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Stray (video game)

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Stray
Cover art of a ginger cat, and the logo "Stray" written in white spray-paint style
Developer(s)BlueTwelve Studio
Publisher(s)Annapurna Interactive
Director(s)Koola and Viv[a]
Producer(s)Swann Martin-Raget
Designer(s)
  • Mathieu Audrain
  • Alexandre Brodu
  • Hugo Dunas-Wald
Programmer(s)
  • Rémi Bismuth
  • Sores Hatipoglu
  • Antonin Ferret
Writer(s)Steven Lerner
Composer(s)Yann van der Cruyssen
EngineUnreal Engine 4
Platform(s)
Release
  • PS4, PS5, Windows
  • 19 July 2022
  • Xbox One, Series X/S
  • 10 August 2023
  • macOS
  • 5 December 2023
  • Nintendo Switch
  • 19 November 2024
Genre(s)Adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Stray is a 2022 adventure game developed by BlueTwelve Studio and published by Annapurna Interactive. The story follows a stray cat who falls into a walled city populated by robots, machines, and mutant bacteria, and sets out to return to the surface with the help of a drone companion, B-12. The game is presented through a third-person perspective. The player traverses the game world by leaping across platforms and climbing up obstacles, and can interact with the environment to open new paths. Using B-12, they can store items found throughout the world and hack into technology to solve puzzles. Throughout the game, the player must evade the antagonistic Zurks and Sentinels, which attempt to kill them.

The development began in 2015, led by BlueTwelve Studio founders Koola and Viv,[a] who wanted to pursue an independent project after working at Ubisoft Montpellier. They partnered with Annapurna Interactive to publish the game. Stray's aesthetics were influenced by Kowloon Walled City, which the developers felt could be appropriately explored by a cat. The gameplay was inspired by the developers' cats, Murtaugh and Riggs, and the team studied images and videos of cats for research. They found playing as a cat led to interesting level design opportunities, though they encountered challenges in balancing design and gameplay. The decision to populate the world with robot characters further influenced the narrative and backstory.

Stray was announced in 2020 and became highly anticipated. It was released for the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, and Windows in July 2022, for the Xbox One and Xbox Series X/S in August 2023, for macOS in December 2023, and for the Nintendo Switch in November 2024. The game received generally positive reviews, with praise for its artistic design, cat gameplay, narrative, original score, and platforming elements, though critics were divided on the combat and stealth sequences. The game received accolades at The Game Awards, Game Developers Choice Awards, and Golden Joystick Awards, and appeared on multiple publications' year-end lists. An animated film adaptation is in development.

Gameplay

[edit]
A cat runs through a street and leaps upwards, onto a box, a tin awning, an air conditioning unit, and onto a roof surrounded by greenery.
In Stray, the player traverses the environment by leaping across platforms and climbing up obstacles.

Stray is an adventure game played by a single player in a third-person perspective.[1][2] The player controls a stray cat, leaping across platforms and climbing up obstacles,[3] and can open new paths by interacting with the environment, such as climbing in buckets, overturning paint cans, operating a vending machine, and clawing at objects.[4][5][6] They solve puzzles to progress the narrative, often involving moving obstacles.[7][8] Optional activities include sleeping, meowing, and nuzzling up to non-player characters, most of which elicit a response.[3][9] Some levels have open-world elements, allowing the player to roam at their freedom.[7]

The player is accompanied by a drone companion, B-12, who assists by translating the language of other characters, storing items found throughout the world, providing light, and hacking into various technologies to open paths and solve puzzles.[10][11] Throughout the game, the player finds several of B-12's memories, providing more context for the story.[7] Most of these memories are optional, but some are unlocked through story progression.[12] The player can collect badges, including several optional throughout the world, which are displayed on the cat's backpack.[6]

The world is populated by robots, who often employ the player to locate objects that reveal more information and progress the narrative.[13] Some robots provide optional tasks, such as Morusque, who plays songs upon being provided with music sheets found around the slums.[14] The player can interact with most robots in the world.[7] Stray features two types of enemies who can kill the player: Zurks, a large, mutated bacteria that can swarm and devour the cat;[12] and Sentinels, security drones who will attempt to shoot the player upon spotting them.[13][15] For a portion of the game, the player can attach a Defluxor to B-12 to destroy the Zurks,[16] though it can only be used for a limited time before B-12 overheats and requires a brief period to cool down.[15] The player can evade Sentinels by avoiding their sight lines, indicated by glowing lights.[17]

Plot

[edit]

