100 Cats World Tour
100 Cats World Tour - Play Online
Ever stared at one of those "Where's Waldo?" books until your eyes crossed? That's the vibe here, but with adorable cats and iconic cities. 100 Cats World Tour is a chill hidden object game where you hunt down exactly 100 sneaky felines in hand-drawn panoramas of New York, Paris, Prague, and more. It's pure brain-training wrapped in cute packaging—perfect for family game night or when you need something that doesn't make your heart race. Just pan, zoom, and click until every whisker is found.
Key Features
- Multiple City Locations: Travel through famous landmarks from New York rooftops to European streets, each packed with 100 hidden cats.
- Clean Line-Art Style: Simple vector graphics that zoom in without pixelation—runs smooth even on older PCs and phones.
- Hint System: Stuck? Spend coins earned from finding cats to reveal locations of the trickiest ones.
- Progressive Unlocking: Beat one city to unlock the next destination, with a satisfying world map showing your journey.
How to Play 100 Cats World Tour
The concept is dead simple: find cats. The execution? That's where your observation skills get tested.
Pan and Zoom to Explore
You start with a wide view of a massive hand-drawn city scene. Drag the screen with your mouse (or finger on mobile) to move around, and use the scroll wheel to zoom in tight. The cats blend into the architecture—some are obvious orange tabby shapes, others are just a pair of eyes peeking from behind a chimney. The counter at the top shows your progress: 89/100 means you've got 11 sneaky furballs left.
Spotting the Camouflaged Cats
This is where the game earns its "attention game" tag. Cats hide in shadows, behind street signs, inside windows, even tucked into decorative scrollwork. When you click one, it fills with yellow color and adds a satisfying coin clink to your bank. Miss one? There's no penalty—just keep scanning. Some levels had me zoomed in so close I could see individual roof tiles. The challenge isn't reflexes; it's pure visual puzzle-solving.
Unlocking New Destinations
Complete all 100 cats in a city and the next location opens on the world map. I started in what looked like New York, then unlocked London and progressively harder European cities. The coins you collect aren't just for show—you can burn them on hints (a magnifying glass icon) that highlight a cat's location when you're genuinely stumped. It's a fair trade-off between patience and progress.
Who is 100 Cats World Tour for?
This is built for casual players, families, and anyone who finds "cozy gaming" appealing. Kids can play it without guidance (no timers, no fail states), but adults will appreciate the low-stress escape after work. If you're the type who likes jigsaw puzzles or those Sunday newspaper hidden picture games, this is your jam. Not for adrenaline junkies—there's zero action here, just methodical searching.
The Gameplay Vibe
Calling this "meditative" isn't an exaggeration. There's no music that I noticed—just ambient city sounds (distant traffic, maybe some wind). The black-and-white line art with pops of yellow when you find cats creates a coloring book aesthetic. I played it while half-watching TV and it was perfect for that. The pace is entirely yours. Some players will blitz a level in 10 minutes; I took 20+ on New York because I refused to use hints. It's the gaming equivalent of a stress ball.
Technical Check: Saves & Performance
The game auto-saves your progress through browser cache, so you can close the tab and pick up where you left off—just don't go nuclear on clearing your browsing data. Performance-wise, it's featherweight. The 2D vector art and simple click mechanics mean even a potato laptop will run this without hiccups. I tested zooming in and out rapidly with no lag. Mobile players get smooth touch controls with pinch-to-zoom that actually works intuitively.
Quick Verdict: Pros & Cons
A solid pick for decompressing, but don't expect groundbreaking innovation.
- ✅ Pro: Zero pressure—no timers, no lives, just you versus the cats at your own pace.
- ✅ Pro: The hint system is generous enough to prevent frustration without making it mindless.
- ❌ Con: Once you've found all the cats in a level, there's no reason to replay it. Limited long-term value unless you're a completionist.
Controls
Responsive and intuitive. The click detection is spot-on—never had it miss a cat I tapped.
- Desktop: Left-click and drag to pan, scroll wheel to zoom, click cats to collect them.
- Mobile: Swipe to move the scene, pinch to zoom in/out, tap cats to mark them as found.
Release Date & Developer
Developed by Korgi Studio and released on November 13, 2024. It's part of that recent wave of "100 Hidden [Object]" games flooding browsers and Steam, but the world tour theme gives it a slight edge in variety.



