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Explore Cooking Mama Wallpaper on WallpaperSafari Find more items about Cooking Mama Wallpaper, Yo Mama Jokes Wallpaper. Cooking Mama World Kitchen Wallpaper Download 800x600. Cooking Mama is Displeased by missbooyaka 600x412. Cooking Mama Mama Kills Animals 557x407. Cooking Mama World Kitchen Images 640x480. Cooking Mama World Kitchen includes more than 25 vegetarian-friendly recipes including delicious breakfast, dinner, dessert and snack options. And, while Mama is not a vegetarian, she fully supports the humane treatment of animals, particularly for her canine protege Max who makes his doggie debut in. Play Cooking Mama on PC. It’s easy to get started. Download and install BlueStacks on your PC. Complete Google sign-in to access the Play Store, or do it later. Look for Cooking Mama in the search bar at the top right corner. Click to install Cooking Mama from the search results. Cooking Mama is a cookery simulation-styled minigame compilation video game for the Nintendo DS, and later ported to iOS as Cooking Mama: Lets Cook! It was developed by Office Create and published by Taito, Majesco Entertainment, and 505 Games. It was awarded IGN's 'Best Of E3' award for 2006. Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals!, Mama has had it up to here with all of your lousy cooking! She’s tired of you ruining all of her delicious recipes and she just wants to get her next class over with.

The title screen of Pokémon Black and Blue, a parody of Pokémon Black and White. Injured Pokémon from left to right: Oshawott, Snivy, Tepig, and Pikachu.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), an animal rights organization based in the United States, has released a number of browser games on its website that have parodied existing video games. Various PETA parodies have been made based on games such as Super Mario Bros., Cooking Mama, and Pokémon Black and White. PETA creates these games to spread attention about real-life animal rights and animal welfare concerns and advocate vegetarian and vegan diets.

History[edit]

Screenshot of Super Chick Sisters, one of PETA's games relating to KFC

Some of PETA's earliest forays into gaming include Flash-based games such as Make Fred Spew (2001)[1] and Save the Chicks (2003),[2] which were included as part of PETA's anti-dairy and Kentucky Fried Cruelty campaigns. These games received some coverage in academic and news sources,[3][4][5] and PETA's head of online marketing, Joel Bartlett, identified their 2004 Revenge of the PETA Tomatoes and the Frogger parody, Lobster Liberation, as some of the organization's earliest released games.[6][7] However it was not until 2007 that PETA began to attract wider attention within the gaming community with its release of Super Chick Sisters, a parody of Super Mario Bros.[8] Controlling two female chicks named Nugget and Chickette, the player sets out to rescue vegetarian actress Pamela Anderson, who has publicly revealed animal cruelty endemic to KFC's food production, from KFC's mascot Colonel Sanders.[9] In 2009, the game was met with a sequel, New Super Chick Sisters, a homage to New Super Mario Bros.[8] In this game, McDonald's mascot Ronald McDonald kidnaps Anderson with the intent of using her as a Happy Meal ingredient, and the Chick Sisters must rescue her again.[10]

In 2008, PETA released an adaptation of the cooking simulatorCooking Mama called Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals.[11] In it, PETA encouraged users to write to Cooking Mama developer Majesco Entertainment to create a version of the game with only vegetarian recipes.[12]Mama Kills Animals consists of minigames related to the preparation of animal carcasses, in this case, a stuffed turkey.[13] After successfully completing the main levels, Mama goes vegan and hugs a live turkey, while the player makes a tofurkey. The game contains facts about turkeys and includes vegan Thanksgiving recipes.

In Super Mario Bros. 3, Mario can wear an item called the 'Tanooki Suit' – a costume resembling a tanuki (raccoon dog) similar to those shown here. PETA created Mario Kills Tanooki to draw attention to the real-life killing of raccoon dogs for their fur.

