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Stray review: one small step for cats, one giant leap for action adventure games

Lap it up

Cats are masters of their domain. As an owner of two tortoiseshells myself, they've unlocked routes in our house I never knew existed, using the tiny lip of our fridge as a gateway to the top of our kitchen cupboards, bed frames as launch pads to the middle bar of our sash windows (not even the actual window sill, those daft beasts), and don't even get me started on how they managed to get onto the top of our 2cm wide shower rail that one time.

Stray, BlueTwelve Studio's cat 'em up explorathon, puts you in the paws of a similarly savvy feline protagonist. The cat itself is a marvel of digital observation, fully inhabiting all of the best cat-isms I know and love. You can scratch the backs of sofas and knead and shred carpets with alternate squeezes of the trigger buttons, meow at will, lap from dripping water bowls, topple piles of carefully stacked books and push paint cans off the edge of ledges - and, if you leave them idle long enough, they'll stretch and catch flies too tiny to be caught by the human eye. You can also play a mean game of billiards, much to the annoyance of the local robots. I wouldn't go as far as saying it loosened my jaw quite as much as when I first set eyes on Trico from The Last Guardian, all told, but I reckon if BlueTwelve had the same kind of budget and scale as GenDesign and Sony's Japan Studio did back then, then Stray's cat would be every bit the equal of that famous cat-bird-chimera.

But it's the way Stray's cat navigates its walled, closed-off city that impresses the most. Whereas other 3D platformers tend to drown you in gallons of paint and glinting footholds telling you where to go, Stray opts for a smarter way of doing things, offering up simple, context-sensitive button prompts showing you where you can and can't jump as you move the camera around. The minimalist HUD is still a touch artificial, to be sure, but the overall effect it creates is one of astounding realism, letting you actively pick through this forgotten jumble of ledges, rooftops and air conditioning units as you see fit, rather than feeling like you're simply going through the motions on a predefined path.

It puts your Uncharteds and Tomb Raiders to shame, really, even though its platforming follows a similarly automated mould. You can hold down A (or Space, if you're so inclined, although Stray is definitely best played with a game pad), for example, and your cat pal will leap around to its heart's content as long as there's a corresponding button prompt on your surface of choice. In this sense, Stray is not a particularly challenging game, as when it comes to navigating its city, there's no accidentally falling to your death or missing a jump. The key difference here, though, is that you're actively using the camera to find that next jumping point, as the prompts only appear if the jump is achievable. This does that vital service of handing back agency to the player, giving them the space to wonder whether that ledge is just too far out of reach, or whether your surprisingly springy hindlegs can just about stick the landing.

A cat sits next to a robot on a rooftop in Stray
A cat walks through a dark tunnel covered in a fleshy-looking fungus in Stray
A cat sits in a bucket outside a RAM-en bar in Stray
A ginger cat stands on top of a busy desk in Stray

Besides, it's not like Stray has zero stakes, either, as in between noodling about its various hub zones, your (still very linear) mission to find a way back to the surface will occasionally see you branching off into dedicated locations where the game's main threat hangs out: the Zurk. They're a bit like the cute cushion of Half-Life's headcrabs, pouring out of shadowy orifices to leap at you with their sticky, life-sucking mandibles. Since you're a cat, there's no way to fight these one-eyed monsters except by running away most of the time, and if you don't shake them off fast enough then they will nobble you into a quick restart.

Thankfully, the game's rather generous checkpointing means that succumbing to the Zurk is no great hardship most of the time, and BlueTwelve's artful framing of its chase sequences means it's usually pretty easy to decipher where you're meant to be heading, too. These high-speed sections are also a nice change of pace from Stray's more thoughtful stealth and exploration sections as well, and the addition of a Zurk-zapping gizmo later on really ups the ante as players must react to situations on the fly.

A ginger cat sits in the middle of a busy, neon street in Stray
If you thought the game's starting slums area was pretty, wait until you get a load of Midtown.

Indeed, you're not entirely alone on your journey through this strange, forgotten land. After its short introduction to both being a cat and navigating your newfound surroundings, you join up with a little flying drone friend called B-12, who not only (briefly) acts as the aforementioned Zurk-zapper, but also as your local robot translator and bottomless item pocket. It's his story you'll also be unravelling as you move through the different levels of this dark, neon-lit cityscape, and without treading too much too into spoiler territory, let's just say you'll feel as strongly about this tiny little tin can by the end of the game as you do its warm, furry lead.

Heck, even the way they react to your cat's meow, with their LED faces lighting up into hearts, cheesy grins and annoyed frowns is nothing short of extraordinary.

Indeed, considering the small size of BlueTwelve Studios, Stray's production levels as a whole are phenomenal. The atmospheric lighting and attention to detail in this densely packed city makes it feel like a natural, living, breathing environment, and its population of exquisitely animated androids are imbued with a real sense of warmth and humanity. Heck, even the way they react to your cat's meow (and occasional leg brush), with their LED faces lighting up into hearts, cheesy grins and annoyed frowns - not to mention the way their voice boxes melt into a goo of bleep-bloopy joy - is nothing short of extraordinary. Again, no spoilers, but keep an eye out for two robots playing mahjong around the half-way point. Easily one of the best moments in the whole game, I tell ya.

A robot talks to a cat on a wooden canoe in Stray
Me too, Momo. Me too.
A robot invites a cat into a window in Stray
Why yes, I do want to party with you.

My favourite moments, though, are where your cat pal can take a load off for a while, curling up for a quick snooze in one of its many cosy-looking nooks. These sleeping spots are scattered throughout Stray's environments, and while they don't serve any actual purpose - you're not going to glimpse any hidden secrets with them or anything - there's just something very pleasing, and very cat-like, about the way the camera slowly pulls back, giving you a wide-eyed view of your surroundings. As the world zones out, and the chill music dials in, it's yet further evidence - if any was needed at this point - of how BlueTwelve are fully tuned in to making this cat 'em up as authentic as possible.

Will dog lovers and cat-haters get as much out of Stray as someone who, as we speak, has two stretched out purr machines on the bed behind her? Probably not, in all honesty, as fully inhabiting its feline lead is at least 50% of the appeal here. But even if you're not massively into cats the same way I am, Stray is still a remarkable action adventure game in its own right, and whose naturalistic approach to 3D platforming is among the best I've seen. It proves we don't need condescending slathers of paint to point us in the right direction anymore, and that there are better, more immersive ways of traversing dense and detailed play environments. That's something worth celebrating in my books, so take note Lara Croft, Nathan Drake and every 3D action hero of the last twenty years. A good game of billiards isn't the only thing you'll learn from this four-legged fluffball.

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About the Author

Katharine Castle avatar

Katharine Castle

Editor-in-chief

Katharine is RPS' editor-in-chief, which means she's now to blame for all this. After joining the team in 2017, she spent a lot of time in the RPS hardware mines, testing all the bits that go inside our PCs, but now she gets to write about all the lovely games we play on them, too. She'll play pretty much anything she can get her hands on, and is very partial to JRPGs and the fetching of quests.

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