While a group of four stray cats trek through the ruins of an abandoned facility, one becomes separated from the others after falling into a chasm leading to an unpopulated underground city. The cat finds a lab where it helps download an artificial intelligence into the body of a small drone, which calls itself B-12. It explains it previously helped a scientist but much of its memory was corrupted and needs time to recover. B-12 promises to help the cat return to the surface and accompanies it further into the city. As they travel farther, the pair discover that, while the city is completely devoid of human life, their robotic servants, Companions, remain. With humans absent, the Companions have grown self-aware and have built their own society among the ruins of the city, but they likewise are trapped underground. The ruins are infested with Zurks, mutant bacteria that have evolved to devour both organic life and robots.

The pair meet Momo, a member of the Outsiders, a group of Companions dedicated to finding a way to the surface. The Outsiders help the cat and B-12 proceed to the Midtown sector of the city. There, they locate Clementine, another Outsider who plans to steal an atomic battery to power a subway train leading to the surface. The trio are caught and arrested by the Sentinels, but the cat helps them all escape prison. Clementine stays behind to distract the Sentinels while the cat and B-12 escape on the subway, which takes them to the city control center. B-12 finally recovers all of its memories. It reveals that it was originally a human scientist who attempted to upload their own consciousness into a robot body, but the process went awry until the cat arrived. B-12 remembers that the city, Walled City 99, was built to shelter humanity from a catastrophe on the surface, but a plague eventually wiped out the entire human population. Realising humanity's legacy now lies with the Companions and the cat, B-12 sacrifices itself to override the city's network. This opens the blast doors over the city, exposing it to sunlight which kills the Zurks and deactivates the Sentinels. With the main exit unsealed, the cat leaves the city and reaches the surface, sniffing the air. As the cat leaves, a screen near the exit flickers and activates.

Development

[edit]
Stray was influenced aesthetically by Kowloon Walled City, which the developers considered the "perfect playground for a cat".[18]

BlueTwelve Studio founders Koola and Viv[a] began working on Stray in 2015 as they wanted to pursue an independent project after working at Ubisoft Montpellier.[19][21][22][23] They maintained a development blog for the game, then known as HK Project.[24] After they shared some footage on Twitter, Annapurna Interactive reached out in April 2016 to publish the project;[22] Koola and Viv had only developed some early scenes, but had a strong direction for the final project.[25] Annapurna, which had not published any games by the time the deal was formed, assisted in building the company over the years, providing occasional feedback but largely leaving creative freedom to the developers.[20] Funding for the studio was confirmed in April 2017, and the development team grew to five by the end of 2017.[25] From early in development, Koola and Viv knew they wanted to maintain a small team of developers,[26] as they prefer working with direct communication.[27] The small team meant the game's scope reduced over time, with focus directed towards elements the developers considered important.[25][27] After revealing the game, the team wanted to focus on production and only begin marketing when development was nearing completion; they found the reception to the reveal added to the pressure of delivering a polished experience.[26] The game uses Unreal Engine 4.[28]

Stray was heavily influenced aesthetically by Kowloon Walled City; Koola and Viv liked the city's organic construction, and found it interesting to approach as artists.[18] They designed some graphical tests of the environments and buildings,[20] and found the city was the "perfect playground for a cat" due to the various paths and views.[18] The development team found gameplay as a cat led to interesting level design opportunities, particularly regarding platforming and puzzle elements.[29] They encountered artistic and technical challenges in balancing interesting game design with the open world, as typically decorative items—such as pipes and air conditioning units—are explorable paths in Stray.[18][30] The in-game location Antvillage allowed the team to experiment with vertical game design and provide several path options for the player.[31] The team decided to avoid standard platforming challenges early in development, after watching players consistently miss jumps, which they thought "didn't feel cat-like". According to producer Swann Martin-Raget, the movements of a cat feel smoother, which led the team to create its guided movement system while still allowing for freedom of choice.[32] The team found the DualSense controller's sounds and vibrations added to the physicality and interactivity of playing as a cat,[26] and the low camera angle led to deeper observation of the environment than a human protagonist.[33]

Contrasting elements were important to the developers, such as the "small, organic, and lively" cat contrasted against the "angular and bold" robots.[34] Viv initially created some human non-player characters, but was unsatisfied with the result and realised the high visual quality required would be too time-consuming with a smaller team.[26][33] After experimenting with robots, they found them easier to place within scenes, and enjoyed the contrast with the cat. The inclusion of robots inspired more of the story, and the team found it fitting because of their fascination with films like Blade Runner (1982).[26] The robots' language printed throughout the world was added to make players feel as though they were in a foreign location;[35] its inclusion led to the development of the world's backstory.[27] B-12 was added as the cat's companion to add additional abilities for the player, such as interacting with technology.[26] Both B-12 and the cat's backpack were conceived early in development, when the game was still known as HK Project.[25]

