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Sneaky Doggie is a lighthearted RPG where you play as a dog obsessed with fashion. Developed by Eternal Dream and released on November 10, 2025, it’s a single-player PC game blending outfit customization with light questing. The premise is simple: create wild combinations using different clothing items, complete fetch-like tasks, and level up your pup’s style. Think of it as a mix of dress-up and pet simulator, aimed at casual players. The game leans into its whimsical charm, with pixel art visuals and a focus on creativity over combat. It’s not about saving the world, it’s about nailing the perfect bowtie and impressing other dogs.
You start by selecting items from a growing catalog, hats, shirts, pants, and accessories, and mixing them for quests. Each task gives a theme, like “business casual” or “beach party,” which you satisfy with your combos. You collect items by playing minigames: fetching sticks, barking at squirrels, or digging up buried treasure. Combat is replaced with “style battles” where you out-fit opponents in a turn-based match. Sessions last 30, 60 minutes, with progression focused on unlocking new items and upgrading your dog’s stats (like “Coolness” or “Fur Fluffiness”). Controls are simple, mouse-driven for outfit selection, keyboard shortcuts for minigames. The loop is repetitive but satisfying for fans of creative fiddling.
Early players rate Sneaky Doggie 87/100 on PlayPile, with 72% finishing the main story. Average playtime is 8 hours, and 43% earn all achievements (which include “Dress in 50 Hats” and “Win Every Style Battle”). Community moods are split: 68% “Amused,” 22% “Relaxed,” and 10% “Underwhelmed.” One user wrote, “It’s exactly what I needed after a stressful week, mindless but cute.” Critics note the shallow progression and lack of multiplayer, but praise the art style. The game’s 17.99 USD price tag is seen as fair, though some wish for more variety in quests.
Sneaky Doggie is best for players who enjoy fiddling with aesthetics and don’t mind light, repetitive gameplay. If you like games like Animal Crossing or Stardew Valley but want less farming, this is your pick. The 18 achievements add a decent challenge, but the core loop can feel samey after 10 hours. At under 20 bucks, it’s a low-risk buy for a few evenings of doggone fun. Skip it if you crave depth, but embrace it as a cozy, weird distraction.
Game Modes
Single player
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