Little Kitty, Big City Lands on All Fours
You can go far in this world if you’re cute and funny. Double Dagger Studio understands this; its debut game, Little Kitty, Big City, prioritizes being cute and funny above all else, and the result is a deeply charming riff on animal sims like Goat Simulator and Untitled Goose Game. Fittingly, it’s a game you’ll want to curl up with on a lazy, cozy day between naps.
Little Kitty, Big City basks in the prankish irreverence of Untitled Goose Game but with softer edges befitting its furry little star. This kitty (who remains nameless until late into the story) doesn’t mean to annoy people or break stuff; that’s just what cats do, though, and so obviously you’ll be doing it too in a game where you play as a cat. From the expected destruction of knocking objects off shelves, to the more grievous mayhem of tripping pedestrians and stealing their phones, this little kitty can cause big chaos all throughout the Japanese city it lives in.
Along the way the cat will meet a menagerie of urban animals, some offering help, others demanding it. A greedy crow offers a variety of services in exchange for “shinies”—the game’s currency, which is basically any bit of human trash that’s small and glittery, eventually becoming something of a friend by the end of the game. An inventive tanuki who hates being mistaken for a raccoon builds a space-time warping fast travel network within the city’s sewer system. A stuffy British duck asks you to find his wayward ducklings; each baby has its own distinct personality and defining interest, the cutest of which is a baby duck fascinated by a duck version of Street Fighter 2. (He even wears a Ryu-style headband.) These interactions are almost always adorable, with a sweet, innocent sense of humor that’s still legitimately funny and not cloying or saccharine.

