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If you’ve yelled “WHO LEFT THE PASTA ON THE STOVE?!” at people you love, there’s a good chance
Overcooked 2 is to blame. This chaotic co-op cooking game has become a modern party classic, and
once your crew finally three-stars every kitchen, the obvious question is: what now?
The good news? There’s an entire buffet of games like Overcooked 2 that deliver the same
delicious mix of teamwork, time pressure, and friendly screaming. From furniture-flinging
movers to plate-spinning pit crews and medieval rat chefs, these 14 titles capture that
Overcooked-style magic in different (and often hilarious) ways.
What Makes a Game “Like Overcooked 2”?
For this ranked list, we focused on games that nail three core ingredients:
- Chaotic cooperation: You’re juggling multiple tasks at once, and you really do need other humans to survive.
- Short, high-intensity levels: Just one more round quickly turns into three hours of “we swear this is the last one.”
- Couch-friendly design: Local co-op is either supported or clearly the best way to play, with online as a nice bonus.
We pulled from recommendations and roundups by family-focused gaming blogs, co-op curators, and
major gaming outlets that frequently highlight Overcooked-style chaos and cooking games,
including PlateUp!, Moving Out 2, Tools Up!, Unrailed!, Catastronauts, and more.
The 14 Best Games Like Overcooked 2, Ranked
1. PlateUp!
If Overcooked 2 is a wild night shift at a doomed diner, PlateUp! is what happens when you
decide to franchise the chaos. This co-op restaurant game combines fast-paced cooking with
roguelite progression: you design your kitchen layout, choose your menu, and survive multi-day
runs where every upgrade, appliance, and customer quirk can make or break your little bistro.
The vibe is instantly familiar to Overcooked players: chopping, serving, washing dishes, and
sprinting around like your apron is on fire. The twist is that you’re also planning long term:
picking cards that add new dishes, hazards, or restaurant perks between days. Runs can be brutal,
but they’re incredibly rewarding when your team finally syncs up.
Best for: Groups who love Overcooked but want deeper strategy, higher stakes, and
“okay, one more run” energy.
2. Moving Out 2
Moving Out 2 asks a very important question: what if you took Overcooked’s teamwork and
replaced food with couches you can throw through windows? As a F.A.R.T. (Furniture Arrangement
& Relocation Technician yes, really), you and your crew must empty houses, offices, and
bizarre fantasy locations as quickly (and recklessly) as possible.
Just like Overcooked 2, the levels escalate from “okay, this is manageable” to “why is this
truck moving while I’m holding a fridge?” Physics-heavy chaos, environmental gimmicks, and a
steady stream of puns keep the mood light even when you’ve just accidentally yeeted a TV into
the pool.
Best for: Players who love Overcooked’s frantic coordination but want a
sillier, more slapstick setting.
3. Restaurats
Imagine Overcooked 2, but everyone is a medieval rat running a restaurant for orcs and
vampires. That’s Restaurats, a new co-op cooking game that leans hard into absurdity:
you cook, serve, and also occasionally whack each other with baguettes while trying to keep a
monster-filled dining room happy.
It’s pure chaotic co-op: orders pile up, your rat crew scrambles for ingredients, and everything
can go sideways in seconds. Customizable rat chefs and fantasy customers give it a distinct
identity, but the tight, timer-driven gameplay will feel instantly familiar to Overcooked fans.
Best for: Groups who want Overcooked-style kitchens with a fresh theme and
lots of slapstick comedy.
4. Overcooked! All You Can Eat
Yes, it’s technically still Overcooked, but it’s also the definitive way to play everything
you love about Overcooked 2 (and then some). All You Can Eat remasters Overcooked 1 and 2,
bundles in all DLC, and adds accessibility options, cross-platform multiplayer, and quality-of-life
tweaks that make it easier to get a group going.
Think of it as the “director’s cut” of the Onion Kingdom. If you only played Overcooked 2 on
release, this package feels fresh thanks to revamped visuals and the huge library of kitchens,
recipes, and chefs.
Best for: Newer players who missed the original, and veterans who want one clean,
modern version of the whole series.
5. Tools Up!
Tools Up! trades chopping veggies for renovating apartments under a brutal time limit. Instead
of plating dishes, you’ll be rolling paint, ripping up carpets, mixing cement, and arguing about
who left a bucket on the stairs.
