Just Eat Sushi! Dive into Conveyor Belt Madness
Just Eat Sushi! is ready to serve up revolving sushi simulator in a playful party-game on Linux and Windows. Aurora Colored Bird keeps the magic flowing with its bright, creative touch. Which is already live on Steam. Just Eat Sushi! sounds like the kind of release you load for a chill night, then somehow end up yelling at your friends over wasabi and wrong plates. It is weird, cozy, and oddly serious about one thing: making a digital conveyor belt sushi spot feel alive. I like games that understand the power of a simple idea. Not every release needs a giant open world, a grim hero, or a 90-hour quest log. Sometimes, you just want to sit at the counter, watch sushi roll past, pour tea, add soy sauce, and feel that tiny rush when your favorite plate finally appears. That is the vibe behind Just Eat Sushi!, a new revolving sushi simulator party-game from indie developer Aurora Colored Bird. The release is now live, and yes, Linux support is part of the deal alongside Windows. For Linux players, that already gets my attention.
A Sushi Bar You Can Actually Sink Into
Just Eat Sushi! is built around the feel of a Japanese conveyor belt sushi restaurant. So you are not just clicking random food icons and watching a score go up. The whole point is the little ritual. While the plates glide by. The restaurant has that busy, warm energy. You can look for the sushi you want on the ordering tablet. You can also pour tea, serve wasabi, and add soy sauce like you are settling into a real meal after a long day. That may sound small, but small details can carry a sim. The realistic sushi textures and familiar restaurant functions are clearly doing the heavy lifting here. This is not trying to be a parody of sushi culture. It is trying to capture the excitement of sitting there, scanning the belt, and making the perfect pick. And honestly, that sounds dangerous for my free time.
Chill When You Want, Chaos When You Need It
The best part is that Just Eat Sushi! is not locked into one mood. It has five modes, and they all seem built for different kinds of nights. Free Mode is for the players who just want to relax. No pressure. No stress. Just you, the belt, and a steady flow of colorful sushi plates. Then there is Memory Challenge, where you have to avoid eating the same sushi twice. That sounds simple until the table fills up, your brain starts buffering, and your confidence falls apart in front of everyone. Wasabi Roulette brings the danger. It has that party-game energy where everyone acts brave until the gameplay starts punishing bad choices. Sushi Battle lets friends compete directly, which is where I expect the real trash talk to happen. Then Odd One Out Mode asks you to compare plates on the belt with a reference and pick only the correct ones. Sharp eyes matter there. One lazy glance and you are cooked.
Over 60 Menu Items in Just Eat Sushi!
There are over 60 menu items in Just Eat Sushi! which is exactly what this kind of simulator needs. A conveyor belt game lives or dies by variety. If the same few plates keep drifting past, the magic fades fast. Here, the menu sounds big enough to make each session feel fresh. Better yet, the release includes a Sushi Collection with trivia and facts about each dish. That is a smart touch. Plenty of players love sushi but still mix up names, ingredients, and styles. Having a collection system gives the game a reason to teach without feeling like homework. You eat, you learn, you remember, and then you probably argue with a friend about what just passed by. That is good PC gaming nonsense.
Just Eat Sushi!:Game Trailer
Built for Friends, Even With One Copy
Local multiplayer supports up to four players through Steam Remote Play Together. That means one copy can fuel a full digital dinner party. For a game like this, that matters a lot. Just Eat Sushi! sounds fun alone, but it also feels built for Discord nights. You can imagine the rhythm instantly. Someone is trying to focus on the Memory Challenge. Someone else is laughing too hard during Wasabi Roulette. One person is weirdly good at Odd One Out Mode and refuses to shut up about it. That is the kind of social friction I want from small indie titles. Not toxic. Not sweaty in a bad way. Just loud, funny, and full of tiny moments that become inside jokes.
The Face Customization Is Completely Unhinged
Then there is the customization feature, and this is where the game goes from cozy to cursed in the best way. You can use your own original images to customize your character’s face. That also means your sushi dinner can turn into a surreal mess of friends, memes, pets, mascots, and whatever else your group decides is funny. This is such a PC feature. It is strange, personal, and likely to create screenshots nobody can explain later. I respect it.
A Small Just Eat Sushi! Indie Game With the Right Kind of Flavor
What makes Just Eat Sushi! stand out is not just that it is a revolving sushi simulator party-game It is that Aurora Colored Bird seems focused on the feeling behind the meal. The waiting. The choosing. The panic of missing the plate you wanted. The tiny joy of getting it right. The goofy tension when friends turn a calm dinner into a competition. For Linux players who enjoy quirky, polished, performance-friendly indie experiences, this one is certainly worth keeping an eye on. It is coming to Steam for Linux and Windows, and the store page is live now. Just Eat Sushi! may not be the biggest game on Steam, but it has a strong hook, a clear personality, and the kind of cozy chaos that can turn a simple night online into something memorable.










