An extract of the Yummy Yummy Cooking Jam review by WiiWare World:
"The main premise of Yummy Yummy Cooking Jam revolves around food preparation inside various eateries. The game basically features four different restaurants, each serving its own unique type of food, including Hot Dogs, Hamburgers, Pizza and Mexican Food. You'll start the game making Hot Dogs which feature simple core ingredients and you'll also be dealing with extremely tolerant customers. Once you've completed the necessary four rounds at the Hot Dog restaurant you'll then move on to the more difficult foods that feature far more ingredients and an increasingly impatient customer base.
The object of the game is simple. You're given a time limit and your goal is to accumulate a certain amount of tip money in order to progress to the next round. The better your food and the faster your service, the better the tips. As your customers enter the restaurant you'll have to use the Wii Remote to hand out menus to each person at the table. After a short peruse of the menu, your customers will begin giving you their orders which you have to follow exactly in order to win their approval, and ultimately their tip. While this is a very simple task in the first level, you'll soon find yourself getting bombarded with more tasks and more complicated orders. Some items you can put together with very little effort, like placing a wiener on a hot dog bun, but soon you'll have to start cutting up ingredients, warming buns, and dispensing a wide variety of condiments in order to get each order to your customer's liking. In later levels the game will even throw a few annoyances your way, one being the bothersome flies that you'll have to swat from time to time. As the game intensifies, you'll find your task getting much more complicated as your progress through the game."
Go Fanboy writes: "Yummy Yummy Cooking Jam has already made an appearance on WiiWare. If you're familiar with this previous version, or the PSP version released earlier this year, then you're not really in for anything new. The only question is whether or not the control issues that plagued both the PSP and Wii are still her on the DSi, or does the stylus resolve all that?"
PSFocus writes: "The PSPgo download is only one platform and at the time of introduction of these new handheld was introduced like a new kind of games. The Minis, these games appear as small games on the PlayStation Network for one low price. In addition, the developer no more than 100MB to use for this game and because of limited space and the low price is above the name Minis created. Almost weekly appearance on the PlayStation Store update new Minis and once we have the first games under the microscope."
DGS-Online writes: "Obligingness our games to the test, where do they spring from and who they play? People operate, keep customers happy, things like that. On accusations of sexism, we can not escape this unlikely, but the presumption prevails that these games do well with women and young girls. Games for the Wii, the DS, and a browser. And it should directly the question arises: what does the hell Jam Yummy Yummy Cooking on a PSP?"
lol, decent review
Wow, better than I was expecting for a game called Yummy Yummy Cooking Jam