
Chop is dish
A micro-budget retro platformer with a grumpy chef and a stolen steak. Charming pixel wrapper, tissue-thin challenge. Know what you're signing up for.
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About Chop is dish
I went in expecting a rough-around-the-edges passion project, and that's more or less what Chop is Dish delivers. HugePixel's side-scrolling platformer casts you as Marik, a master chef who charges headlong into a world of strange creatures after someone lifts his prized cut of meat. The setup is absurd in the best low-budget indie way, and the pixel art carries a warm, handmade quality that recalls the kind of games that used to live on floppy disks. The structure is pure old-school: move left to right, hop over hazards, ring the bell at the end of the level, repeat. Three distinct locations keep the scenery changing, and the game rotates through a small arsenal - fists, a gun, and grenades - that adds a little texture to the otherwise simple combat. The mask system, which unlocks different abilities for Marik, is the most interesting wrinkle mechanically, even if it never gets pushed as far as it could. Enemies include birds, bats, and floor-crawling turtles you can stomp and send skidding - small genre nods that feel deliberate rather than lazy. Boss encounters cap each world, and while they rarely test reflexes in any serious way, they break up the rhythm well enough. Here is where honesty matters: this is a short, easy game. Reviewers across platforms have noted that a careful player can clear it without losing a life, and the achievment list is completable in a single sitting. The difficulty tagged on Steam does not reflect the actual experience on PC - the 'Difficult' community tag appears to be aspirational. Enemy drops, hidden burgers for extra lives, the collectible meat pieces - none of it creates pressure. A screen-creep camera quirk can briefly feel disorienting, and hit detection has some soft edges that occasionally feel unfair rather than challenging. Who is this actually for? Players who grew up with NES-era side-scrollers and want something that fits in a lunch break. The pixel art is earnest and the cooking-themed world has a genuine oddball charm. It sits comfortably in subscription bundles and low-price tiers, and at that level the lightweight runtime and breezy tone are honest trade-offs rather than dealbreakers. If you want mechanical depth, build variety, or any real push against your skills, you should look elsewhere. But if a short, visually cosy run through a strange little food-themed world sounds like a quiet evening well spent, Chop is Dish will not overstay its welcome. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows XP SP3+ or higher
- Memory
- 1 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 9.0
- Storage
- 10 MB available space
- Graphics
- OpenGL 2.1 or higher
- Processor
- 1 GHz
- Sound Card
- Any
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Game Info
- Developer
- HugePixel
- Publisher
- HugePixel
- Release Date
- Nov 28, 2018




