Run a seafood restaurant in the free demo
Catch & Cook puts you in control of a quaint boat, where you’re both the owner of a seafood restaurant and the sole supplier of said seafood. You’re the fisherman and the chef; the catcher and the cooker. Most of my time in the demo was split between catching the fish, trading them for ingredients at nearby islands, and then returning to my restaurant to mix-and-match the newfound items, discovering recipes through experimentation.
Fishing mini-games make pretty much any video game better, is my hot take. The fishing mini-game in the demo is a little one-note, but there’s something inherently meditative about floating above the waves, waiting for a bite, and then clicking for a catch in any game. Hell, I was hooked back into bothDestiny 2andSablewhen they added fishing in post-launch updates, so I’m clearly not hard to please.
Work on the arctic location continuesLearn more, play demo & wishlist to help us 🧡https://t.co/JmrmiwCiff#indiegame#indiedev#madewithunity#gamedev#lowpoly#Blender3d#CatchAndCookpic.twitter.com/mcVvqvJ1oz
Plus, most fishing sims and fishing-adjacent games are mostly about the vibes anyway. And oh boy, this game’s vibes are immaculate. Travel agents should simply make clients play this game because all I now crave is a hot sun, some sand, and a brain-freezing drink. The cel-shaded art, colourful underwater flora, and clear ocean are absolutely beautiful. Chuck in a plucky ambient soundtrack and Catch & Cook is a pretty relaxing time.
Catch & Cook’s demo is available nowon Steam. The developers say the game will show up again at the upcoming Steam Next Fest, but in the meantime, they frequently tease new areas and biomes overon Twitter.
Oh, and fans of Dredge can look forward to that game’s chiller passive mode too, announced through therecently revealed roadmap.