Cookie | |
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Cover art
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Developer(s) | Tim and Chris Stamper |
Publisher(s) | Ultimate Play the Game |
Platform(s) | ZX Spectrum |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Action, platform |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Review scores | |
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Publication | Score |
Crash | 73% |
Home Computing Weekly |
Cookie is an action-platform video game developed and published by Ultimate Play the Game that was released exclusively for the ZX Spectrum in 1983. In the game, Charlie the Chef has to bake a cake, however his five ingredients are sentient and attempt to escape his pantry, enabling his quest to re-capture them.
The game was written by Chris Stamper, and graphics were designed by Tim Stamper. Cookie was one of the few Spectrum games also available in ROM format for use with the Interface 2, allowing "instantaneous" loading of the game (the normal method of cassette loading could take several minutes). A version was also created for the BBC Micro, but was not commercially released. The game received mixed reviews upon release, with critics praising the graphics, but criticising the hard difficulty and its similarities to Pssst.
The game is presented from a single, 2D perspective, and the main objective involves Charlie the Chef baking a cake from evil, sentient ingredients. The five ingredients vary from Mixed Peel, Chunky Chocolate, Crafty Cheese, Sneaky Sugar and Colonel Custard, who will all jump out of the pantry and try and avoid the player whenever possible.
The player starts the game with three lives. Several ingredients will fly around the screen simultaneously, and if the player touches an ingredient with their body, a life will be deducted. The player's objective is to put the ingredients into the cooking bowl before they either fall into the dustbins on either side or knock the player into the bowl. As a defence, Charlie the Cook can shoot flour sacks, which will push the ingredients further in the direction they are moving in. Bombs may also spawn in the game, which will allow the player to push the ingredients further than conventional flour sacks. The player has to push the right variety of ingredients into the bowl, which changes for each level. When the right amount of ingredients has been put in the bowl, a cake is baked and a new level begins.
Ultimate Play the Game was founded by brothers Tim and Chris Stamper, along with Tim's wife, Carol, in Ashby-de-la-Zouch, England in 1982. They began producing video games for the ZX Spectrum throughout the early 1980s. Prior to founding Ultimate, the Stamper brothers had designed arcade machines, but had no marketing experience in the video game sector. The company was known for its reluctance to reveal details about its operations and upcoming projects. Little was known about their development process except that they used to work in "separate teams": one team would work on development, while the other would concentrate on other aspects such as sound or graphics.