Cookingdom
ABI GAMES PTE. LTD.
Screenshots



About this app
Cookingdom is a slow-brew, feel-good cooking app where every recipe breaks into tiny, tactile mini-games — chop, stir, flip, plate. You unlock new dishes as you go, customize a tiny kitchen that actually smiles back, and deck your chef in goofy aprons or fuzzy slippers. The audio is low-key addictive (yes, food ASMR — the chopping actually soothes). No frantic timers. No cosmic stress. It’s the sort of game you open to unwind for ten minutes and somehow stay for an hour. Expect ramen, pancakes, lava cake, and a bunch of fusion snacks you didn’t know you needed. Some things unlock with upgrades; some sparkle is cosmetic. I won’t promise endless depth — it’s cozy first, big ambition second — but if you want to calm the brain and make cute dishes, this is your little pocket kitchen.
Editor's Review
Okay—straight talk. I’ve binged Cookingdom on three separate late nights (yes, shameful, yes, worth it). The game hooks you with tiny, tactile tasks: slice veggies, whisk batter, flip a pancake with a flick that actually feels satisfying. Short sessions. Big relax. The sound design deserves legit praise — the knife-on-board clicks and simmer hums are oddly calming (ASMR fans: you’ll grin). Players on forums love the cozy aesthetics; they also gripe about paywalls, slow progression, and the occasional ad pop (not surprising for free-to-play). I got stuck on a plating puzzle for way too long — hand sweaty, heart racing, then triumphant. That’s fun. Don’t expect deep simulation or competitive scoring. This isn’t a pro chef simulator. It’s cozy, deliberate, and sometimes sticky with microtransactions. If you want to wind down, decorate a warm kitchen, and noodle through cute recipes, Cookingdom nails it. If you want hardcore challenge or zero monetization, look elsewhere.
Pros
- Mini-games feel tactile — chopping and flipping actually satisfy (I laughed out loud once).
- Strong sound design: tiny ASMR moments make the routine feel special.
- Cute kitchen customization and outfit bits that add personality.
- Short, pick-up-and-play sessions that fit a commutes-or-bedtime vibe.
Cons
- Progression can slow; some recipes feel gated behind timers or purchases.
- Repetition sets in after dozens of dishes — variety isn't endless.
- Occasional ads and minor UI glitches on some phones (I noticed stutter on older devices).
Additional Information
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