

While the developers have continued to release patches and the occasional content drop, many of these patches appear to have been tailored towards keeping C.R.S.E.D. is starting to exhibit signs of being sidelined.

The developers are as talented as ever, but the successful launch of Enlisted clearly has demanded their attention and C.R.S.E.D. Unfortunately for fans of Cusine Royale, this journey has not been an altogether happy one. F.O.A.D.Ĭuisine Royale as we knew it is over, but the journey of C.R.S.E.D. While Cuisine Royale was a joke, the developers were not, and suddenly the internet were aware of that.Ĭuisine Royale was given a chance few April fools projects are given, it would be given an opportunity to survive on its own merit, and development began in earnest.Ģ019 saw the release of console ports, new mechanics, and an optional “battle pass”, which rewarded players with wild west-themed cosmetics and items.Īround this time, the in-game store began to sell cosmetics which drifted away from the “funny underpants” theme of year one to the “drunken costume party” theme of year 2, including racially insensitive near topless female Native Americans and multiple stereotypical “Indian chief” costumes.Ģ020 was the year that everything changed with a new name, new mechanics, a dark supernatural theme, console ports, and even more, “cheeky” female skins, Cusine Royale became C.R.S.E.D. These aspects alone would not have saved the April fools gag from a quick demise if not for Cuisine Royale’s exceptionally good combat system and map design. The History of C.R.S.E.D.: F.O.A.D.Ĭuisine Royale was never intended to survive, but it did players embraced the cheeky humour of underwear-clad men (and eventually women) running around in kitchenware armour, driving noisy vehicles and eating excessive amounts of innuendo-laden consumable items.

Being edgy can “only get you so far”, and by the looks of it, C.R.S.E.D.: F.O.A.D.
