Compare Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by GameOn Production. Published by Alawar Casual. Released on 10/27/2021. Available on PC. Genres: Casual, Indie, Simulation.

A breezy time-management cooking game completable in under five hours - fine for a low-stakes afternoon but too short and too shallow to justify much repeat attention from anyone who wants real strategic bite.

I'll be straight with you: as someone who normally tracks resource chains and late-game scaling curves, I came into Baking Bustle: Ashley's Dream ready to be underwhelmed, and I was half right. This is a click-to-serve time-management game where you guide Ashley and Scott through a series of day-based restaurant levels, racing the clock to take orders, plate food, restock supplies, and bank enough tips to unlock upgrades between shifts. The loop is immediately legible. There is no obscure tutorial to fight through, and the difficulty ramp is gentle enough that the genre's traditional newcomer - the person who has never played a Diner Dash-style game in their life - can find their footing inside the first two or three levels. The structure across the game's four restaurant settings gives it a surface impression of variety. You move from a grill-and-bar environment through to coffee-and-pastry venues, each with its own menu logic and a small cast of customer types that carry distinct patience thresholds. Learning to read a fussy regular versus a comedian archetype and prioritise accordingly is the closest the game gets to genuine decision-making depth. Upgrades earned between levels let you improve serving speed and kitchen efficiency, but the upgrade tree is shallow - you will not be building anything resembling a production order or a long-term strategy. For players who want that layer, it simply is not here. The game's most reported friction point is click precision. In a timed genre where every half-second counts, some players have found that the clickable hit-boxes on interactable objects are unforgivingly small, which can cause mis-clicks at the worst possible moments. It is a legitimate complaint and it does undercut the otherwise clean presentation. The isometric visuals are colourful without being cluttered, and the pacing inside individual levels feels consistent once you accept that this is a relaxed-difficulty product. Both a timed mode and an untimed relaxed mode are available, which is a sensible inclusion that lets less competitive players ignore the clock entirely. On the longevity question, the numbers are honest and not flattering: most players finish everything, achievements included, in roughly four to five hours. There is no mod ecosystem, no procedural replayability, no branching upgrade path that rewards a second run. The ten achievements are all reachable without missable conditions, which makes the completion loop friction-free but also paper-thin. If you are hunting a light, single-session couch game to hand to a family member who liked the original Baking Bustle, this sequel-in-spirit delivers exactly that. If you are coming in expecting a restaurant management sim with any systemic depth, recalibrate before you start. Diego, Scout Team

Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream
CasualIndieSimulation

Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream

Oct 27, 2021GameOn ProductionAlawar Casual
GamerScout Says

A breezy time-management cooking game completable in under five hours - fine for a low-stakes afternoon but too short and too shallow to justify much repeat attention from anyone who wants real strategic bite.

PC
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About Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream

I'll be straight with you: as someone who normally tracks resource chains and late-game scaling curves, I came into Baking Bustle: Ashley's Dream ready to be underwhelmed, and I was half right. This is a click-to-serve time-management game where you guide Ashley and Scott through a series of day-based restaurant levels, racing the clock to take orders, plate food, restock supplies, and bank enough tips to unlock upgrades between shifts. The loop is immediately legible. There is no obscure tutorial to fight through, and the difficulty ramp is gentle enough that the genre's traditional newcomer - the person who has never played a Diner Dash-style game in their life - can find their footing inside the first two or three levels. The structure across the game's four restaurant settings gives it a surface impression of variety. You move from a grill-and-bar environment through to coffee-and-pastry venues, each with its own menu logic and a small cast of customer types that carry distinct patience thresholds. Learning to read a fussy regular versus a comedian archetype and prioritise accordingly is the closest the game gets to genuine decision-making depth. Upgrades earned between levels let you improve serving speed and kitchen efficiency, but the upgrade tree is shallow - you will not be building anything resembling a production order or a long-term strategy. For players who want that layer, it simply is not here. The game's most reported friction point is click precision. In a timed genre where every half-second counts, some players have found that the clickable hit-boxes on interactable objects are unforgivingly small, which can cause mis-clicks at the worst possible moments. It is a legitimate complaint and it does undercut the otherwise clean presentation. The isometric visuals are colourful without being cluttered, and the pacing inside individual levels feels consistent once you accept that this is a relaxed-difficulty product. Both a timed mode and an untimed relaxed mode are available, which is a sensible inclusion that lets less competitive players ignore the clock entirely. On the longevity question, the numbers are honest and not flattering: most players finish everything, achievements included, in roughly four to five hours. There is no mod ecosystem, no procedural replayability, no branching upgrade path that rewards a second run. The ten achievements are all reachable without missable conditions, which makes the completion loop friction-free but also paper-thin. If you are hunting a light, single-session couch game to hand to a family member who liked the original Baking Bustle, this sequel-in-spirit delivers exactly that. If you are coming in expecting a restaurant management sim with any systemic depth, recalibrate before you start. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayerachievementscloud-savestier:sub-5Time ManagementScore AttackRelaxed ModeClick PrecisionShort CompletionFamily FriendlyRestaurant UpgradeIsometric View

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
2 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
500 MB available space
Graphics
GPU with at least 512MB of VRAM
Processor
2 GHz processor

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Game Info

Developer
GameOn Production
Publisher
Alawar Casual
Release Date
Oct 27, 2021

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Price History

2026-06-102.49(lowest)

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What platforms is Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream available on?

Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream is available on PC.

When was Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream released?

Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream was released on 27 October 2021.

Who developed Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream?

Baking Bustle: Ashley’s Dream was developed by GameOn Production and published by Alawar Casual.