Compare Poof vs the cursed kitty prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Neko Entertainment. Published by Spawn Digital SAS. Released on 11/8/2013. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Single Player, Side View, Indie.

A dog, a golden-egg-laying kitty, and a single room full of monsters. Poof vs the Cursed Kitty is a scrappy arcade mash-up of platforming and tower defense that earns its chaos honestly.

There is something almost alchemical about the premise here. A dog named Poof gets tricked into accepting a cursed kitty that lays golden eggs, and now every monster in the dimension wants it. The game's entire job is to put that setup into motion and then refuse to stop. It is a single-room arcade score-chaser that splices the wave-defense loop of classic arcade Mario Bros. with the active, tool-juggling chaos of games like Super Crate Box and Orcs Must Die. That is a genuinely interesting combination on paper, and for a good stretch of play, it lands. The core loop asks you to stomp enemies by jumping on their heads while also placing tesla coil turrets, laying golden poo to slow advancing waves, and hurling knives, bombs, and ice-freeze attacks to thin the mob. Power-ups come in a stack and must be used in last-collected-first order, which adds a small, pleasing layer of pressure management to every round. The real spice is the time-manipulation mechanic: slow time down with a mouse scroll to survive hairy moments, or crank it up past normal speed to multiply your score. That risk-reward dial gives high-score chasers something to actually care about. Every few missions a trio of challenges unlocks a token you spend on one of 36 upgrades, covering extra health, faster movement, improved turret damage, and eventually new sections of the room itself. The room. This is the thing you will need to make peace with. There is exactly one map, and while it slowly expands as you progress, it never becomes a different place. Enemy layouts are randomized, which keeps individual runs from feeling scripted, but it also means the game never builds toward a boss or a dramatic reveal. The structure is challenge-list-to-challenge-list, all the way down. Some players find that hypnotic. Others hit a wall of repetition well before the upgrade tree empties out. The art direction, at least, is unconditionally warm. Every character reads clearly, the enemy variety is wider than you expect (twelve types, including flies, ogres, knights, and dragons), and the cartoony palette never tries to be anything it is not. The soundtrack skips chiptune entirely and lands somewhere between a medieval fair and a synth-guitar arcade, upbeat enough to hold the energy of a frantic round without grating on loop. Audio cues alert you when an enemy is close to the kitty and off-screen, which is a small but meaningful design choice. The controls are the honest weak point. Keyboard-and-mouse is serviceable but awkward given the layout, and most reviewers, including people who enjoyed the game, recommend plugging in a controller for anything approaching precision stomping. Poof vs the Cursed Kitty was Arkedo Studio's final game before the studio closed, and it carries some of that bittersweet energy. It is a small, handmade thing with a specific idea it believes in, released into a world that mostly looked the other way. The single-arena design is a limitation, but it is also a deliberate choice, one that respects the pick-up-and-play rhythm the whole game is built around. If your tolerance for score-loop arcade games is high and you can forgive controls that need a gamepad to feel right, this little dog and his cursed cat have a surprisingly stubborn hold. Kai, Scout Team

Poof vs the cursed kitty
ActionSingle PlayerSide ViewIndie

Poof vs the cursed kitty

Nov 8, 2013Neko EntertainmentSpawn Digital SAS
GamerScout Says

A dog, a golden-egg-laying kitty, and a single room full of monsters. Poof vs the Cursed Kitty is a scrappy arcade mash-up of platforming and tower defense that earns its chaos honestly.

PC
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A
Historical low: €0.53

GamerScout Verdict

Worth it for arcade score-loop fans who can stomach a single map and want a quick, frantic session game with controller in hand.

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.

