Kebab Simulator VR scores 78/100 — better than 79% of Simulation capsules (n=5,188).

Quick text summary

Kebab Simulator VR scored 78/100 on Steam Analyzer — Good for a Simulation capsule. Top priority fix: [brand_consistency] Introduce a distinctive mascot character or visual motif (e.g., a chef avatar or signature brand color accent) that could anchor brand recognition across store pages and social media

Capsule scores by dimension

  • Genre Clarity: 9/10 — Instantly recognizable food sim. The capsule immediately communicates a cooking/food service simulator through explicit kebab, burger, fries, and sauce imagery arranged as if displayed in a restaurant. At tiny size, the recognizable food shapes and VR text clearly signal a food preparation game, not a narrative adventure or combat title.
  • Title Readability: 9/10 — Bold, legible hierarchy. KEBAB SIMULATOR VR uses large yellow sans-serif caps for primary title with clean white sans-serif for subtitle, both positioned in the top half on a semi-transparent or controlled background region. The text maintains excellent readability at small and tiny sizes due to strong value contrast, generous letter spacing, and strategic placement above the food assets.
  • Contrast & Color: 8/10 — Strong value separation achieved. Bright yellow title and white subtitle pop distinctly against the muted gray-blue cityscape background, with tan and brown food assets providing warm mid-tone separation. The silhouettes of food items remain clear even at tiny size, though the grayscale test shows the building background is somewhat muddy and could benefit from darker separation.
  • Uniqueness & Polish: 7/10 — Charming food sim aesthetic. The capsule achieves playful charm through deliberate food asset selection (sauce cup, fries box, kebab, burger, onions) that feels intentional rather than generic. Craft is solid with clean asset rendering and logical arrangement, though the approach is straightforward without unexpected visual hooks or unusual perspective that would elevate it to premium territory.
  • Brand Consistency: 6/10 — Functional but limited identity. The capsule establishes food service branding through the food asset palette and VR callout, but lacks a signature character, distinctive color motif, or memorable visual symbol that could anchor brand recall across multiple game touchpoints. The warm food tones and casual arrangement are consistent with a casual sim, but not distinctively memorable.
  • Composition: 8/10 — Balanced, clear focal hierarchy. Title occupies top third with clear primary focus, while food assets below create a secondary visual line that guides the eye horizontally without competing for attention. Layout respects safe margins, uses foreground/midground/background depth through layering (title, then assets, then buildings), and maintains clean composition even at small size with no edge-hugging or awkward gaps.

What works

  • Unambiguous genre communication. The explicit food items (kebab, burger, fries, sauce) immediately signal a food service simulator to viewers at any size.
  • Readable title with strong contrast. Yellow caps and white subtitle have excellent value separation from the muted background and remain legible at tiny thumbnail size.
  • Logical spatial composition. Clear foreground/background layering with title at top and supporting food assets below creates natural eye flow without clutter.

What hurts the capsule

  • Generic brand identity. No iconic character, mascot, or signature visual motif that would help the game stand out or be remembered across promotional materials.
  • Uninspired background treatment. The cityscape buildings feel like a placeholder that doesn't reinforce the food service narrative or establish a distinctive setting identity.
  • Limited visual storytelling. Assets are simply arranged in a list-like display rather than composed into a scene that conveys gameplay moment or emotional hook.

Priority fixes

  1. [brand_consistency] Introduce a distinctive mascot character or visual motif (e.g., a chef avatar or signature brand color accent) that could anchor brand recognition across store pages and social media
  2. [uniqueness_polish] Redesign the background to show an actual kebab shop interior or VR headset context instead of generic buildings, creating immediate gameplay narrative connection
  3. [composition] Consider layering a foreground element such as a cutting board, grill, or counter surface to create stronger depth and visual interest while maintaining readability

Store copy priority fixes

  1. [feature_communication] Replace 'test your skills' and 'lightning-fast reflexes' with concrete mechanics: 'Slice meat, assemble orders, manage toppings, and serve before time runs out' to clarify actual interactions.
  2. [uniqueness] Add a specific gameplay differentiator beyond theme, such as: 'Unique physics-based ingredient handling' or 'Cartoon chaos where customers react to your mistakes' to justify why this kebab sim over others.
  3. [audience_targeting] Add explicit mode clarity: mention if there is an endless mode, level progression, score leaderboards, or difficulty settings so players know if this is a casual pick-up or skill-driven challenge.
  4. [genre_clarity] Emphasize time management and order fulfillment more explicitly in the short description by replacing 'rush of frantic fun' with 'manage orders, beat the clock, satisfy hungry crowds'—this clarifies the core loop immediately.

Related guides

Steam app ID: 2908280 · Tags: Simulation, Cooking, VR, Life Sim, Time Management