The structure is pure Overcooked: each level is a tiny puzzle box with a checklist of tasks,
and the key to success is dividing roles. One player manages paint, another handles floors, and
someone inevitably becomes The Person Who Keeps Throwing Things Out the Window.
Best for: Overcooked fans who love logistics and don’t mind swapping aprons for
overalls.
6. Out of Space
Out of Space is Overcooked in a haunted space apartment. You and your roommates must clean up
alien goo, power your ship, cook food, and keep everyone alive, all while managing a limited
layout and energy supply.
The “multitask to survive” feeling is extremely Overcooked: you’re juggling trash, doors,
showers, batteries, and hunger while aliens creep in. Success comes from designing efficient
room layouts and assigning clear jobs – and then immediately ignoring your own plan when
everything catches fire.
Best for: Groups who enjoy Overcooked but want a slightly more strategic,
house-management twist.
7. Catastronauts
Take the frantic task-juggling of Overcooked, place it on a starship under attack, and you get
Catastronauts. Instead of serving meals, you’re repairing systems, putting out fires, and
hurling bombs at enemy ships while your own hull falls apart.
Like Overcooked’s trickiest kitchens, every level forces you to prioritize on the fly: do you
repair the engine, extinguish that fire, or man the weapons? One missed step and the whole crew
goes up in flames.
Best for: Fans who want the same chaotic tempo but with sci-fi instead of
sauté pans.
8. Unrailed!
Unrailed! swaps kitchens for train tracks, but the energy is identical: you’re always on the
edge of disaster. Your train constantly rolls forward, and your team must chop trees, mine
stone, craft tracks, and lay them down before the train derails.
Cooperation is mandatory. Someone gathers wood, someone crafts tracks, someone clears obstacles,
and everyone yells “MOVE THE BUCKET!” at least once per round. Levels escalate with new biomes,
hazards, and upgrades.
Best for: Overcooked players who love pure teamwork and don’t mind trading
knives for pickaxes.
9. Crashout Crew
Crashout Crew is an upcoming co-op game where you and your friends operate forklifts and heavy
equipment to move cargo under ridiculous conditions. Early previews compare its “absurd
delivery missions” and four-player co-op structure directly to Overcooked’s blend of chaos and
coordination.
While it’s not a cooking game, the DNA is clear: tight arenas, time-limited objectives, and
slapstick physics that turn simple tasks into comedy. It’s one to watch if your group likes
the “disaster at work” genre of party games.
Best for: Players who want something fresh and more action-heavy but still
built around frantic communication.
10. KeyWe
KeyWe trades chefs for kiwi birds running a post office. Two players control tiny birds who hop
across typewriters, levers, and conveyor belts to assemble and send messages before time runs
out.
The game leans more into puzzle-platforming than raw chaos, but it still hits that Overcooked
sweet spot where success depends on coordination, timing, and laughing when you both slam into
the same button.
Best for: Duos who want something cute and slightly calmer but still co-op
focused.
11. Very Very Valet
In Very Very Valet, you and your friends are chaotic parking valets responsible for grabbing,
parking, and returning cars in wild, obstacle-filled arenas. Family gaming reviewers often
recommend it alongside Overcooked-style party games thanks to its frantic pacing and easy
pick-up-and-play controls.
Like Overcooked 2, success depends on assigning roles (“you grab cars, I return them”) and
accepting that things will go wrong in increasingly funny ways.
Best for: Groups who love slapstick physics and don’t mind occasionally
driving a car straight off a cliff.
12. Cake Bash
Cake Bash is technically more party brawler than pure co-op, but its sugary chaos makes it a
natural recommendation for Overcooked fans. You play as adorable pastries battling to be the
tastiest by surviving minigames like dodging pigeon attacks or covering yourself in frosting.
It’s fast, readable, and great for mixed-skill groups. While you’re mostly competing, the shared
mayhem feels very similar to a particularly unhinged Overcooked kitchen.
Best for: Nights when you want Overcooked-level absurdity but with less
structured objectives.
13. Galaxy Burger
Galaxy Burger takes cooking to space but cranks the pressure down. Described as a
laid-back alternative to frantic kitchen games, it lets you serve burgers to alien customers
across different planets with optional online co-op and extra challenge modes.
It’s not nearly as punishing as Overcooked 2, which makes it perfect for players who like the
theme of cooking games but don’t want their heart rate to spike every 30 seconds.
Best for: Casual groups or family nights where “cozy” beats “chaotic.”
