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100 Cats Lost in England is a chill indie puzzle game about finding hidden cats and coloring scenes in a whimsical, hand-drawn world. Developed by Two Cats Games, it drops you into a large map filled with 100 feline-shaped secrets. You can play solo or team up with a friend online to tag each cat and then fill scenes with colors using guided number-based tools or freeform palettes. Released in January 2026 for PC, it leans into slow-paced exploration with a focus on creative expression. The vibe is calm, the art is cozy, and the multiplayer adds a light co-op twist. Think of it as a digital coloring book crossed with a gentle scavenger hunt.
You spend most of your time panning across a detailed map, zooming into scenes to spot camouflaged cats. Once found, you unlock the area for coloring, which involves selecting hues from a palette to fill pre-drawn segments. The color-by-number mode offers structured guidance, while freeform lets you go wild. Multiplayer lets two players split tasks, cat hunting and coloring, or collaborate on both. Sessions are short and snackable; expect 20, 40 minute stretches of scanning, clicking, and blending. Controls are straightforward, with a right-click to mark cats and left-click to paint. The co-op mode syncs actions in real time but doesn’t force communication, making it ideal for laid-back teamwork.
PlayPile data shows a 4.2/5 rating from 12,000 players, with 78% completing all 100 cats. Average playtime clocks in at 8.5 hours, though 22% of players hit 15+ hours chasing optional art challenges. Community moods are mostly calm (65%) and curious (25%), but 10% report mild frustration in later levels where cats blend into busy backgrounds. One review notes: "The hand-painted visuals are a joy, but the color picker could be more precise." Achievements are light but rewarding, unlockable art frames and cat facts. 82% of players finish the game with a co-op partner, citing shared laughter over missed cats.
This is a niche title for coloring book fans and casual co-op enthusiasts. At $19.99, it’s a low-risk buy for its meditative vibe and charming art. The base game lacks deep mechanics, but the optional challenges and multiplayer give it legs beyond a one-sitting experience. If you want a game that’s about exploration, creativity, and team bonding without stress, this hits the mark. Just don’t expect a story or high-intensity action, this is all about relaxing and spotting fuzzy shapes in pretty scenes.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer, Co-operative
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