Edmund McMillen[14] from Team Meat, the developer of the indie gameSuper Meat Boy, created various accounts on PETA's official forums to try to get his game parodied by PETA. PETA developed Super Tofu Boy and released it in December 2010.[15] It stars Tofu Boy, an anthropomorphic cube of tofu whose goal is to rescue Bandage Girl, the girlfriend of the original game's protagonist Meat Boy, from Meat Boy.[16] It plays as a standard platformer[15] and is peppered with inter-level pro-vegetarian messages and facts about meat consumption and the livestock industry.[17][18]

After releasing Mario Kills Tanooki, a parody of Super Mario Bros. 3, PETA released a statement that the game was 'meant to be tongue-in-cheek, a fun way to call attention to a serious issue, that raccoon dogs are skinned alive for their fur.' The organization also stated that 'by wearing Tanooki, Mario is sending the message that it's OK to wear fur.'[19] It is an action game in which the player controls a skinned but living raccoon dog that chases Mario to retrieve its fur.[19][20]

PETA took on the Pokémon series with Pokémon Black and Blue, a parody of Pokémon Black and White that focuses on animal fighting and experimentation.[21][22] In role-playing-style battles, the player controls a Pikachu who escapes Ash Ketchum’s abusive circus. Pikachu first fights a drunk Cheren,[23] who brutally abuses his Tepig in a dog fighting-esque manner, and then moves on to other Trainers and characters in order to rescue their Pokémon from their ownership (a Snivy being experimented on by Professor Juniper, an Oshawott skinned alive by Ghetsis, and finally Ash himself).[24][25] Pikachu recruits these Pokémon to its cause,[26] as well as the sympathetic Nurse Joy.[22] A sequel, Pokémon Red, White, and Blue, followed in 2013.[27] The game suggests that Nintendo's continual releases of Pokémon games reduce humans' empathy for animals.[28] Also a role-playing game, it stars Pikachu and Miltank,[29] who battle McDonald's characters like the Hamburglar in a crusade against the rare but ongoing practice of meat production in the Unova region.[30][31] Pikachu must rescue a Jigglypuff from being treated like furniture, a Miltank from the dairy industry and the slaughterhouse, and Grimace from being tortured. At the beginning of the game, Pikachu is nearly eaten by an obese gamer but lives.

Also in 2013, PETA released Cage Fight: Knock Out Animal Abuse, a beat 'em up game in the style of River City Ransom. The player controls vegetarian mixed martial arts fighters Jake Shields, Aaron Simpson, and Georgi Karakhanyan and attacks animal testing practitioners to rescue confined animals.[32] There is a warning before the game begins that it is illegal to punch scientists in real life.

PETA has parodied Fast Food Nation in a game called “You Want Lies With That?”. The player controls an evil chef who must create hamburgers while avoiding the pigs and cows who are chasing him. Successful completion of each level reveals the links between meat consumption and heart attacks or E. coli.

There is also a hunting game where the player shoots tofu deer; “Stick a Chick” , where the player must prevent salmonella-infected chicken from entering the shopping cart; an animal testing awareness game that also spreads awareness about breast cancer; a gory maze game about seal clubbing; several games about animal skins used in fashion; and a quiz game that compares the American Kennel Club to the KKK.

Reception and impact[edit]

PETA's games have received mainly negative opinions from video game journalists. Forbes writer Erik Kain summarized the series in general as 'a long parade of silly protests.' He also considered PETA's failure to satirize well-known hunting games like Duck Hunt and Big Game Hunter as well as the general message that video games encourage real-life violence, to be illogical.[33]

Response to Mario Kills Tanooki has been negative, generally holding that it was under-researched. While PETA's protest focused on Mario wearing a raccoon dog's skin rather than harming them himself, Gaming Union stated that 'from any gamers' perspective, it's clear to see that PETA have missed their mark on this one; Mario squishes hundreds of enemies in each of his games, but is never seen harming a tanuki.' Kain called the game 'ludicrous' given that gamers had long adored the Tanooki suit and would not be encouraged to kill real-life raccoon dogs.[33]

Jessica Conditt from Joystiq found the messages of Pokémon Black and Blue to be contradictory: 'while it's terrible to punch, kick, cut or hit fictional animals with bats, it's perfectly acceptable to electrocute humans'.[34] Jason Schreier from Kotaku called it 'ridiculous'.[21]Kotaku's Mike Fahey wrote a mostly negative piece about Pokémon Red, White, and Blue; he stated that despite its occasional humor, 'mostly it just wanders about, beating its message into your brain with heavy hands.'[27]

