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Repeated intro
Hello, Chefs!
What changed
- Balance
- Gameplay
Today, we'd like to introduce the dishes featured in Lone Chef.
We'll take a closer look at what kinds of food you can find, what effects they have on the player, and the role they play within the story.
The Dishes of Lone Chef
Lone Chef features over 170 dishes in total, including 121 standard recipes and 48 ancient recipes. Standard recipes can be created by combining ingredients in various ways, while ancient recipes are special dishes that can only be cooked once their recipes have been discovered through exploration. Some of these ancient recipes are even tied to key characters in the game, who seek out specific dishes. Today, we'd like to introduce three of them.
Flaming Rabbit Orb Pie
A dish given to a companion in the demo. This pie is made by wrapping Overheated Orb Meat in grain dough and baking it. Even after it's cooked, the orb at the center still glows with heat, pulsing and keeping the pie warm.
Mushroom Beef Noodle Soup
An ancient recipe featured in the main part of the game. This dish consists of meat and noodles served over a broth extracted from deboned Bone Mushrooms. Between the light strands of noodles, the numbing mushroom flavor and meaty aroma settle into a calm, layered harmony.
Heaping Rice Sikhye
Another ancient recipe featured in the main game. This chilled Sikhye is made with rice cooked from two types of grain, piled high in a bowl. The airy Wind Grain seems ready to scatter and drift upward, but the Red Fruit jam and sweet broth on top hold it firmly in place.
These dishes go beyond simply filling your stomach. In Lone Chef, food is a means of player growth, while also playing an important role in how the story unfolds.
Ingredient Tags and Player Stats
All dishes in Lone Chef—including Flaming Rabbit Orb Pie, Mushroom Beef Noodle Soup, and Heaping Rice Sikhye—carry "tags." The tags assigned to a dish vary depending on the combination of ingredients used, and these tags allow players to enhance their stats or even change their combat style.
Ingredients are categorized into Meat, Fruit, Vegetables, Grain, and Mushrooms. Meat primarily influences STR, Fruit affects VIT, Vegetables boost AGI, and Grain contributes heavily to HP.
There are two types of tags: standard tags and equipped tags. Standard tags grant stat EXP upon consumption or temporarily increase stats until the next dish is eaten. Equipped tags, on the other hand, are special effects found only on ancient recipe dishes. They persist until another equipped-tag dish is consumed and can fundamentally change how you fight.
Food Tags
Flaming Rabbit Orb Pie is made using Overheated Orb Meat, a rare ingredient obtained from the Turbo Rabbit, and Small Grain. Because it includes meat, it gains STR-related tags such as Meaty and Savory, while the grain adds an HP EXP tag, Light.
In addition, dishes made with Overheated Orb Meat have the equipped tag Overheated. This changes your ground basic attack into one that throws a heated projectile, which explodes on impact and deals AoE damage.
Mushroom Beef Noodle Soup is made with three ingredients: Bone Mushrooms, Grain, and Wild Meat. The Meaty tag from the meat builds STR EXP, while the Numbing tag from the Bone Mushroom temporarily increases AGI.
Its equipped tag, Deboned, allows you to wield a massive bone as a weapon, significantly increasing your basic attack damage.
Heaping Rice Sikhye is made with two types of grain and Red Fruit. Since grain is the main ingredient, the Light tag is strongly applied, greatly boosting HP EXP, while the fruit's Sweet tag also contributes to VIT EXP.
Among its ingredients, Wind Grain is tied to the equipped tag Scattering, causing grains of rice to scatter outward and expand your attack range.
The Role of Food in the Story
The protagonist of Lone Chef isn't much of a talker.
Before truly engaging with someone, they often try one thing first: cooking for them.
For the hungry, the weary, and the wary, food in Lone Chef becomes a means of persuasion and communication.
As characters receive these dishes, they gradually begin to open up, and their individual stories unfold.
In gameplay, food clearly supports you in combat. It grants buffs and strengthens your abilities.
But in Lone Chef, food is present in every moment that truly matters.
💬 A Note from the Development Team
As we worked on a game centered around cooking, we kept asking ourselves a question: Why make a game about cooking?
If it's not just a tool for combat, then what role should it play?
Lone Chef is our own answer to that question.
As you play, we hope you enjoy the moments when the protagonist offers food to others.
With that, we wish you a wonderful time cooking and adventuring in the world of Lone Chef!
🍳 From the Lone Chef Team
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