, and then wait 20 seconds while it automatically installs. After that, select either iOS or Android, and then you can enter the amounts of coins and lives that you would like to see in your gaming account.
When you are ready to begin the process, tap on “Start” and it should take no more than 30 seconds for this to complete. After that, you can open up the game as normal on your device, and there you will see the coins and lives have already been placed in your account.
The most important thing you can do is to network using Facebook. Just logging in using your Facebook account will award you free coins. Coins can be used to purchase upgrade costumes in the game. These costumes will allow you to earn coins everyday and give you more hearts. You start with five hearts when you begin and if you happen to lose all of your precious hearts then you will find yourself having to take a forced break from Crazy Kitchen.
One of the best tips is to make a point to make the longest chain of one item possible. You can 200 points for the first and second items in a chain. After that each item is worth 100 points more. For example, the third item in the string is worth 300 points and fourth is worth 400 points. Also, try to line up your items so that when the new items drop down they land in a perfect “Tetris like” pattern, scoring you even more points. Keep in mind that your strings of items can take diagonal turns. This is a unique feature that does help quite a bit in beating some levels but in my opinion makes the game too easy. Personally, I can play Tetris for an hour or more without stopping. Crazy Kitchen, however, is just too easy and doesn’t require enough brain power to keep me totally immersed.
When customers make an order, try your very best to fulfill that order in the least moves possible. The fewer moves you make to fulfill all of the costumers’ orders the more lunch bags you get at the end of the level. Lunch bags are worth big points and are definitely worth having. Take some time before you try to fulfill an order to figure out how you can fulfill it with one or two moves. You don’t have any time limit before you start fulfilling orders, so don’t be in a rush. Just make a point to use as few moves as possible and you’ll be on the road to success.
Points are important because at the end of each level points are used to automatically buy stars. The more points that you earn the more stars you will earn as a result. During each level of Crazy Kitchen make it your goal to complete the level with a solid three star rating.
When I think of Crazy Kitchen I have flashbacks of having played Candy Crush. Don’t get me wrong, both are extraordinary games but they have some stark similarities. Crazy Kitchen consists of two components: a game board and customers. The game board has all the different foods on it. Each food item is in its own square. This is set up much like a Tetris board. The other component are the customers. The customers stand in line and once at the counter place their orders. The orders appear as a bubble over their heads. If you can’t imagine this, think of old cartoons in the newspaper and replace the dialogue with cupcakes and donuts. The basic concept of Crazy Kitchen is that a customer places an order, let’s say for three donuts, and then you have to make a string of at least three donuts to fulfill that customer’s order. Of course, this sounds incredibly easy and it is. Like any other game, Crazy Kitchen gets more difficult as you move through the levels. Not only do customers start to have complex orders but the “Tetris” board changes from a square to other random shapes, making it more difficult to get the string of like items that you need to fill the customer’s order. Additionally the game starts to introduce more features such as ice blocks that must be broken, and wood crates that must be destroyed.
This is an interesting game but I have to say that it felt like a game geared for school age children. There was little complex thinking involved. If you did not find the longest possible string of one item the game would show you. It’s as if you didn’t even need to try to beat each level, likely making it good for many children who need the reinforcement of completing a level of a game.
Artwork: I am awarding Crazy Kitchen a score of 6/10. Crazy Kitchen had a very cartoon like style, probably intended to be welcoming to children. However, there wasn’t anything special about the artwork to earn this game a higher rating.
Music & SFX: This game deserves a 4/10 for its Music and SFX. I routinely turned the volume down all the way on my phone to not have to listen to the music of this game. Crazy Kitchen’s music wasn’t mind numbing but it was far from entertaining.
Story & Originality: Crazy Kitchen earns itself a mere 3/10 for its story and originality. Crazy Kitchen has no storyline whatsoever. You simply fill customers’ orders and continue to do so level after level after level. It lacks any kind of progression in role, such as being promoted to chef. In terms of originality, I have to say that this is one of the most unoriginal games I have ever played. There is nothing original by matching two like items.
General Gameplay: I feel as though I have to give this game and 4/10 for its tedious, yet far too simple gameplay. I know that having a game that is both tedious and simple seems to be an oxymoron but in the case of Crazy Kitchen, both words accurately describe the game. You do the same thing over and over and over in a game that feels like it was made for fairly young children.
Addictiveness: Crazy Kitchen deserves a 4/10 for addictiveness. I have to say that I did think that the game had potential at first. It reminded me of Candy Crush which is well known as one of the most addictive games out there. However, Candy Crush couldn’t even keep me entertained for 15 continous minutes.
After weighing all the factors involved I decided that is is only just to give Crazy Kitchen a crazy low score of 4/10.