
Stray’s release on Switch 2 in May reminded everyone how much of the gaming audience really just wants to play as a cat. BlueTwelve’s neon-noir adventure isn’t on Android yet, and probably won’t be for a while. The good news: the Play Store has a quiet but solid catalogue of cat games, from cosy adventure to chaotic tower-defence, and almost all of them are happy to run on a five-year-old phone.
We tested seven cat games for Android that hit the same cosy, cat-shaped sweet spot Stray players are chasing. The list mixes paid premium ports with free-to-play campaigns, picked to cover different moods: relaxing exploration, action combat, survival, and the inevitable virtual-pet sim your nephew will install on every phone you hand him.
What to look for in a cat adventure game
- Movement that feels feline. The good ones nail jumping, leaping, and squeezing through gaps. The bad ones reuse a generic third-person template and slap a cat on top.
- Story or sandbox, pick one. Story-driven cat games like Cat Quest reward you for finishing. Sandbox ones like Calico are about settling in. Mixing them rarely works.
- Touch controls that don’t fight you. Twin-stick on a phone is a compromise. The best cat games either auto-target or give you a single-finger control scheme.
- Offline play. Cat games are commute games. If they need a constant connection to load saves, they fail the test.
- Reasonable monetisation. A few of these are free-to-play. Ones that ask for a payment every time you upgrade a paw are uninstalls.
- Cat sound design. Purring, meowing, paws on hardwood. You’ll feel the cheap ones immediately.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Platforms | Free plan | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Battle Cats | Tower defence chaos | Android, iOS | Yes, freemium | 800+ unlockable cat units |
| Cat Quest III | Action-RPG adventure | Android, iOS, PC, console | Paid | Open-world pirate-cat campaign |
| A Street Cat’s Tale | Survival narrative | Android, iOS | Paid | Stray-flavoured atmospheric story |
| Cat Sim Online | Open-world cat sim | Android, iOS | Yes, ads | Multiplayer roaming |
| My Talking Tom 2 | Virtual pet | Android, iOS | Yes, ads | Built-in mini-games |
| Cattch | Puzzle-platformer | Android, iOS, PC | Paid | Quick-restart speedrun-friendly levels |
| Calico | Cosy cafe sim | Android, iOS, PC, console | Paid | Decorate a cafe full of cats |
The apps
1. The Battle Cats — Best for chaotic tower defence
The Battle Cats is the franchise that turned PONOS into a household name in Japan and quietly into a top-10 free-to-play game everywhere else. The setup is silly: deploy waves of weird cat units to push the enemy back to their tower. The depth is real: there are over 800 unlockable units, an active event calendar, and a metagame that rewards patience over wallet.
Where it falls short: The early grind takes a while. Rare-cat capsule rolls lean on chance.
Pricing: Free with optional in-app purchases.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Install the Battle Cats if you want a cat game you can play for years, in three-minute bursts.
2. Cat Quest III — Best action-RPG adventure
Cat Quest III is The Gentlebros’ pirate-cat answer to anyone who wanted Stray with a sword. Sail an open-world ocean dotted with cat-shaped islands, fight skeleton pirates with paw-swung cutlasses, and clear dungeons in 10-minute bursts that fit a phone session. The combat is tight, the writing is genuinely funny, and the touch controls map cleanly to one-thumb play.
Where it falls short: Pay-once, but not cheap. The story finishes in around eight hours.
Pricing: Paid, under the cost of a movie ticket.
Platforms: Android, iOS, PC, PlayStation, Xbox, Switch.
Bottom line: Cat Quest III is the closest a phone game gets to the Stray-shaped adventure most people want.
3. A Street Cat’s Tale — Best atmospheric survival story
A Street Cat’s Tale is the Korean indie that pre-dated Stray and works in a similar emotional register. You play a stray kitten in a city, looking for food, dodging dogs, and meeting other cats who can teach you tricks. The pixel art is gorgeous, the story has a strong opening hook, and the second game (Twin Sisters) is also on Android if you want more.
