
Alien Cat 2
A pocket-sized top-down puzzler built around one quietly brilliant idea: every cat clone you gain mirrors your every move, and keeping them all alive is harder than it looks.
Compare Prices(0 stores)
Loading prices...
We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.
Screenshots & Media

About Alien Cat 2
My first few minutes with Alien Cat 2 felt almost too gentle. A small pixel cat, a single-screen grid, some coins to collect, a portal to escape through. Repa Games is not trying to dazzle you with production values. And then, a few stages in, a second cat appears and starts mirroring everything the first one does, and the whole texture of the game shifts under your feet. That synchronised-clone mechanic is the real heart of this thing, and it earns its place. The structure is clean: 22 single-screen levels with progressive difficulty, no lives limit, and passwords handed out between every stage so you are never punished for putting the game down. Hazards arrive in careful waves. First you are dodging mines and spike traps by timing your movement. Then patrol enemies enter, marching predetermined paths. Later still, you are managing three or four cats simultaneously, wedging some against safe walls so others can thread through a gap. The puzzle logic is closer to Sokoban-adjacent positioning than twitch-reflex action, though the hit-detection can occasionally feel a touch generous in the wrong direction. One or two later stages will have you second-guessing whether you clipped a tile by a pixel or just got lucky. It is a small frustration inside an otherwise fair experience. On the audiovisual side, temper expectations carefully. The resolution sits low enough to notice most in the menus, and tile sets repeat across multiple stages without apology. The death animations lean into pixel gore that is incongruous with the otherwise breezy tone, the kind of gory splat that would surprise a parent who assumed this was completely inoffensive. The music lands somewhere between workable and memorable depending on the stage. There are roughly five rotating themes; none are offensive and a couple have a chiptune warmth that kept me from muting it, but this is not a soundtrack you will be thinking about later. What the presentation does right is keep the grid readable and the cat characters charming in motion. Completion time hovers around ninety minutes for a clean run, which is either a perfectly calibrated session or too short depending on your tolerance for micro-puzzlers. Alien Cat 2 knows what it is, delivers it without padding, and ends before you resent it. That is a quieter virtue than most budget games manage. The Steam community has responded warmly, and the consensus is consistent: the clone mechanic clicks, the back half of the level list provides a genuine spatial-logic workout, and the unlimited-retry structure keeps it from ever tipping into frustration. If you played the first Alien Cat and found the single-screen platforming a bit thin, this sequel corrects course by swapping genre entirely, which is either charming or baffling depending on your appetite for a series that refuses to repeat itself. Kai, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Windows 7, 10
- Memory
- 512 MB RAM
- Storage
- 15 MB available space
- Graphics
- Intel HD Graphics
- Processor
- Intel Celeron 1800 MHz
- Sound Card
- DirectSound Compatible
- Additional Notes
- Keyboard
Community Discussion
Be the first to comment on Alien Cat 2.
Reviews & Ratings
No ratings available
Game Info
- Developer
- Repa Games
- Publisher
- КиКо
- Release Date
- Jun 15, 2020