The gameplay experience was specifically inspired by the founders' cats, Murtaugh and Riggs,[22] and the studio's in-house cats, Oscar and Jun.[21] Murtaugh, a former stray cat found under a car in Montpellier, was the primary inspiration for the protagonist,[36] while Oscar, a furless Sphynx, provided effective reference for animation.[32] The cat animator, Miko, studied several images and videos of cats for research,[21] and worked with cat programmer Rémi Bismuth to find a balance between smooth animations and enjoyable gameplay.[36] Most of the team own cats, providing consistent inspiration and reference material. When the office cats began reacting to and interacting with the in-game cat, the team figured their choices had been successful.[18] While the game is a "love letter" to the team's cats, they intentionally avoided making a simulator game, opting for interesting gameplay over complete realism.[27] The action sequences were added to provide some stress to the player, and the team wanted to build a rhythm to maintain the story's progression.[27] The sequence in which the player can kill the Zurks was seen as revenge by Koola and Viv for a bedbug infestation they underwent.[37] The user interface was kept minimal, with directions integrated in the game world to guide the player.[37]

Release

[edit]

Stray was announced on 11 June 2020, at PlayStation's Future of Gaming event, in development for PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, and Windows.[38][39][40] In a January 2021 Consumer Electronics Show trailer, the release window was printed as October 2021, which was later removed.[41] In July 2021, an early 2022 release window was revealed in a new gameplay trailer,[42] but the game was delayed to a mid-year release in April 2022.[43] During PlayStation's State of Play presentation in June, the release date was announced as 19 July 2022. At launch, it became available for PlayStation Plus's Extra, Deluxe, and Premium tier members.[44] Stray achieved the highest number of players on PlayStation Plus in the twelve months following the service's June 2022 rebranding;[45] it was removed from the service in July 2023.[46]

Highly anticipated following its announcement,[47][48][49] the game topped Steam's wishlist charts before release,[50] broke Annapurna Interactive's record for concurrent Steam players upon release, with over 62,000 players,[51] and became the highest user-rated game of the year on the platform.[52] In July, it was the most-downloaded PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 game in North America, and the second-most PlayStation 5 and third-most PlayStation 4 in Europe;[53] in August, it was the fifth-most PlayStation 5 and sixth-most PlayStation 4 game in North America, and the fifth-most on both platforms in Europe;[54] and in September, it ranked 19th on PlayStation 5 in Europe.[55] Videos of cats watching footage of Stray went viral after the release, with the dedicated Twitter account @CatsWatchStray garnering over 32,000 followers.[56][57][58]

For the release, Annapurna Interactive partnered with several charities to raise money for homeless cats by providing giveaways as incentives for donations.[59] Two physical versions were released by iam8bit and Skybound Games: the retail version for PlayStation 5 on 20 September, featuring six art cards;[60] and the Exclusive Edition for PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5 on 12 December, with an additional poster and embroidered patch.[60][61] A vinyl record of the soundtrack was released in May 2023 by iam8bit,[62][63] with album art by Fernando Correa.[64] In June 2023, Annapurna announced the game was in development for Xbox One and Xbox Series X and Series S, which was released on 10 August 2023,[65] and for macOS (compatible with Apple M series devices), which was released on 5 December 2023.[66][67] During a Nintendo Direct presentation in June 2024, Annapurna announced the game would release for the Nintendo Switch during the following holiday season;[68] in August, the release date was set as 19 November.[69]

Reception

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

Stray received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic,[70] and 86% of critics recommended the game according to OpenCritic.[71] Chris Scullion of Video Games Chronicle considered it one of Annapurna Interactive's best releases,[10] and Andrew Webster of The Verge named it among the best games of the year to date.[78] VG247's Kelsey Raynor described it as "a touching tale of loss, loneliness, environmental destruction",[14] and Ars Technica's Sam Machkovech declared it a blend of the "eerie, atmospheric exploration" of Half-Life (1998) and the "childlike whimsy of a classic Studio Ghibli film".[4]

