We propose using the so called Royal Road functions as test functions for cooperative co-evolutionary algorithms (CCEAs). The Royal Road functions were created in
the early 90’s with the aim of demonstrating the superiority of genetic algorithms over local search methods. Unexpectedly,
the opposite was found to be true. The research deepened our understanding of the phenomenon of hitchhiking where unfavorable alleles may become established in the population following an early association with an instance of a highly
fit schema. Here, we take advantage of the modular and hierarchical structure of the Royal Road functions to adapt them to
a co-evolutionary setting. Using a multiple population approach, we show that a CCEA easily outperforms a standard genetic
algorithm on the Royal Road functions, by naturally overcoming the hitchhiking effect. Moreover, we found that the optimal
number of sub-populations for the CCEA is not the same as the number of components that the function can be linearly separated
into, and propose an explanation for this behavior. We argue that this class of functions may serve in foundational studies
of cooperative co-evolution.