Cooking Mama Loves Animals

Not all critical response has been unfavorable. Fahey opined that New Super Chick Sisters 'manages to be a rather capable little platformer despite its heavy-handed message.'[8] Nikole Zivalich of G4TV called Super Tofu Boy 'actually a pretty good time waster' and, as she is a vegetarian, claimed to be 'on Team Tofu.'[15] Overall, Mike Splechta from GameZone stated that 'some are a little less flattering than others, but they do tend to get their point across.' He also called Cage Fight 'kickass', praising its gameplay and chiptune soundtrack, and encouraged readers to play it.[32]

In some cases, the creators of the original games have responded to PETA's parodies. In response to Super Tofu Boy, Super Meat Boy developer Team Meat added Tofu Boy as a playable character in a Super Meat Boy update.[15] Majesco responded to Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals that the Mama character, while not a vegetarian herself, supports treating animals humanely and 'would never put rat in [her] Ratatouille.'[11] Nintendo also released a statement in regards to Pokémon Black & Blue stating, 'Nintendo and the Pokémon company take the inappropriate use of our products and intellectual property seriously.'[35]

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Notable titles[edit]

PETA's games—and the games they parody—that have received press coverage include:

  • Super Chick Sisters (2007) – Super Mario Bros.[8]
  • Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals (2008) – Cooking Mama[11]
  • New Super Chick Sisters (2009) – New Super Mario Bros.[8]
  • Super Tofu Boy (2010) – Super Meat Boy[15]
  • Mario Kills Tanooki (2011) – Super Mario Bros. 3[33]
  • Pokémon Black and Blue (2012) – Pokémon Black and White[34]
  • Cage Fight: Knock Out Animal Abuse (2013) – River City Ransom[32]
  • Pokémon Red, White, and Blue: Loosely Connected to McDonald's (2013) – Pokémon Black and White[27]

References[edit]

