Review
By Pixel Perfect

Image: IGDB
Store links: Schrodinger's Cat Burglar on Steam
The split-cat idea is the real game, not just the joke
Schrodinger's Cat Burglar is built around one concrete mechanical hook: protagonist Mittens can split into two cats after an accident with the game's Dual Event Synthesizer. GameCritics describes it as a third-person puzzle experience first, with the quantum-cat premise driving the room-by-room problem solving rather than sitting on top as a visual gag. That matters because this is the difference between a cute cat burglar game and a puzzle game with staying power.
What works: clean puzzle escalation
The strongest reported detail in GameCritics' review is the pacing of the puzzles. Early challenges ask players to use the two Mittens bodies in direct ways, such as having one cat ride a box-stacked cart while the other pushes it across the room to reach a higher platform. From there, Abandoned Sheep adds buttons, doors, weights, levers, batteries and other lab contraptions. According to the review, the complexity grows steadily without becoming overwhelming, and many puzzles can be solved in roughly five to ten minutes.
Solo control sounds better than expected
Schrodinger's Cat Burglar supports both solo and co-op play. In co-op, each player controls one cat when Mittens splits. GameCritics played solo and reported that controlling both cats with the two thumbsticks of a controller felt manageable, with no major platforming difficulty. That is an important practical point for an indie puzzle game built around dual-character movement, because awkward execution could easily turn good puzzle ideas into friction. Here, the source frames the controls as methodical rather than tight or athletic.
The stealth fantasy is lighter than the puzzle craft
The premise has Mittens trapped in an underground research lab full of robots, security systems, a malicious AI and corporate weirdness. That gives Schrodinger's Cat Burglar the flavor of a stealth puzzle review subject, but the available source material emphasizes puzzling over stealth tension. Players looking for precise sneaking, patrol manipulation or high-stakes infiltration should temper expectations. The stronger appeal appears to be environmental logic, split-body coordination and a playful sci-fi setup.
Charm helps, but the dressing may be overstuffed
GameCritics highlights the game's eccentric tone: talking animals, cute design, pseudo-science technobabble, a mysterious quantum ghost cat and banter between Mittens and hedgehog support character Lazy Susan. The review's listed high point is a joke about a hedgehog ranting over the worthlessness of AI, which says plenty about the game's comic register. The same source also flags an unusual excess: lots of codex lore and a surprisingly deep cosmetics system. Hats, collars, fur length, fur color and eyes can be unlocked, using currencies such as money, data chips and quantum fragments. The critique is not that customization exists, but that the game may devote more reward space to cosmetics than some players will want.
Why it matters for indie puzzle fans
Small puzzle games live or die by how well one idea can be explored. Based on the reported puzzle progression, Schrodinger's Cat Burglar seems to understand that its quantum gimmick needs new interactions, not just repeated button-pressing. The best sign is that the source describes the game as engaging and challenging without tipping into frustration. For players who like Portal-adjacent room puzzles but do not want demanding first-person movement, this sounds like a warmer, slower and more accessible alternative.
Practical questions: platforms, price and performance
The provided source material does not list launch date, supported platforms, price, PC requirements, storefront availability or technical performance metrics. It does confirm solo and co-op play and mentions controller use in solo mode. Because those buying details are not included in the source, players should check the current store listing before purchasing, especially if they need a specific platform, online or local co-op information, or Steam Deck compatibility.
Verdict
Schrodinger's Cat Burglar appears to make good on its central pun by turning one cat into a genuine puzzle tool. The dual-Mittens mechanic reportedly supports approachable but thoughtful challenges, and the tone gives the lab setting a distinct indie personality. The tradeoff is that the surrounding rewards and lore may feel puffed up compared with the clean pleasure of solving rooms. For puzzle fans, the gimmick sounds clever enough to carry the experience, provided you are here for methodical problem solving more than stealth pressure.
Final Verdict
A solid gaming experience that delivers on its promises and provides hours of entertainment.