14. Potion Party
Potion Party is a pixel-art alchemy shop where up to four players grow plants, grind ingredients,
mix potions, and serve a steady stream of customers before time runs out. It frequently appears
in community recommendations for people who enjoy PlateUp! and Overcooked-style co-op but want a
fantasy twist.
Like Overcooked 2, the pressure ramps up as more recipes unlock, station upgrades come into play,
and the shop fills with chaos. It’s cute, but don’t be fooled: late-game potion rushes can be
brutal.
Best for: Fans of cozy pixel art who still want a serious teamwork challenge.
How to Choose the Right Overcooked-Style Game for Your Group
To pick your next obsession, think about what your crew loved most about Overcooked 2:
- Love the pure kitchen chaos? Go for PlateUp!,
Restaurats, or Overcooked! All You Can Eat. - Want physics-driven slapstick? Try Moving Out 2,
Tools Up!, or Very Very Valet. - Prefer more strategy and planning? Out of Space,
Unrailed!, and PlateUp! all reward careful layouts and
long-term thinking. - Need something gentler or kid-friendly? KeyWe,
Cake Bash, and Galaxy Burger are easier on the nerves while
still fun to share.
No matter which you choose, expect the same basic cycle: everyone politely plans at first,
someone panics, someone forgets the dishes, and by the end you’re all laughing about the train
you let crash or the orc who left because you served him raw steak three times in a row.
Co-op Chaos Lessons: Experiences from Overcooked-Style Games
One of the reasons games like Overcooked 2 inspire so many spiritual successors is that they
create stories you still talk about weeks later. You don’t just remember that you played
Unrailed!; you remember the moment your friend sprinted across a burning forest with a
single piece of wood that saved the entire run. You don’t just “try” PlateUp!; you relive the
time your group accidentally designed a kitchen where everyone kept getting door-stuck in front
of the sink.
Across these games, a few patterns show up again and again:
- Communication evolves fast. At first, everyone narrates everything:
“I’m chopping!” “I’m washing dishes!” “I’m on the grill!” After a few levels, that turns into
efficient shorthand: “Plates left,” “Top path,” “Need tracks,” “Mop after this.” Games like
Overcooked 2, PlateUp!, and Tools Up! naturally teach players to give specific, actionable
calls instead of yelling general chaos. - Clear roles make or break a run. In Out of Space, one person often
becomes “power engineer,” watching doors and batteries while others focus on cleaning or
cooking. In Unrailed!, someone is designated “water bucket hero” to keep fires out. When
people know their jobs, even the wildest stages start to feel manageable. - The best moments are the failures. Ask any group what they remember most and
it’s rarely the perfect three-star run. It’s the day they locked themselves out of half the
apartment in Out of Space, or launched the train into a canyon because nobody noticed the
tracks had run out. In that sense, these games are secretly comedy generators disguised as
teamwork exercises. - They’re great “skill gap” equalizers. Unlike sweaty shooters or complex
strategy titles, Overcooked-style games let less experienced players contribute meaningfully.
A younger sibling can just handle dishes in PlateUp!, or carry boxes in Moving Out 2, while
more experienced players juggle trickier tasks. It’s a rare genre where everyone can feel
useful without needing to memorize long combos or meta builds.
Over time, groups often find that these games change how they play together in general. People
get more comfortable taking responsibility (“That one was on me, I dropped the soup”), more
willing to swap roles, and more open to laughing at mistakes instead of getting salty. The
stakes are low, but the lessons about communication, flexibility, and not panicking under
pressure are surprisingly real.
That’s ultimately why the “Overcooked-like” subgenre has exploded from monster-feeding cult
kitchens to medieval rat restaurants and cozy burger joints in space. Each game on this list
reshuffles the formula, but they all share the same beating heart: a timer, a shared objective,
and just enough chaos to turn “let’s relax for a bit” into the most memorable game night of the
month.
Conclusion
If your group has squeezed every last onion out of Overcooked 2, you don’t have to leave that
brand of joyful chaos behind. Whether you want to upgrade to deeper kitchen roguelites in
PlateUp!, toss sofas across traffic in Moving Out 2, or embrace your inner medieval rat chef in
Restaurats, there’s a perfect follow-up waiting for your next game night.
Grab a controller, assign roles, set your expectations to “we’re going to fail hilariously,” and
dive into one of these Overcooked-style gems. Just remember: the real win isn’t three stars
it’s the story you’ll be laughing about tomorrow.