  1. ^Original Make Fred Spew game page. Internet Archive. Archived 4 June 2001. Retrieved 15 May 2014.
  2. ^Original Save the Chicks game page. Internet Archive. Archived 7 February 2003. Retrieved 15 May 2014.
  3. ^Frasca, Gonzalo. KFC Cruelty Game. www.bogost.com. 18 February 2004
  4. ^Jackson, Rachael. 'PETA dials back diatribe, edges into the mainstream.' Orlando Sentinel. 11 May 2008.
  5. ^Smith, Wesley J. A Rat Is a Pig Is a Dog Is a Boy: The Human Cost of the Animal Rights Movement. (2010) Encounter Books, ISBN978-1-59403-346-9
  6. ^'An Interview with PETA: Game Developer.' Gameranx. 21 October 2013.
  7. ^Original 2004 lineup of 4 games. Internet Archive. Archived 10 September 2004. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  8. ^ abcdeFahey, Mike (November 12, 2009). 'PETA Releases New Super Chick Sisters'. Kotaku. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  9. ^PETA (2007). Super Chick Sisters. PETA. Description: Colonel Sanders and his minions have kidnapped Pamela Anderson for revealing to the world that KFC's secret recipe is cruelty to chickens! Help the Super Chick Sisters save Pam before it's too late!
  10. ^PETA (2009). New Super Chick Sisters. PETA. Description: Princess Pamela Anderson has been captured by evil Ronald McDonald, who plans on making her a part of his unhappy meals along with the chickens who are tortured for McDonald's restaurants. Help free Princess Pam and rescue the chickens from McDonald's cruelty!
  11. ^ abcFahey, Mike (November 19, 2008). 'Cooking Mama Responds to PETA'. Kotaku. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  12. ^PETA (2008). Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals. PETA. Message: Urge Majesco to make a vegetarian recipe version of Cooking Mama!
  13. ^PETA (2008). Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals. PETA. Objective: Remove the Internal Organs: Using your mouse, stick your hand inside the turkey, remove the organs, and place them in the mixing bowl.
  14. ^Ransom-Wiley, James (October 26, 2010). 'If you think Super Meat Boy is hard, try developing it'. Joystiq. Retrieved May 30, 2014.
  15. ^ abcdeZivalich, Nikole (December 2, 2010). 'Team Meat Responds To PETA's Super Meat Boy Parody, Super Tofu Boy'. G4TV. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  16. ^PETA (2010). Super Tofu Boy. PETA. Tofu Boy: I must save Bandage Girl from Meat Boy's bloody, jealous rage!
  17. ^PETA (2010). Super Tofu Boy. PETA. Tip: Tofu doesn't scream when you cut it!
  18. ^PETA (2010). Super Tofu Boy. PETA. Tip: Red meat can lead to impotence, obesity, and loss of girlfriend.
  19. ^ abHorn, Leslie (November 17, 2011). 'PETA Claims Mario Dig Was 'Tongue-in-Cheek''. PC Magazine. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  20. ^PETA (2011). Mario Kills Tanooki. PETA. Objective: Save your skin! Press the space bar to jump.
  21. ^ ab'Humans Are The Enemy In This Ridiculous PETA Pokémon Parody'. Kotaku. October 8, 2012. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  22. ^ abPETA (2012). Pokémon Black and Blue. PETA. Nurse Joy: I heard what you said to Cheren. I want to help you. As a nurse, I've seen how mistreated and exploited Pokémon are. Like all thinking and feeling beings, Pokémon must surely suffer terribly when they are cut up in experiments or forced to fight.
  23. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Black and Blue. PETA. Objective: You have escaped from your trainer—get ready to fight!
  24. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Black and Blue. PETA. Objective: Defeat all the trainers to free all Pokémon!
  25. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Black and Blue. PETA. Pikachu: Pokémon are not yours to abuse, Cheren. We exist for our own reasons.
  26. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Black and Blue. PETA. Tepig: Let's get going, Pikachu. I haven't had a good walk in a long time!
  27. ^ abcFahey, Mike (October 11, 2013). 'I'm Not Sure, But I Think PETA Is Upset With Pokémon'. Kotaku. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  28. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Red, White, and Blue. PETA. Description: For generations, humans have claimed to love Pokémon, but if Pokémon came to our world in real life and saw how we treat animals, would they love us back? Would they feel that Pokémon games have a part in reducing our empathy for animals? Would they feel like it's completely ridiculous that Nintendo releases two versions of essentially the same game and then has the audacity to release a slightly different version a couple of years later?
  29. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Red, White, and Blue. PETA. Pikachu: I can't believe you think it's OK to feed Miltank to people. Prepare for trouble!
  30. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Red, White, and Blue. PETA. Mysterious Stranger: The people of Unova eat Pokémon, do they not?
  31. ^PETA (2012). Pokémon Red, White, and Blue. PETA. Pikachu: Only occasionally, and we're fighting to change that. Everyone knows it's gross.
  32. ^ abcSplechta, Mike (June 25, 2013). 'PETA has MMA fighters free animals in kickass River City Ransom clone'. GameZone. Retrieved May 8, 2014.
  33. ^ abcKain, Erik (October 10, 2012). 'PETA Pokémon Protest Isn't A First - 5 Other Silly Anti-Video Game Protests From The Animal Rights Group'. Forbes. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  34. ^ ab'PETA parody 'Pokemon Black and Blue' fights for fictional animal rights'. Joystiq. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  35. ^'Nintendo Responds to PETA's 'Pokémon Black & Blue''. zeldainformer.com. Retrieved 1 August 2015.

External links[edit]

  • Full list of PETA's browser games
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=PETA_satirical_browser_games&oldid=944361208'
Cooking Mama
Developer(s)Office Create
Publisher(s)
  • JP:Taito
  • NA:Majesco Entertainment
  • PAL:505 Games
SeriesCooking Mama
Platform(s)Nintendo DS
iOS
ReleaseNintendo DS
  • JP: March 23, 2006
  • NA: September 12, 2006
  • AU: December 7, 2006
  • EU: December 8, 2006
iOS
Genre(s)Simulation, minigame
Mode(s)Single-player

Cooking Mama[a] is a cookerysimulation-styled minigame compilation video game for the Nintendo DS, and later ported to iOS as Cooking Mama: Lets Cook!. It was developed by Office Create and published by Taito, Majesco Entertainment, and 505 Games. It was awarded IGN's 'Best Of E3' award for 2006. It is the start of the Cooking Mama series, with 4 more main series titles on DS and Nintendo 3DS, two spin offs on Wii, and a spin off on 3DS. It also spins off into the Gardening Mama series. For later titles in the series, the publishers and Office Create joined together to form Cooking Mama Limited, which was made exclusively to develop the Cooking Mama series.

