Find Matt's Cats: A Scavenger Hunt Wrapped Around a Game Dev Story

Find Matt's Cats invites you on a long, deliberate search. Over 84 hand-crafted levels you will hunt for cats, objects and tiny surprises, while getting to know the four friends who are trying to keep their video game studio afloat. The setup is simple and generous: lots to look at, lots to find, and a frame story about friendship, work and creation holding everything together.

The game promises more than a visual puzzle. With thousands of items to find and an estimated 20 plus hours of gameplay, it aims to reward patience and curiosity. There are different ways to play, secret modes and spot-the-difference challenges that make each playthrough feel distinct.

  Find Matt's Cats screenshot 2  

A Monster List of Things to Find

Find Matt's Cats leans into the pure delight of discovery. Levels are hand-crafted, which suggests the team has packed each scene with intention. That pays off for players who enjoy scanning environments for tiny jokes, oddities and the obscure collectable.

The item list is enormous, which helps explain that long play time. Some levels are straightforward hunts. Others hide their rewards behind different objectives depending on which difficulty mode you choose. That design turns the act of replaying into a real incentive rather than a chore.

  Find Matt's Cats screenshot 3  

Modes, Secrets and Replay Value

The game includes three difficulty modes, each with different goals. That is a clever way to vary the experience without remaking levels. On top of the modes there are spot-the-difference puzzles and other secret game modes, so a completionist run will likely feel very different from a casual, relaxed stroll through the scenes.

If you enjoy systems that reward returning to familiar spaces with new rules, this structure should scratch that itch. The presence of secret modes also makes exploration feel like it can lead to surprises beyond the cat list.

 

Narrative and Tone

Find Matt's Cats pairs the scavenger hunt with a meta narrative about game development and friendship. You follow four friends as they navigate the practical and emotional strain of keeping a studio going. The tone mixes warmth with occasional dark humour. The darker notes are disabled by default to keep the experience family friendly, though they can be enabled for players who want a sharper edge.

That combination-cozy gameplay with hints of real-world struggle-suggests the team wants players to care about the people behind the scenes as much as the objects on the screen.

  Find Matt's Cats screenshot 4  

Accessibility, Family-Friendly Options, and DRM

Accessibility is an explicit focus. The game comes with many options so players can move at their own pace, which suits a scavenger-hunt title where time pressure would ruin the fun for some audiences. Family-friendly defaults and the ability to toggle darker humour show attention to different player needs and sensibilities.

It is also 100 percent DRM-free, and the developers point out you can make a copy for your grandma. That line is both practical and a gentle promise about trusting players.

 

A Quiet Kind of Ambition

Find Matt's Cats does not advertise as a blockbuster. Instead it offers a long, lovingly constructed scavenger hunt threaded with an honest story about four people trying to make something together. If you like lo-fi discovery, replayable goals and small narrative details that reward attention, this one looks worth a closer look.

 

➡️ Check out Find Matt's Cats now on Steam