The v1.0.11 update is a hearty meal of new content, significantly expanding the game's already massive kitchen count.

Many players reported that chef skins (particularly the exclusive ones) were not unlocking correctly. This update fixed the triggers for unlocking several, including the elusive "top" meta-chefs.

has officially landed. This patch focuses on tightening the gameplay experience, ensuring your chaotic culinary sessions are smoother than a perfectly blended soup. Performance & Stability The headline of this update is a suite of stability improvements

The update brings a range of new content to the game, including:

Some levels now require you to box meals for delivery instead of just plating them.

Online play is the heart of the "All You Can Eat" experience. This update includes backend tweaks to cross-platform matchmaking

Play with friends on PC, Xbox, or PlayStation, now functioning much better thanks to the stability patches in updates like 1011.

For those playing on homebrew-enabled consoles, finding the is often the "top" search query because it provides the most stable version of the game before later, potentially more complex updates. Top Fixes in the 1011 Update

For updating a game, , making a v1.0.11 NSP file universally required regardless of whether your base game is an XCI or an NSP. How to Install the 1.0.11 Update on Custom Firmware Overcooked! All You Can Eat NSP, XCI ROM + v1.0.11 Update

The "All You Can Eat" edition is special because it runs natively at 60 FPS on next-gen consoles and Switch, with cross-platform multiplayer. However, for the Nintendo Switch homebrew scene, the game is distributed as an (Nintendo Submission Package) file, followed by sequential updates.

: Download ghost data from the world's top-ranked players on the Leaderboards to learn their movement patterns and ingredient management. Synchronized Team Training