Critics praised the graphical quality and art design,[7][77][79] and several particularly lauded its use of lighting.[5][6][80] Alyse Stanley of The Washington Post described Stray as "a master class in environmental story telling and level design", lauding the subtle directions provided to the player.[9] Bill Lavoy of Shacknews found the world to be among the most beautifully-designed, praising the attention to detail in each environment, though criticising the lack of graphical settings.[10] Kotaku's Ari Notis likened the cinematic cutscenes to games by prestigious studios like Naughty Dog.[81] Sam Loveridge of GamesRadar+ found the atmosphere unique among recent releases, describing the world as "a stunning place to just exist in".[73] Blake Hester of Game Informer similarly praised the enjoyability of exploring the world.[72] Push Square's Stephen Tailby wrote the game conveys an atmosphere of melancholy and hope.[11] NME's Jordan Oloman considered the worldbuilding the strongest element, though noted it failed to reach levels of intelligence or subtlety like Nier: Automata (2017).[7] VentureBeat's Rachel Kaser found the Zurk-infested levels among the worst visually,[82] and some reviewers noted minor glitches.[4][11] William Hughes of The A.V. Club felt the concept of the underground city populated by robots felt like a "Lego stack of ready-made video game tropes".[79] Kotaku's Sisi Jang found Stray a troubling example of techno-orientalism.[83]

A cat walks in a neon-lit city populated by robots; some are walking, some are standing and talking to each other, some are sitting. The city is lit with bright yellow, orange, purple, blue, and green. Reflections can be seen in small puddles on the ground.
The graphical quality and art design of Stray received acclaim from critics,[7][77][79] several of whom particularly lauded its use of lighting.[5][6][80]

Katharine Castle of Rock, Paper, Shotgun determined assuming control of a cat "is at least 50% of the appeal here".[84] The realistic recreation of cat behaviour in the gameplay received widespread praise;[3][6][14] critics lauded the animation and easy controls,[7][12][11] and the immersion of the movement and navigation,[13][75][80] though some noted occasionally awkward controls and camera angles while navigating.[9][15][73] VG247's Raynor was prepared for a repetitive gameplay system, but ultimately found it maintained consistent enjoyment.[14] Keza MacDonald of The Guardian considered Stray "an excellent example of how a change of perspective can enliven a fictional setting to which we've become habituated".[77] Scullion of Video Games Chronicle found the platforming simple but effective,[10] and Alessandro Barbosa of GameSpot commended the balanced pacing between the gameplay sequences.[8] Pauline Leclercq of Jeuxvideo.com felt the puzzles generally lacked difficulty, but improved in the second half,[74] while Hughes of The A.V. Club found it repetitive over time.[79] PCMag's Gabriel Zamora noted disappointment at the lack of choice while platforming,[85] and Electronic Gaming Monthly's Josh Harmon wrote the core gameplay loop of objectives and puzzles "feels distinctly uncatlike".[17]

Hardcore Gamer's Kyle LeClair felt Stray has "a terrific story with profound themes to uncover and great emotional beats along the way".[6] Several reviewers were surprised by the narrative themes, considering the basic gameplay concept:[74][81] Stanley of The Washington Post found them memorable,[9] and Game Informer's Hester considered them simple but effective.[72] The Verge's Webster recognised "themes ranging from wealth inequality to environmental disaster" and found the ending to be tragic and beautiful.[78] GameSpot's Barbosa similarly found the ending satisfying, noting it allowed reflection on the character relationships.[8] Polygon's Alexis Ong identified themes related to the ongoing democratic development in Hong Kong, particularly regarding police brutality and the 2019–2020 protests, citing the working title HK Project.[3] Reviewers lauded the robot characters in the game world,[10][77] described by PCGamesN's Nat Smith as "whimsical and strikingly human".[76] Loveridge of GamesRadar+ felt the interactions directed the narrative, which itself touched on themes of hardship and friendship.[73] Raynor of VG247 similarly found the friendships effective and emotional.[14] VentureBeat's Kaser and PC Gamer's Jon Bailes both shared strong feelings towards the protagonist,[75][82] a sentiment echoed by Rock, Paper, Shotgun's Castle towards both the cat and B-12.[84]

The original score received praise,[7][15] and was described as among the year's best by Ars Technica's Machkovech, who compared it favourably to Half-Life.[4] Scullion of Video Games Chronicle wrote the score "knows exactly when to evoke awe, when to creep the player out, and when to pluck at our pesky human heartstrings".[10] Kotaku's Notis called it "deliciously jazzy",[81] and Jeuxvideo.com's Leclercq found it appropriate within the game world.[74] Hardcore Gamer's LeClair and Shacknews's Lavoy appreciated the environmental melodies, including those played by the robot Morusque, and some on the in-game radio.[6][80] Smith of PCGamesN described the music as "gently optimistic and abruptly unsettling", lauding the seamless switching between tracks dependent on the gameplay.[76]