Where it falls short: Short. The first chapter runs about three hours.
Pricing: Paid.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: A Street Cat’s Tale is the easy recommendation for Stray fans on Android.
4. Cat Sim Online — Best open-world cat sim
Cat Sim Online drops you into a free-to-explore world as a cat, with multiplayer servers where you can meet other cats and form a clan. There’s a survival layer (hunger, predators), a customisation layer (fur patterns, accessories), and a campaign with quests. It’s the spiritual cousin of WolfQuest and shares the same charm.
Where it falls short: Free-to-play, with ads. The multiplayer servers are quieter than they used to be.
Pricing: Free with ads.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: Pick Cat Sim Online if you want a free, sandbox-y cat experience and don’t mind a few ads.
5. My Talking Tom 2 — Best virtual cat companion
My Talking Tom 2 is what your seven-year-old will install. The kitten you adopt grows up over weeks, needs feeding and washing, plays a dozen mini-games, and ships with a sticker book that fills out as you play. It’s safe-for-kids and the design pulls obvious inspiration from Tamagotchi.
Where it falls short: Ads between every mini-game. Big in-app-purchase prompts for cosmetic outfits.
Pricing: Free with ads and in-app purchases.
Platforms: Android, iOS.
Bottom line: It’s the virtual cat for kids and casual players. Adults will likely prefer Cat Quest.
6. Cattch — Best puzzle-platformer
Cattch is the indie cat platformer with a clever bouncing-tongue mechanic. You launch the cat’s tongue like a grappling line to pull objects, swing across gaps, and string combos that feel like a 2D rhythm game. Levels are bite-sized and quick-restart, which makes it perfect for commute play.
Where it falls short: Short and skill-based. Some levels expect twitch reflexes.
Pricing: Paid.
Platforms: Android, iOS, PC.
Bottom line: Cattch is the right pick if you like Celeste-style precision and a cat protagonist.
7. Calico — Best cosy cafe sim
Calico is the cosy game adopted by every cat-loving streamer in 2022 and now solid on Android. Run a magical bakery, decorate it with furniture, and fill the room with cats you tame on bike rides through the woods. There’s no combat, no fail state, and a soundtrack you’ll actively look forward to.
Where it falls short: Performance was rough at launch. The port has been patched but still drops frames on older phones.
Pricing: Paid.
Platforms: Android, iOS, PC, Switch, PlayStation, Xbox.
Bottom line: Calico is the right wind-down game. It’s the closest cosy equivalent to Stray’s quieter moments.
How to pick the right one
- If you want the closest thing to Stray on Android: A Street Cat’s Tale.
- If you want the best action-RPG with a cat: Cat Quest III.
- If you want a cosy decorate-and-pet sim: Calico.
- If you want a free time-sink: The Battle Cats.
- If you want a sandbox to roam: Cat Sim Online.
- If you want a precision platformer: Cattch.
- If you’re buying for a kid: My Talking Tom 2.
FAQ
Is Stray on Android?
No. As of 2026 Stray is on PC, PlayStation, Xbox, Mac, and Switch 2. There is no announced Android port. A Street Cat’s Tale and Cat Quest III are the closest Android matches.
Are any of these cat games free?
The Battle Cats, Cat Sim Online, and My Talking Tom 2 are free-to-play with ads and in-app purchases. Cat Quest III, A Street Cat’s Tale, Calico, and Cattch are paid up front.
What’s the best cat game for kids?
My Talking Tom 2 has the friendliest interface for younger kids. For older kids who can read, Cat Quest III is the most rewarding pick.
Can I play these cat games offline?
Cat Quest III, Cattch, A Street Cat’s Tale, and Calico all run offline. The Battle Cats and Cat Sim Online require a connection. My Talking Tom 2 needs a connection for most mini-games.
Will Stray ever come to Android?
Annapurna Interactive hasn’t announced an Android port. Given the engine and the controls, a phone version isn’t out of the question, but there’s no public roadmap.