Reviews

Strike Force Kitty review for Nintendo Switch, PC

Platform: Nintendo Switch
Also on: PC
Publisher: No Gravity Games
Developer: Deqaf Studio
Medium: Digital
Players: 1
Online: No
ESRB: T

Even if Strike Force Kitty were the greatest game in the history of everything, I?d have a hard time recommending anyone pick it up on the Switch. I mean, it?s a free Flash-based internet game that?s been around for the better part of this decade, that you can play in your browser right now, at this very second — for, again, literally no money. I don?t care how much you like buttons, free is a very hard price to beat.

As it stands, however, Strike Force Kitty is most decidedly not the greatest game ever, which renders the discussion of Switch versus browser moot. I can?t speak to what it?s like to play this game for zero dollars in Chrome or Firefox or whatever, but I can speak to the Strike Force Kitty Switch experience, and based on that, I feel confident in saying this game sucks.


In the game?s defense, I?ll admit that I had no idea what I was supposed to be doing, so I may have just been playing it entirely wrong. There are no tutorials, nor any manuals, so I just kind of figured it out as I went along. I may have missed some crucial gameplay element that would have made it GOTY material.

In my defense, however,I don?t think that?s the case. I think that Strike Force Kitty really is just terrible. You?re given a team of four cats, you dress them up in various costumes that give them various powers, and then you set them free in a side-scrolling world to fight with other cats. Your part in the whole game is to jump occasionally, and, between levels, to train them up, though it never seemed like the training amounted to much. You also can change costumes after you win them from other cats; while the game prides itself on how it skirts around copyright infringement with puns and whatnot, I can?t say that they added much to the game.

In fact, if anything they underline just how lazy Strike Force Kitty feels. It always comes off as if the game is simply coasting on what others have done before it, whether it?s the costumes that rip off better-known characters, the graphics that feel like they were lifted straight from Scribblenauts, or the gameplay — which, again, only asks that you jump every so often, while the game plays itself.

Then again, I guess if anyone has to play Strike Force Kitty, better it be AI than an actual human. Calling it dull and repetitive does a disservice to dull, repetitive games. Strike Force Kitty asks nothing of you other than to let it run in your browser, so you may as well do that, rather than paying a cent for it on the Switch.

No Gravity Games provided us with a Strike Force Kitty Nintendo Switch code for review purposes.

Grade: D
Matthew Pollesel

Recent Posts

PAX East 2025: Inside the Elden Ring: Nightreign Dome!

For the attendees who remained ticketless, we reveal what’s inside the dome!

3 days ago

Alien: Rogue Incursion – Part One: Evolved Edition is sneaking onto non-VR PS5 and PC platforms

The latest Alien title is going flat later this year!

3 days ago

Mafia: The Old Country gets an August 8th, 2025 release, official gameplay trailer and more

With Grand Theft Auto VI officially bumped into next year, now's the time for 2K…

4 days ago

Celebrate the upcoming launch of Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater 3 + 4 with THPS Fest tonight in L.A. and Twitch

Activision has put together a tribute to the those who helped make Tony Hawk’s Pro…

4 days ago

Sega reveals the English Voice Cast for Yakuza 0: Director’s Cut

Real Yakuza play with subs, but if you need a dub, SEGA’s got your back.

4 days ago

Captain Blood review for PC, Nintendo Switch, Xbox, PlayStation

It took more than twenty years, but Captain Blood has finally seen the light of…

4 days ago