"Olivia, get the bowls and chopsticks ready to eat dinner," my mum asks 10 year old me. I do as I'm told, taking them to the dinner table. In childish, whimsical fashion as a childish, whimsical child, I grab my pair of chopsticks and start hitting them together as if I'm a drummer. "Olivia, don't do that," my mum scolds me. "Your grandma always used to tell me off when I did that as a child." Sullenly, I put the chopsticks back down on the table.
Well, 10 year old me, you're in for a treat. If you wait a couple of decades, you'll learn of Nour: Play With Your Food, a game which allows you to bang together chopsticks. The game wants you to. Nour is a physics simulation of a variety of foods, where you can choose the ingredients for the dish and add various "effects" of a non-culinary nature.
Nour has been in development for a while. We first caught wind of Nour in 2017, and developer TJ Hughes ran a Kickstarter campaign to help get it to the pass. The last update we had on it was in August 2021, and now Hughes has announced a demo as part of the current Steam Next Fest.
With its bright colours and shiny pristine models, it's tempting to arrange everything nicely on the screen for pretty picture, but its far more entertaining to make a complete mess. Drop food haphazardly, set it on fire, make it start vibrating to a dance beat. In the meat grinder level, I shoved absolutely everything I could into the grinder and wound up with multi-coloured tubes of who knows what. Tasty? Absolutely not, I wouldn't want to put this abomination near anyone's mouth. But once the tubes start swirling around in the air from the magnet effect, I'm not looking at it as food anymore. It's an art form to be visually consumed.
The demo shows
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