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Meowdoku looks like a lighthearted game at first glance: cats, colors, a grid. But once you play it, you'll realize it's not that simple.
You start by placing one cat on the board. Then add another. And very quickly, everything begins to follow its own rules.
Nothing complicated:
That's it. No lengthy tutorials, no extraneous mechanisms.
It's usually a little nerve-wracking at first.
Looking at the chessboard, I don't know where to place my piece. I try a square. Wrong. Undo. Then try again.
There will be times when the entire screen "gets stuck" because there are no clear moves left. But once you find the right move, everything naturally opens up again.
This type of puzzle doesn't require speed. It forces you to look more closely.
No pressure whatsoever. No time limits. No combos. No flashy rewards.
There is only right or wrong.
The great thing is: it's really satisfying when it's correct, because you figured it out yourself, you didn't have to guess.
Not at the beginning, but you need to pay more attention later on.
No. Too much guessing will only confuse you.
No, the game is quite light.
It has the same spirit, but replaces the numbers with rules for placing cats.
Meowdoku isn't trying to be anything big. It's just a little game; you sit and think through each step, and then you solve it without even realizing it.



















