You’ve seen what The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild would look like on the Nintendo DS, now check out 64 Bits’ Netflix Delicious in Dungeon demake for the handheld. The focus is on cooking up fantastical dishes from the series, like the Red Dragon Tail Feast, with a gameplay style heavily inspired by Cooking Mama but with some Final Fantasy DS game elements tossed in for flavor.
The best way to describe this game is a stylus-based cooking adventure where you chop, fry, and mix, all in a pixel-art style like a 2006 Nintendo DS game. Just so we’re on the same page, it’s not a real game but a fan-made project showing what such a game could look like. If you’re unfamiliar with the anime, it’s a fun fantasy-comedy-adventure about a group of adventurers exploring a dungeon. The catch? They cook and eat the monsters they defeat to stay alive, mixing creative cooking with survival challenges.
- Buildable display model of a Super Mario Piranha Plant (71426) – Celebrate Mario Day with a building adventure as you capture the finer details of...
- Create iconic poses – Pose the head, mouth, stalk and leaves of the Super Mario Piranha Plant figure
- Buildable pipe – Place the Piranha Plant in the brick-built pipe. The set also includes 2 coins

Cooking Meshi DS is all about the cooking part. It’s cheerful and fun, skipping the dungeon exploring and deeper story for a relaxed, old-school gaming feel. You focus on making dishes like Red Dragon Tail Feast using the DS stylus to chop, stir, and fry, all with a pixel-art look.


The Delicious in Dungeon anime gives a rich, layered story where cooking is a tasty piece of a bigger fantasy world. The Cooking Meshi DS demake, though not playable, captures the anime’s cooking charm in a fun, nostalgic DS-style package, great for fans who’d love to picture cooking monster meals with a stylus.