Polygon on Dosa Divas
Polygon posted a review of Dosa Divas saying the restaurant is generally appealing but shows occasional overseasoned dishes. The social post has drawn strong engagement—over 4,000 views—highlighting public interest in the spot. (x.com)
Polygon’s review says *Dosa Divas* is a compact role-playing game with strong combat and character work, even as some cooking systems need more polish. (polygon.com) The review, published April 13, was written by Jen Glennon and describes an 8-to-10 hour game built around exploration, cooking, and turn-based battles. Polygon says the game “doesn't overstay its welcome” and calls combat its strongest feature. (polygon.com) Polygon’s social post linking the review was live on X, the platform formerly called Twitter, under the outlet’s official account. The post pointed readers to the review as *Dosa Divas* reached its April 14 release window. (x.com) (store.steampowered.com) *Dosa Divas* comes from Outerloop Games, the studio behind *Thirsty Suitors* and *Falcon Age*, and follows sisters Amani and Samara as they travel with an ancient mech called Goddess. The story centers on food, family conflict, and a corporate takeover by Lina, the youngest sister, after the collapse of the family restaurant. (polygon.com) (rpgsite.net) The game’s combat swaps standard fantasy elements for flavor types such as spicy, sweet, and sour. Polygon says exploiting those flavor weaknesses can break shields and leave enemies “stuffed,” opening them to extra damage. (polygon.com) The review’s main criticism is the cooking interface, not the premise. Polygon says the recipe system sometimes autofills the wrong ingredients and makes players repeat minigames instead of quickly remaking dishes they already created. (polygon.com) That mixed-but-positive take lines up with other early coverage published April 13. Kotaku praised the game’s emotional themes and storytelling, but said repetitive cooking minigames and fetch quests weaken the overall package. (kotaku.com) The timing puts extra attention on the review because April 14 is the game’s planned launch date on Steam, with listings and launch news also pointing to PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, Nintendo Switch, and Nintendo Switch 2. Publisher credits on store pages list Outerloop Games and Outersloth. (store.steampowered.com) (gematsu.com) For readers seeing the game for the first time through Polygon’s post, the review frames *Dosa Divas* as a small-scale release with a clear hook: cooking, mech travel, and family drama in one short role-playing game. Polygon’s verdict is that the ingredients mostly work, even if part of the kitchen still needs tuning. (polygon.com)