How a video game kitty is helping real cats find homes
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| New York
The virtual cat hero from the new video game sensation 鈥淪tray鈥 doesn鈥檛 just wind along rusted pipes, leap over unidentified sludge, and decode clues in a seemingly abandoned city. The daring orange tabby is helping real world cats as well.
Thanks to online fundraising platforms, gamers are playing 鈥淪tray鈥 while streaming live for audiences to raise money for animal shelters and other cat-related charities. Annapurna Interactive, the game鈥檚 publisher, also promoted 鈥淪tray鈥 by offering two cat rescue and adoption agencies copies of the game to raffle off and renting out a New York cat cafe.
Livestreaming game play for charity isn鈥檛 new, but the resonance 鈥淪tray鈥 quickly found from cat lovers is unusual. It was the fourth most watched and broadcast game on the day it launched on Twitch, the streaming platform said.
Viewers watch as players navigate the adventurous feline through an aging industrial landscape doing normal cat stuff 鈥 balancing on railings, walking on keyboards, and knocking things off shelves 鈥 to solve puzzles and evade enemies.
About 80% of the game鈥檚 development team are 鈥渃at owners and cat lovers鈥 and a real-life orange stray as well as their own cats helped inspire the game, one creator said.
鈥淚 certainly hope that maybe some people will be inspired to help actual strays in real life 鈥 knowing that having an animal and a companion is a responsibility,鈥 said producer Swann Martin-Raget, of the BlueTwelve gaming studio in Montpellier, in southern France.
When Annapurna Interactive reached out to the Nebraska Humane Society to partner before the game鈥檚 launch on July 19, they jumped at the chance, marketing specialist Brendan Gepson said.
鈥淭he whole game and the whole culture around the game, it鈥檚 all about a love of cats,鈥 Mr. Gepson said. 鈥淚t meshed really well with the shelter and our mission.鈥
The shelter got four copies of the game to give away and solicited donations for $5 to be entered into a raffle to win one. In a week, they raised $7,000, Mr. Gepson said, with the vast majority of the 550 donors being new to them, including people donating from Germany and Malta. The company also donated $1,035 to the shelter.
鈥淚t was really mutually beneficial,鈥 Mr. Gepson said. 鈥淭hey got some really good PR out of it and we got a whole new donor base out of it.鈥
Annapurna also bought out Meow Parlour, the New York cat cafe and adoption agency, for a weekend, as well as donating $1,000. Visitors who made reservations could buy 鈥淪tray鈥 themed merchandise and play the game for 20 minutes while surrounded by cats.聽(The game also captivates cats, videos on social media show.)
Jeff Legaspi, Annapurna Interactive鈥檚 marketing director, said it made sense for the game鈥檚 launch to do something 鈥減ositively impactful and hopefully bring more awareness to adopting and not shopping for a new pet.鈥
Annapurna declined to disclose sales or download figures for the game, which is available on PlayStation and the Steam platform. However, according to Steam monitor SteamDB, 鈥淪tray鈥 has been the No. 1 purchased game for the past two weeks.
North Shore Animal League America, which rescues tens of thousands of animals each year, said it hadn鈥檛 seen any increase in traffic from the game but they did receive more than $800 thanks to a gamer.
In a happy coincidence, the shelter had just set up a profile on the platform Tiltify, which allows nonprofits to receive donations from video streams, the week the game launched. The player channeled donations to the shelter, smashing her initial goal of $200.
鈥淲e are seeing Tiltify and livestreaming as this whole new way for us to engage a whole different audience,鈥 said Carol Marchesano, the rescue鈥檚 senior digital marketing director. Usually, though, organizations need to reach out to online personalities to coordinate livestreams, which can take a lot of work, she said.
About nine campaigns on Tiltify mention the game 鈥淪tray,鈥 the company鈥檚 CEO Michael Wasserman said. JustGiving, which also facilitates charity livestreams, said it identified two campaigns with the game.
For his part, Mr. Gepson from Nebraska reached out to an Omaha resident who goes by the name TreyDay1014 online to run a charity livestream. Trey, who asked that his last name not be used, has two cats, one of which he adopted from the shelter.
Last week, he narrated to viewers watching live on the platform Twitch as his cat character batted another cat鈥檚 tail and danced along railings.
鈥淚f I found out my cat was outside doing this, I鈥檇 be upset,鈥 Trey said, as his character jumped across a perilous distance. Moments later, a rusty pipe broke, sending the tabby down a gut-wrenching plunge into the darkness.
鈥淭hat is a poor baby,鈥 Trey said somberly, 鈥渂ut we are okay.鈥
A $25 donation followed the fall, pushing the amount raised by Trey for the Nebraska shelter to over $100 in about 30 minutes. By the end of four and a half hours of play, donations totaled $1,500. His goal had been to raise $200.
鈥淭his has opened my eyes to being able to use this platform for a lot more good than just playing video games,鈥 Trey said.
This story was reported by The Associated Press. AP business writer Matt O鈥橞rien contributed to this report.