What about in relation to the bottles? Bottles similar to alcohol can contain substances such as balsamic vinegar or olive oil.
(This is what other stuff I intend to use it for)
What about in relation to the bottles? Bottles similar to alcohol can contain substances such as balsamic vinegar or olive oil.
(This is what other stuff I intend to use it for)
Just avoid anything that has to do with Alcohol, and replace it with something, S A F E
A regular bottle that looks like a wine bottle can be used.
A regular bottle does not suggest that it will contain wine. Especially with labels.
Add a label and you should be fine.
You could come up with something creative which acts like alcohol. (Cooking wise, don’t switch controls on player after consumtion) In any case you should be fine as long as you associate a proper name with the ingredient or bottle being used.
Think a cool substitute would be cactus juice… think it’d be fun to flambé with cactus juice.
We are aiming for learn and explore sort, so everything needs to be factually accurate.
In the real world, yes, Alcohol is related to cooking, it’s used in many dishes such as Tequila Lime Shrimp, and even Mezcal Gazpacho Soup, heard of them a lot in cooking shows.
You can make a bottle of it, but maybe not mention the name “Alcohol” in the game, like Firewater or Fancy Juice. (Come up with better names than me, my suggestions LOL)
If you’re going to teach kids how to cook, you better mention the uses of “Alcohol” in it so kids later when they’re an adult and learn the uses of it, and perks.
My answer: Yes, but don’t mention the name.
Non-alcoholic wine?
That conforms to their TOS
What about ‘Fermented red grape juice’?
That will work, kids think it will be grape juice, healthy choices!
Hmm, well as long as you take alcohol out of the equation it should suffice.
I like fermented grape juice XD
Btw what recipes you making?
What do you mean here specifically? Do you mean the alternative names for the term “Alcohol”, or what else, since I can’t come up with a clear question?
I’ll edit this for answers, so it won’t flood the post.
I cant say too much about the game, but mainly just for marinating meat.
Given that there are many recipes that involve wine as an ingredient, its normal to presume it would be alright. However, there has been many games that have been stricken down for merely mentioning alcohol. Even things like rubbing alcohol in medical games can be risky to include.
To be on the safe side, you may want to look for a different ingredient to replace red wine. This might be the only way to keep it accurate for teaching, as well as compliant to TOS. A few things that can substitute red wine in recipes:
These substitutes all depend on the recipe you are making, so you may want to search for red wine substitutes specific to your recipe.
Interesting, never used that technique before. Mostly ever came across alcohol for various sauces and the occasional fire show. Sounds pretty cool.
Best of luck on the game!
I think ima directly check with roblox if i’m allowed to call it ‘Fermented grape juice’ just to play on the safe size.
Oddly tasting grape juice? As long as it doesn’t state it’s wine I’d assume.
No it’s not allowed, try to substitute it with oil or something. Sorry
It could get you banned, as mentioned above, try substituting.
I know it sounds stupid not being able to add ingredients to a game simply because of their name,
However, you can think of it like this, If roleplay is allowed on the game, people can act out them drinking it etc. hence why it could be against the ToS.
At the end of the day, rules are rules created by the owners of roblox, only they can bend them and re-make em.
Technically, the alcohol itself evaporates out of the food when you cook it, so you could argue it’s not really alcohol…
It definitely seems like an unnecessary risk, though. I wouldn’t risk it, or putting “fermented grape juice” (which gives the exact same impression - it’s obvious what you mean). You could always use a real life substitute, like the ones listed here. Examples include pomegranate juice, grape juice, and ginger ale. (apparently?)