Gameplay[edit]

Cooking Mama Kills Animals 2

In Cooking Mama, the player is tasked with cooking various meals using the device's touch screen. Following the instructions of the titular 'Mama', the player uses the stylus or their finger to perform different kitchen tasks, including chopping vegetables, slicing meat, flipping food in pans, and arranging the final items on the plate. The version of the game for iOS also takes advantage of the accelerometer in its devices with some similar gameplay to Cooking Mama: Cook Off. Each of these tasks is performed by completing a mini-game which usually lasts less than 10 seconds. The gameplay structure consists of the player progressing through a series of short minigames. The game features a total of 96 different dishes.

Each minigame represents a different activity in the meal preparation, such as mixing, frying, or chopping the provided ingredients. The minigame mechanics themselves range from quickly drawing parallel lines in order to chop items, to a rhythm game where ingredients are added to a skillet or the heat is adjusted at precisely the right time. In many cases, players must look at the top screen of the DS for guidance on what to do next and then perform the task on the bottom screen. If the player makes a serious blunder or time expires without sufficient progress being made, that step in the cooking process is considered a failure. When this happens, a graphic of an angry 'Mama' with flames erupting from her eyes is displayed, along with the caption 'Don't worry, Mama will fix it!'.

Completing a dish can require playing one minigame, or as many as a dozen. The player's performance is rated when each dish is finished, based on the average result of each minigame. Depending on the final score, the game may award the player a bronze, silver or gold medal. The highest medal earned for each dish is recorded and displayed next to each item on the selection screen.

A screenshot of the 'Let's Cook' mode, where a player is cutting a tomato for a dish

Game modes[edit]

Let's Cook[edit]

The main game mode where players cook dishes. Players initially start with just a few simple recipes to choose from, with additional recipes unlocked as the earlier ones are mastered. Each recipe requires players to play through a short, timed minigame for each ingredient or group of ingredients. For example, to make a sandwich, the player would first be required to chop a cucumber into slices before the time limit elapses.

When cooking a recipe which has previously been mastered, the player sometimes has the option to change the dish being made 'on the fly' between two minigames. If completed, this new recipe is then unlocked for future play.

A player also has a choice to practice a recipe.

Let's Combine[edit]

In this mode, players can take the recipes which have been unlocked and combine them to make something new. For example, the 'Fried Eggs' recipe can be combined with the 'Rice' recipe to make an entree.

Use Skill[edit]

In this mode, players put their minigaming ingredients, peeling, stewing, tearing, and more to the test. The player is ranked at the end of each task.

Reception[edit]

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
DSiOS
Eurogamer6 of 10[1]N/A
Famitsu28 of 40[2]N/A
Game Informer6.5 of 10[3]N/A
GamePro[4]N/A
GameSpot6.9 of 10[5]N/A
GameSpy[6]N/A
IGN7 of 10[7]7.3 of 10[8]
Nintendo Power7 of 10[9]N/A
Nintendo World Report6.5 of 10[10]N/A
Detroit Free Press[12]N/A
The Sydney Morning Herald[13]N/A
Aggregate scores
GameRankings68%[14]67%[15]
Metacritic67 of 100[16]N/A

The DS version received 'average' reviews according to video game review aggregatorMetacritic.[16] In Japan, Famitsu gave it a score of all four sevens, for a total of 28 out of 40.[2]

411Mania gave it a score of 7.5 out of 10, saying that 'At $19.99 this makes yet another quality and affordable title for the Nintendo DS library.'[17]Detroit Free Press also gave it a score of three stars out of four, calling it 'a game best played in small bursts. It's perfect for waiting in line or during road trips.'[12] However, The Sydney Morning Herald gave it a score of three stars out of five and said it was 'A lot of fun but unlikely to satisfy your gaming appetite.'[13]

The original Cooking Mama sold more than 500,000 copies in the United States as of August 15, 2007,[18] and sold more than 1 million copies in PAL regions.[19] It received a 'Double Platinum' sales award from the Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association (ELSPA),[20] indicating sales of at least 600,000 copies in the United Kingdom.[21]

As of January 30, 2008, the Cooking Mama series sold more than 2.6 million copies worldwide.[22] Majesco also credited it, among other games, for an increase in revenue in early 2007.[23] By May 2009, over four million copies of the series were sold in North America. Miley Cyrus was found to be a huge fan of the game, and even gained a large number of fans due to how much she enjoys it.[24]