The combat sequences polarised critics; some found them tense and exciting,[6][9][74] while others found them tiresome and less interesting than its other elements.[8][82][85] The gameplay sequences involving Zurks—compared by several critics to the headcrabs from the Half-Life series[73][75][84]—were positively described as "more authentically cat" by Electronic Gaming Monthly's Harmon,[17] while GamesRadar+'s Loveridge found they added balance to the calmer moments.[73] The Escapist's Damien Lawardorn found the sequences an effective example of body horror, and among the most compelling and effective chapters.[86] Webster of The Verge similarly felt they added necessary tension, likening them to the swarms of A Plague Tale: Innocence (2019), but wrote they could become frustrating.[78] This sentiment was echoed by IGN's Tom Marks and PC Gamer's Bailes,[15][75] the latter of whom described a confrontation as "repeated backpedalling and shooting".[75] NME's Oloman considered the sequences a vast difference from the rest of the game,[7] and Game Informer's Hester found them monotonous, though appreciated their rarity.[72] The stealth mechanics received similarly polarised responses: PC Gamer's Bailes found them entertaining,[75] while they were described by PCMag's Zamora as sufficient but simplistic,[85] and by Vice's Renata Price as ranging "from fine to frustrating".[5]

Accolades

[edit]
Antonin Ferret, software programmerAlexandre Brodu, game designerClara Perrissol, 3D artistSwann Martin-Raget, producerMathieu Audrain, level designerJean-Marie Vouillon, animator
Stray won Best Debut at the 23rd Game Developers Choice Awards.[87]
Hover over image: Point to identify the person.

Stray won PlayStation Game of the Year at the 40th Golden Joystick Awards[88] and Most Innovative Gameplay at The Steam Awards.[89] It was nominated for six awards at The Game Awards 2022, including Game of the Year and Best Game Direction;[90] it won Best Independent Game and Best Debut Indie Game.[91] From PlayStation Blog, Stray won Best Independent Game of the Year and ranked fourth for Best Art Direction, Best Use of DualSense, PS4 Game of the Year, and PS5 Game of the Year, while the cat was runner-up for Best New Character.[92] It was nominated for Game of the Year, Adventure Game of the Year, and Outstanding Achievement in Art Direction at the 26th Annual D.I.C.E. Awards.[93]

Stray won Best Sound Design for an Indie Game at the 21st Annual Game Audio Network Guild Awards,[94] and the Gayming Magazine Readers' Award at the Gayming Awards 2023.[95] It led the nominees of the 23rd Game Developers Choice Awards with six nominations (tied with Elden Ring), including Game of the Year,[96] and won Best Debut.[87] It had nine nominations at the 19th British Academy Games Awards, including Best Game,[97] and was nominated for Best Game Writing at the 58th Annual Nebula Awards.[98] The game appeared on multiple publications' year-end lists of 2022, including PCGamesN (2nd),[99] GamesRadar+ (3rd),[100] The Guardian (4th),[101] Time (5th),[102] Empire (7th),[103] Vulture (7th),[104] Digital Trends (8th),[105] GQ (10th),[106] Den of Geek (11th),[107] and The Washington Post.[108]

Award Date Category Result Ref.
British Academy Games Awards 30 March 2023 Best Game Nominated [97]
Animation Nominated
Audio Achievement Nominated
Debut Game Nominated
Music Nominated
Narrative Nominated
Original Property Nominated
Technical Achievement Nominated
EE Game of the Year Nominated
D.I.C.E. Awards 23 February 2023 Game of the Year Nominated [93]
Adventure Game of the Year Nominated
Outstanding Achievement in Art Direction Nominated
Game Audio Network Guild Awards 23 March 2023 Best Sound Design for an Indie Game Won [94]
Game Developers Choice Awards 22 March 2023 Best Debut Won [87]
Game of the Year Nominated [96]
Best Audio Nominated
Best Design Nominated
Innovation Award Nominated
Best Visual Art Nominated
Best Technology Honorable Mention
Golden Joystick Awards 22 November 2022 PlayStation Game of the Year Won [88]
The Game Awards 8 December 2022 Best Independent Game Won [91]
Best Debut Indie Game Won
Game of the Year Nominated [90]
Best Game Direction Nominated
Best Art Direction Nominated
Best Action/Adventure Game Nominated
Nebula Awards 14 May 2023 Best Game Writing Nominated [98]
The Steam Awards 3 January 2023 Most Innovative Gameplay Won [89]
Game of the Year Nominated

