Compara los precios de Cats and the Other Lives en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Cultic Games. Publicado por Maple Whispering Limited, Cultic Games. Lanzado el 21/11/2022. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Adventure.

A six-hour point-and-click that lures you in with a chubby house cat doing cat things, then quietly breaks your heart with a decades-deep family mystery you won't see coming.

My first impression was that this would be a cute, low-stakes adventure about pawing at furniture and knocking things off shelves. That impression lasts maybe twenty minutes. Cats and the Other Lives is a pixel-art point-and-click set almost entirely inside the Hartford mansion of the recently deceased Bernard Mason, whose surviving family has gathered for the wake. You play as Aspen, the household's aging orange cat, free to roam every room, eavesdrop on every uncomfortable conversation, and generally be a cat while a quiet, increasingly grim family drama unfolds around you. The writing is genuinely sharp. By the time the credits roll you have a clear picture of who Bernard was, why his four adult children are so estranged from each other, and what secrets the house has been holding since the 1960s. That last part is where the game pulls a tonal left turn most players won't expect: what starts as warm domestic drama pushes into territory involving domestic violence, substance abuse, and some genuinely dark mythology threading through the Mason bloodline. The content warnings are real. On the gameplay side, the cat perspective is the cleverest thing here. Aspen can jump on shelves, track scents across rooms, squeeze through vents, chase mice, scratch furniture for attention, and use those feline abilities as the mechanical backbone for light puzzles. None of the puzzles are hard - this is not a game where you get stuck - but they do a good job of making you feel like a cat with accidental agency rather than a human brain in a cat body. The flashback sequences, where ghostly younger versions of family members replay pivotal moments from decades past, are used sparingly and land with real weight. The structure spans three chapters across three story days, and the pacing holds up across all of them, though a handful of longer dialogue stretches in the middle act can drag slightly. The few chase sequences involving mice or running from danger have been consistently flagged as the weak link: lane-switching feels a little unresponsive and the one tree-climbing chase in particular trips up most players at least once. Visually, the 2D pixel art earns its atmosphere. Aspen's animations are the star - chunky, unhurried, physically convincing in the way only a well-observed chunky cat can be. The mansion itself is detailed enough to feel lived-in and slowly decaying, which suits the story's preoccupation with inherited grief and unfinished business. The soundtrack is understated to the point where some players barely notice it, though that restraint fits the sombre mood better than a more intrusive score would. The game runs around six to seven hours on a first playthrough with minimal replay value beyond hunting collectible memory objects scattered through the environment. Who is this for? Anyone who gravitates toward narrative-heavy indie games - think Telling Lies or Gone Home in spirit, not in structure - and who is comfortable with adult themes handled seriously rather than sensationally. Pure puzzle-game hunters will find too little friction. Players who bounce off heavy text-based dialogue will find too much of it. But if you are the kind of person who finishes a short story and immediately needs to talk to someone about it, Cats and the Other Lives is very much in that space. The cat framing is not a gimmick. It earns its premise. Alex, Scout Team

Cats and the Other Lives

Cats and the Other Lives

21 nov 2022Cultic GamesMaple Whispering Limited, Cultic Games
GamerScout opina

A six-hour point-and-click that lures you in with a chubby house cat doing cat things, then quietly breaks your heart with a decades-deep family mystery you won't see coming.

PC
Steam Deck PlayableProtonDB Gold
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Acerca de Cats and the Other Lives

My first impression was that this would be a cute, low-stakes adventure about pawing at furniture and knocking things off shelves. That impression lasts maybe twenty minutes. Cats and the Other Lives is a pixel-art point-and-click set almost entirely inside the Hartford mansion of the recently deceased Bernard Mason, whose surviving family has gathered for the wake. You play as Aspen, the household's aging orange cat, free to roam every room, eavesdrop on every uncomfortable conversation, and generally be a cat while a quiet, increasingly grim family drama unfolds around you. The writing is genuinely sharp. By the time the credits roll you have a clear picture of who Bernard was, why his four adult children are so estranged from each other, and what secrets the house has been holding since the 1960s. That last part is where the game pulls a tonal left turn most players won't expect: what starts as warm domestic drama pushes into territory involving domestic violence, substance abuse, and some genuinely dark mythology threading through the Mason bloodline. The content warnings are real. On the gameplay side, the cat perspective is the cleverest thing here. Aspen can jump on shelves, track scents across rooms, squeeze through vents, chase mice, scratch furniture for attention, and use those feline abilities as the mechanical backbone for light puzzles. None of the puzzles are hard - this is not a game where you get stuck - but they do a good job of making you feel like a cat with accidental agency rather than a human brain in a cat body. The flashback sequences, where ghostly younger versions of family members replay pivotal moments from decades past, are used sparingly and land with real weight. The structure spans three chapters across three story days, and the pacing holds up across all of them, though a handful of longer dialogue stretches in the middle act can drag slightly. The few chase sequences involving mice or running from danger have been consistently flagged as the weak link: lane-switching feels a little unresponsive and the one tree-climbing chase in particular trips up most players at least once. Visually, the 2D pixel art earns its atmosphere. Aspen's animations are the star - chunky, unhurried, physically convincing in the way only a well-observed chunky cat can be. The mansion itself is detailed enough to feel lived-in and slowly decaying, which suits the story's preoccupation with inherited grief and unfinished business. The soundtrack is understated to the point where some players barely notice it, though that restraint fits the sombre mood better than a more intrusive score would. The game runs around six to seven hours on a first playthrough with minimal replay value beyond hunting collectible memory objects scattered through the environment. Who is this for? Anyone who gravitates toward narrative-heavy indie games - think Telling Lies or Gone Home in spirit, not in structure - and who is comfortable with adult themes handled seriously rather than sensationally. Pure puzzle-game hunters will find too little friction. Players who bounce off heavy text-based dialogue will find too much of it. But if you are the kind of person who finishes a short story and immediately needs to talk to someone about it, Cats and the Other Lives is very much in that space. The cat framing is not a gimmick. It earns its premise.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Etiquetas

steamFamily DramaSingle PlaythroughCollectiblesGhostly FlashbacksDark ThemesFeline MechanicsLinear NarrativeCozy-Dark Hybrid

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7+
Processor
Intel i5+
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX900 Series or Higher
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space

Recomendados

OS
Windows 10+
Processor
Intel i7+
Memory
16 GB RAM
Graphics
Nvidia GTX1000 Series or Higher
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
3 GB available space

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Steam
91%(1,503)

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Cultic Games
Distribuidora
Maple Whispering Limited, Cultic Games
Fecha de lanzamiento
21 nov 2022

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Cats and the Other Lives?

Cats and the Other Lives está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Cats and the Other Lives?

Cats and the Other Lives se lanzó el 21 de noviembre de 2022.

¿Quién desarrolló Cats and the Other Lives?

Cats and the Other Lives fue desarrollado por Cultic Games y publicado por Maple Whispering Limited, Cultic Games.