Criticism[edit]

The animal welfare group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) created a Flash game titled Cooking Mama: Mama Kills Animals[25] intended to both criticize the video game's use of meat-based recipes and to encourage veganism.[26] The creators of Cooking Mama responded to the PETA in a press release stating that 'I would never put rat in my ratatouille', and indicated that not all of Mama's recipes are meat-based.[27] PETA stated that they were happy with the release of Gardening Mama, a spin-off of the series.[28]

Sequels[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

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  1. ^MacDonald, Keza (October 10, 2006). 'Cooking Mama (DS)'. Eurogamer. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  2. ^ abFreund, Josh (March 15, 2006). 'News - Latest Famitsu reviews - Yggdra Union, Ace Combat Zero, more'. GamesAreFun. Archived from the original on March 20, 2006. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  3. ^Mason, Lisa (October 2006). 'Cooking Mama (DS)'. Game Informer (162): 114. Archived from the original on January 19, 2008. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  4. ^Ahoy And Avast (September 12, 2006). 'Review: Cooking Mama'. GamePro. Archived from the original on October 18, 2006. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  5. ^Navarro, Alex (September 18, 2006). 'Cooking Mama Review (DS)'. GameSpot. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  6. ^Villoria, Gerald (September 20, 2006). 'GameSpy: Cooking Mama'. GameSpy. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  7. ^Harris, Craig (September 19, 2006). 'Cooking Mama Review (NDS)'. IGN. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  8. ^Buchanan, Levi (February 27, 2009). 'Cooking Mama iPhone Review'. IGN. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  9. ^'Cooking Mama'. Nintendo Power. 209: 90. November 2006.
  10. ^Castaneda, Karl (August 10, 2006). 'Cooking Mama'. Nintendo World Report. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  11. ^Mastrapa, Gus (November 6, 2006). 'Cooking Mama'. X-Play. Archived from the original on May 15, 2007. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  12. ^ abGudmundsen, Jinny (February 25, 2007). ''COOKING MAMA''. Detroit Free Press. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  13. ^ abHill, Jason (March 26, 2007). 'Cooking Mama'. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  14. ^'Cooking Mama for DS'. GameRankings. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  15. ^'Cooking Mama for iOS (iPhone/iPad)'. GameRankings. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  16. ^ ab'Cooking Mama for DS Reviews'. Metacritic. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  17. ^Aranda, Ramon (September 20, 2006). 'Cooking Mama (DS) Review'. 411Mania. Retrieved February 4, 2016.[permanent dead link]
  18. ^'Cooking Mama Surpasses 500,000'. IGN. August 15, 2007. Archived from the original on March 10, 2009. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  19. ^Boyes, Emma (December 6, 2007). 'Cooking Mama serves up 1 million'. GameSpot. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  20. ^'ELSPA Sales Awards: Double Platinum'. Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association. Archived from the original on 2009-05-20. Retrieved 2019-03-04.
  21. ^Caoili, Eric (November 26, 2008). 'ELSPA: Wii Fit, Mario Kart Reach Diamond Status In UK'. Gamasutra. Archived from the original on September 18, 2017.
  22. ^'Majesco Entertainment Announces Cooking Mama Franchise Sales Reach 1.6 Million Units Domestically'. Majesco Entertainment. January 30, 2008. Archived from the original on April 8, 2008. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  23. ^Seff, Micah (January 29, 2007). 'Majesco Reports Increased Revenue'. IGN. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  24. ^Fahey, Mike (May 11, 2009). 'Cooking Mama Sells Four Million..Domestically'. Kotaku. Retrieved May 11, 2009.
  25. ^'Cooking Mama, The Unauthorized PETA Edition: Mama Kills Animals'. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Retrieved February 4, 2016.
  26. ^Inside Jersey staff (November 18, 2008). 'PETA Burns Cooking Mama'. NJ.com.
  27. ^Fahey, Rob (November 19, 2008). 'Cooking Mama Responds To PETA'. Kotaku.
  28. ^Laughlin, Andrew (November 19, 2008). 'PETA criticises 'Cooking Mama' games'. Digital Spy. Retrieved February 4, 2016.

External links[edit]

  • Cooking Mama at MobyGames

Cooking Mama Mama Kills Animals Download Torrent

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