What to do first
Buy food you can afford, cook it in the available toaster or pan, add it to your sandwich, collect the money it generates, and keep building a bigger giant sandwich only after comparing the visible change.
Learn the buy, cook, stack, and earn loop so you can build a giant sandwich without wasting early money.
Buy food you can afford, cook it in the available toaster or pan, add it to your sandwich, collect the money it generates, and keep building a bigger giant sandwich only after comparing the visible change.
Use values and results visible in your own session whenever the game does not publish an exact rule.
Start with food the game currently lets you afford. The public description confirms buying food, but it does not publish a price or unlock table.
Kitchen note: Keep enough cash to continue the loop instead of emptying your balance on an unclear upgrade.
Use the giant toaster or pan shown in your area. Watch the in-game prompts because recipe, timer, and capacity details are not publicly documented.
Stack the result and note how your height or layer progress changes. Use that observation as your personal baseline.
Record cash and income before and after an upgrade, then use the calculator to compare affordability and payback.
There is no sourced named-food ranking yet. Compare visible cost and result instead.
A label does not prove faster payback. Check the actual income change in your session.
No active code was collected from checked public sources at launch.
Return to the value shown in your own session, change one choice at a time, and recheck the matching guide or source note before spending more.
Buy food, cook it, stack it, collect the generated money, and repeat.
Use the same buy, cook, stack, and collect loop, then measure which purchase or appliance choice moves your sandwich forward fastest in your own session.
No source-safe named ranking is available. Compare the choices visible in your own game.
Only if you can still continue the loop and the visible income gain justifies the cost.
Yes, the official description says it does, but the rate and cap are not published.