Chef

Chef is a Game & Watch game that is also found in Game & Watch Gallery 2 and Game & Watch Gallery 4. Its goal is to keep the food off the ground. If any food hits the ground, the player loses a life.

Classic Version
A chef paces back and forth in a kitchen, using his frying pan to keep three to four pieces of food airborne. If a piece of food ends up on the floor, a mouse will grab it and the player gets penalized with a miss. The cat at the left hand side of the screen will occasionally grab the left-most piece of food with a fork, only to keep it from falling to the ground. It is also the origin of Mr. Game & Watch's standard move in the Super Smash Bros. series.

Modern Version
Princess Peach, who is holding a pan, has to feed Yoshi by cooking the food Mario and Luigi throw into the air. If the food hits Peach's pan, the player gets a point. If the food gets crispy, Peach may have to feed it to Yoshi; feeding the Yoshi gains a few extra points, but if Yoshi eats any raw or burnt food, he changes into a Baby Yoshi (referred to in the manual as a "Little Yoshi"). After Yoshi eats five pieces of cooked food, he lays an egg; after five more pieces of food are served to him, his egg will hatch into a Little Yoshi, which grows back up with five more feedings. If any piece of food goes on the floor, Peach will throw a fit and the player will receive a miss.

The food includes the following:


 * Scrambled eggs
 * Steak
 * Sausage (Game and Watch Gallery 2 only)
 * Fish
 * Drumstick? (Game and Watch Gallery 2 only)
 * Lobster (Game and Watch Gallery 4 only)
 * Green bell pepper (Game and Watch Gallery 4 only)

The different foods that the Mario Bros. toss out each require different amount of flips before getting crispy (ex. eggs require about three flips to cook). As the game progresses, the foods start flying off in angles instead of simply going up straight.

The Modern Version of Chef is remade in Game & Watch Gallery 4 for Game Boy Advance. Changes from the Game Boy Color version of the previous Modern Chef are as follows:
 * Thanks to the GBA's graphical capabilities, the sprites of Peach, Yoshi, and the Mario Brothers are now more consistent with the characters' official color schemes. Also, the Yoshi Egg, which was pink in the original game, has its color changed to green.
 * The kitchen is given a makeover: the windows are given gold curtains; the brickwork on the wall changes color from blue to gold; the countertop is missing the plates from the original; the base of the counter becomes gold and no longer looks like a cupboard, as it did originally; the floor, formerly brown, has its tiles recolored yellow and green; and the countertop, walls, and floor all have light from the wall sconces reflecting off of them.
 * The previous Modern Version used eggs, fish, steak, and sausages as the flippable food. Game & Watch 4's Modern Chef uses bell peppers and lobsters as well, but sausages are no longer used there.
 * The background now changes with every 200 points the player racks up in-game. Peach will start off in the original kitchen, but after 200 points, the background will blur and then be changed into what looks like the princess's castle garden. After 200 more points are earned, the background changes back again, and the pattern continues.
 * The background music cue has its percussion enhanced for the GBA, as is the case in all other Game & Watch Gallery series Modern Games ported to Game & Watch 4.