
Garfield Lasagna Party
Bring three humans to the couch and you'll squeeze genuine laughs out of this licensed mini-game collection. Solo or with bad AI? Save your lasagna money.
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About Garfield Lasagna Party
I came into this one prepared to write a quick kill shot and move on, but Garfield Lasagna Party is a slightly more complicated case than a flat miss. It is a local-only, four-player party game built around 32 mini-games spread across Garfield-branded locations, and the honest truth is that the quality of your session lives or dies entirely on whether you have three warm bodies on the couch with you. Put a controller in a friend's hand and a few of these games are genuinely fun. Hand control to an AI opponent and the experience swings wildly between insulting pushover and brick wall, with no middle ground that feels fair or rewarding. The three modes on offer are Lasagna Race (the board game wrapper), Challenge Mode (pick your games and play them directly), and Competition Mode (a randomised championship bracket). Lasagna Race is the headliner and also the biggest problem. There is exactly one board, a circular loop with three branching paths, and every review of this game lands on the same complaint: the between-turn padding is brutal. Screen-covering banners explain item effects you have already seen, per-round standings animations drag on, and the dice rolls feel slow even when nothing significant is happening. For a shooter guy like me who is used to 60fps decision loops, watching a board game stall out in its own bureaucracy is painful. Challenge Mode sidesteps all of that and is genuinely the smarter way to play. The mini-games themselves are a mixed bag that trends positive when you strip out the weaker third. Highlights include Supercat, a four-player Snake variant that generates real tension, Tick-Tock, a hot-potato alarm clock game inside a house where doors open and close on a timer, and the snowball platform brawler that borrows directly from Mario Party without apology. There is also a rhythm mini-game called Cats Band, a competitive toast-catching game, and a pizza-slicing challenge. The shared trait of the good ones is direct player interaction. The bad ones tend to involve third-person aiming with floaty, disconnected controls, and a snowball fight mini-game where hitting shorter characters feels nearly impossible because the targeting just does not track correctly. On the content side, the numbers are thin at full price. Four playable characters, one board, zero unlockables, and no online play. Steam user sentiment is notably warmer than critic scores, sitting positive on user reviews, but that likely reflects the nostalgia factor and people who played with a full couch. Critics on OpenCritic landed at an average around 51, and the consensus is consistent: fine for families and younger players, underbaked for anyone expecting meaningful long-term depth. The visuals do the IP justice, the 3D character models are charming, and the Garfield locations are recognisable and well-realised. Audio is lighter, no voice acting, and the music fades into the background quickly. The verdict comes down to context. If you have kids who grew up on Garfield, or a game night crew that just wants something brainless for an hour, Challenge Mode delivers enough variety to keep things moving. If you are buying this hoping the board game mode provides the full Mario Party experience, the single-map, sluggish-pace combo will frustrate you fast. There is no online ranked ladder, no progression system, and no reason to return once you have cycled through the mini-game roster a couple of times. Fred, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7+ 64bit
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 600 MB available space
- Graphics
- AMD R7 260X - Nvidia GTX 550 Ti 2GB
- Processor
- Intel Core i3
- Sound Card
- Any
- Additional Notes
- a controller is required for local multiplayer
Recommended
- OS
- Windows 10 64 bit
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- Storage
- 600 MB available space
- Graphics
- Nvidia GTX 960 2 GB
- Processor
- Intel Core i5
- Additional Notes
- a controller is required for local multiplayer
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Balio Studio
- Publisher
- Microids
- Release Date
- Nov 10, 2022