Film adaptation

[edit]

On 5 September 2023, Annapurna Animation announced an animated feature film adaptation of Stray is in development after the success of its first film Nimona (2023). Robert Baird, co-head of animation, felt the game was suitable for adaptation due to its popularity, as well as its buddy comedy and hopepunk elements.[109]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Colas Koola and Vivien Mermet-Guyenet were credited as Koola and Viv, respectively, opting to forgo their full names and avoid interviews.[19][20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Romano, Sal (11 June 2020). "Annapurna Interactive and BlueTwelve Studio announce Stray for PS5, PC". Gematsu. Archived from the original on 12 June 2020. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  2. ^ Kamen, Matt (19 July 2022). "Stray Review". Empire. Bauer Media Group. Archived from the original on 19 July 2022. Retrieved 2 August 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Ong, Alexis (18 July 2022). "Stray review: a triumphant cyberpunk adventure about being a cat". Polygon. Vox Media. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d Machkovech, Sam (18 July 2022). "Game review: Stray redefines the adventure genre with a cat's-eye view". Ars Technica. Condé Nast. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d Price, Renata (20 July 2022). "Stray Is a Cat Adventure Game that Can't Stop Thinking About People". Vice. Vice Media. Archived from the original on 22 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h LeClair, Kyle (18 July 2022). "Review: Stray". Hardcore Gamer. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Oloman, Jordan (18 July 2022). "Stray review: a stunning sci-fi fable that forfeits its full potential". NME. NME Networks. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e Barbosa, Alessandro (18 July 2022). "Stray Review - Nine Lives". GameSpot. Red Ventures. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e Stanley, Alyse (18 July 2022). "Stray, a game in which you play as a cute cat, is a meow-sterpiece". The Washington Post. Nash Holdings. Archived from the original on 12 August 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Scullion, Chris (18 July 2022). "Review: Stray is a PlayStation Plus essential". Video Games Chronicle. 1981 Media. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d Tailby, Stephen (18 July 2022). "Stray Review (PS5)". Push Square. Gamer Network. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
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  14. ^ a b c d e Raynor, Kelsey (18 July 2022). "Stray review: A touching tale on the importance of pets, hope, and friendship – set in a purrfect playground". VG247. Gamer Network. Archived from the original on 18 July 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
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  19. ^ a b Schilling 2021, p. 52.
  20. ^ a b c Scullion, Chris (8 June 2022). "Stray is finally challenging video games' obsession with dogs". Video Games Chronicle. 1981 Media. Archived from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  21. ^ a b c Martin-Raget, Swann (2 June 2022). "Stray comes to PS4 and PS5 on July 19 as part of PlayStation Plus Extra and Premium". PlayStation Blog. Sony Interactive Entertainment. Archived from the original on 5 June 2022. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  22. ^ a b c Mermet-Guyenet, Vivien (11 June 2020). "Stray is coming to PS5 from BlueTwelve and Annapurna Interactive". PlayStation Blog. Sony Interactive Entertainment. Archived from the original on 11 June 2020. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  23. ^ "Correction". Edge. No. 366. Future plc. 2 December 2021. p. 14.
  24. ^ O'Connor, Alice (16 May 2016). "Watch A Cybercat Explore A Kowloon-y Cybercity". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Gamer Network. Archived from the original on 19 April 2021. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  25. ^ a b c d Schilling 2021, p. 57.
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  28. ^ Maher, Cian (13 June 2020). "Most of the games shown at the PS5 reveal run on Unreal Engine". VG247. videogaming247 Ltd. Archived from the original on 14 June 2020. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  29. ^ Martin-Raget, Swann (29 July 2021). "An in-depth look into the mysterious, futuristic world of Stray". PlayStation Blog. Sony Interactive Entertainment. Archived from the original on 29 July 2021. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  30. ^ Romano, Nick (8 June 2022). "Stray allows you to be 'as annoying as you want' as a cat — and that's part of the fun". Entertainment Weekly. Dotdash Meredith. Archived from the original on 8 June 2022. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
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Bibliography

[edit]
  • Schilling, Chris (4 November 2021). "Cat Power". Edge. No. 365. Future plc. pp. 52–65.
[edit]