Deep Fryer
Deep Fryer | |
---|---|
Appears in | WarioWare: Move It! |
Type | A Curious Case of Cave Art (Crygor, Penny & Mike) |
Command(s) | Drop! Pull when cooked! |
Info | "What could be an easier job than frying things in oil? Simply drop the ingredients into the fryer and wait. Once the color matches the guide, pull it back up so it's ready to serve." |
Controls | |
Form(s) | Massage |
Glyph | Trust Tether Sign |
Deep Fryer is one of Dr. Crygor, Penny, and Mike's microgames in WarioWare: Move It!
Gameplay[edit]
The player is holding two ingredients in their hands, with both of them being strapped to their wrists. The player must drop the ingredients into the deep fryer by dropping the Joy-Con, then pull them back up when they are properly cooked, as indicated by the sign held by the chef. When the player pulls up both properly cooked ingredients, the chef laughs and waves around. In ascending order of cooking time, pea pods become fried peas, bell peppers become stuffed peppers, corn cobs become popcorn, and pumpkins become pumpkin soup. If the player takes too long to drop the ingredients, or pulls an ingredient out too early or too late, the chef gets angry and points at the hand where the player made the mistake, and the game is lost.
- Level 1: The player must cook two of the same ingredient. The ingredients can be a pea pod or a corn cob. The chef's hat and outfit are blue, and his neckerchief is orange.
- Level 2: The player must cook two different ingredients, with the chef holding two signs. As well as pea pods and corn cobs, the ingredients can be bell peppers or pumpkins. The chef's hat and outfit are yellow, his neckerchief is teal, and he has a mustache.
- Level 3: Same as Level 2, but a mouse and a Fronk ride plates past the screen in an effort to obscure the ingredients. The chef's hat and outfit are white, his neckerchief is red, and he has a mustache and glasses.
Names in other languages[edit]
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | あげバイト[?] Age Baito |
Portmanteau of「揚げ」(age, fried) and「アルバイト」(arubaito, meaning "part-time job", which originates from the German word Arbeit) | |
Chinese | 油炸打工[?] Yóu zhá dǎgōng |
Working in frying | |
French | Friture à la ligne[?] | Line frying; play on pêche à la ligne ("angling") and friture ("fried food") | |
Korean | 튀김 아르바이트[?] Twigim Areubaiteu |
Frying part-time job | |
Spanish (NOA) | A freír[?] | Let's fry | |
Spanish (NOE) | Fritura[?] | Frying |