Price History

Historical low
€0.535 Jun 2026
Keyshops
€0.49€0.52€0.55€0.585 Jun14 Jun23 Jun1 Jul10 Jul
Tracking prices since 5 Jun 2026
Create alert

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About Poof vs the cursed kitty

There is something almost alchemical about the premise here. A dog named Poof gets tricked into accepting a cursed kitty that lays golden eggs, and now every monster in the dimension wants it. The game's entire job is to put that setup into motion and then refuse to stop. It is a single-room arcade score-chaser that splices the wave-defense loop of classic arcade Mario Bros. with the active, tool-juggling chaos of games like Super Crate Box and Orcs Must Die. That is a genuinely interesting combination on paper, and for a good stretch of play, it lands. The core loop asks you to stomp enemies by jumping on their heads while also placing tesla coil turrets, laying golden poo to slow advancing waves, and hurling knives, bombs, and ice-freeze attacks to thin the mob. Power-ups come in a stack and must be used in last-collected-first order, which adds a small, pleasing layer of pressure management to every round. The real spice is the time-manipulation mechanic: slow time down with a mouse scroll to survive hairy moments, or crank it up past normal speed to multiply your score. That risk-reward dial gives high-score chasers something to actually care about. Every few missions a trio of challenges unlocks a token you spend on one of 36 upgrades, covering extra health, faster movement, improved turret damage, and eventually new sections of the room itself. The room. This is the thing you will need to make peace with. There is exactly one map, and while it slowly expands as you progress, it never becomes a different place. Enemy layouts are randomized, which keeps individual runs from feeling scripted, but it also means the game never builds toward a boss or a dramatic reveal. The structure is challenge-list-to-challenge-list, all the way down. Some players find that hypnotic. Others hit a wall of repetition well before the upgrade tree empties out. The art direction, at least, is unconditionally warm. Every character reads clearly, the enemy variety is wider than you expect (twelve types, including flies, ogres, knights, and dragons), and the cartoony palette never tries to be anything it is not. The soundtrack skips chiptune entirely and lands somewhere between a medieval fair and a synth-guitar arcade, upbeat enough to hold the energy of a frantic round without grating on loop. Audio cues alert you when an enemy is close to the kitty and off-screen, which is a small but meaningful design choice. The controls are the honest weak point. Keyboard-and-mouse is serviceable but awkward given the layout, and most reviewers, including people who enjoyed the game, recommend plugging in a controller for anything approaching precision stomping. Poof vs the Cursed Kitty was Arkedo Studio's final game before the studio closed, and it carries some of that bittersweet energy. It is a small, handmade thing with a specific idea it believes in, released into a world that mostly looked the other way. The single-arena design is a limitation, but it is also a deliberate choice, one that respects the pick-up-and-play rhythm the whole game is built around. If your tolerance for score-loop arcade games is high and you can forgive controls that need a gamepad to feel right, this little dog and his cursed cat have a surprisingly stubborn hold.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Tags

steamTower Defense HybridArcade Score-ChaserWave DefenseTime ManipulationSingle ArenaGamepad RecommendedScore LoopUnlock Progression

System Requirements

Minimum

Memory
1 GB RAM
Storage
600 MB
Graphics
graphic 512 MB RAM
Processor
Intel Core 2 DUO @ 2.4 GHz/Athlon 64 X2 4200+ & above
System requirements
XP/Vista/Win7/Win8

Keep exploring

Community Discussion

Be the first to comment on Poof vs the cursed kitty.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Neko Entertainment
Publisher
Spawn Digital SAS
Release Date
Nov 8, 2013

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert

No card? Pay another way

Top up your Steam Wallet or buy crypto with any card — instant delivery, no bank account needed.

More from Neko Entertainment

Buy smarter: helpful guides

Frequently asked questions about Poof vs the cursed kitty

How much does Poof vs the cursed kitty cost?

Poof vs the cursed kitty pricing changes often and varies by store, edition and region. The live price table on this page compares the cheapest in-stock offers from trusted key stores like Eneba and Kinguin, so you always see the current lowest price before you buy.

Where can I buy Poof vs the cursed kitty cheapest?

Compare Poof vs the cursed kitty prices across every verified store in the price table on this page. We list the cheapest in-stock key and store offers, updated regularly, so you always see the best current deal before you buy.

What platforms is Poof vs the cursed kitty available on?

Poof vs the cursed kitty is available on PC.

When was Poof vs the cursed kitty released?

Poof vs the cursed kitty was released on 8 November 2013.

Who developed Poof vs the cursed kitty?

Poof vs the cursed kitty was developed by Neko Entertainment and published by Spawn Digital SAS.