Arcade Cabinet Cat Playhouse: Pew, Pew, Mew, Mew

The Arcade Cabinet Cat House from MeWooFun is just that: a cat house that looks like an arcade cabinet. Available on Amazon (affiliate link), the house comes in four colors (green, grey, pink, and orange), includes a removable scratching mat, and is the perfect addition to the video game and cat lover’s home. This will look awesome next to my Street Fighter II arcade game. You know, the one in my imagination.

The arcade cat house measures approximately 19″ x 15″ x 19″ and features a joystick, as well as “interactive holes,” presumably for putting toys and catnip in. Although based on the look of the cats in these product photos, I’m not sure they need any more catnip. Like, ever again.

Now my cat can play video games while I play video games! Of course, it won’t actually be playing video games, it’ll be licking itself in a tiny wooden arcade cabinet replica while I curse dying to the same boss in Elden Ring for the twentieth time, but you get the picture.

[via DudeIWantThat]

These wall-mountable, sustainable cat furniture are designed with replaced materials to last you a lifetime!

The lifecycle of most cat toys isn’t very long. When a cat gets a new stuffed mouse or scratching post, it only takes a couple of days before the scratching post is frayed beyond use and the mouse is missing a limb or two. Despite their short shelf time, cat toys and furniture pieces are chewed on and bitten at by cats like their first meal of the day. Extending the life cycle of cat accessories, feline furniture design brand Catipilla designed a collection of wall-mounted, sustainable furniture for cats with replaceable components that are built from premium materials to blend in with the rest of your furniture.

Catipilla’s furniture collection features pieces like scratching posts, hammocks, and cat climbers, each of which can be mounted onto interior walls. Catipilla designs furniture with quality material to ensure a longer life cycle. Constructed from materials like anodized aluminum and waterproof carpet, each component of their collection is replaceable, adding a degree of durability and insurance to the furniture’s long life cycle. The line of scratchers offers two options: a climber and a scratching post. Differing only in length, the scratching post is shorter in length for cats’ front paws to reach their top. The climber is slightly longer than the post, bringing cats from the floor to wall-mounted resting points.

Comprising hammocks, circus-themed tents, and high plates, Catipilla’s resting points can each be mounted onto interior walls as well, offering cats a hard-to-reach place of respite, far away from the reach of humans. While the hammock and high plates are both fully exposed, the circus-inspired big tent features a semi-enclosed interior space for stealthy cats to keep watch over their territory. The line of cat climbers varies in steps and heights to adapt to your cat’s mobility limits. As cats grow older, their limbs become less agile, requiring a downsize in play furniture. That’s why Catipilla offers every variation from single climbing plates to four-tiered climbing pieces.

Designer: Catipilla

Made from vulcanized fabric, the hammock from Catipilla is tough enough to hold heavier cats and soft enough for them to want to stay.

The circus-themed tent is constructed from faux leather panels and enhanced ABS fixings for a sophisticated, whimsical look that lasts.

Single tread plates offer a safe place of respite for your cats after playtime.

Cat climbers are made from powder-coated aluminum pillars, enhanced ABS treadplate body, and waterproof carpeting.

Reinforced with anodized aluminum, this unbleached South American sisal rope post and climber is entirely safe for your cat to paw at and chew.

Soft, waterproof carpeting line the cat climbers and can be replaced following heavy use.

The Great Wave off Kanagawa Cat Scratching Post: Fine Art for Felines

Created using Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic The Great Wave off Kanagawa woodblock print, this is a cat scratcher in a 3D form of the masterpiece. Released by the Cat Club division of Japanese lifestyle brand Felissimo, the scratcher sells for around $90. It’s certainly not the cheapest cat scratcher, but it does look like it belongs in a museum.

The scratcher measures approximately 24″ long, 16″ tall, and 8″ deep, and Felissimo insists that not only is it a great scratching post, but the concave shape of the wave makes it a good place to curl up and take a cat nap as well. I’m already yawning just thinking about it.

So, is this going to be the first in a series of fine art turned cat scratchers? Only time will tell. Well time, and people’s willingness to spend money on them. I feel like the cost of anything I buy for my cat is inversely proportional to how much she actually uses it. At $90 I doubt this will even warrant a second glance. The box it’s shipped in? She’ll sleep in it for years.

[via SoraNews24]

Copycat Art Scratchers: For Feline Art Critics

Cats have claws, and they aren’t afraid to use them. They will scratch up your rugs, furniture, even fine works of art, all to file down their claws. Never give your cat access to a priceless works of art. Ask Dutch interior designer Erik Stehmann. His cats used an embroidered painting in his home as a scratching post. But it gave him a great idea.

copycat_art_scratchers_1zoom in

This little disaster inspired Erik to come up with a very cool idea. That idea is Copycat Art Scratchers, scratching posts that look like classic works of art. Now Fluffy thinks he or she is tearing up a famous painting, but the joke is on him/her.

copycat_art_scratchers_2zoom in

Now you can have the best of both worlds; fine art that a cat can trash. Let your cat destroy famous works like the Mona Lisa, Girl With a Pearl Earring, or Still Life with Flowers in a Glass Vase. Sadly, they cost about $192(USD) each, which would buy you a whole lot of thrift shop art.

copycat_art_scratchers_3zoom in

[via Toyland via Geyser of Awesome]

Copycat Art Scratchers: For Feline Art Critics

Cats have claws, and they aren’t afraid to use them. They will scratch up your rugs, furniture, even fine works of art, all to file down their claws. Never give your cat access to a priceless works of art. Ask Dutch interior designer Erik Stehmann. His cats used an embroidered painting in his home as a scratching post. But it gave him a great idea.

copycat_art_scratchers_1zoom in

This little disaster inspired Erik to come up with a very cool idea. That idea is Copycat Art Scratchers, scratching posts that look like classic works of art. Now Fluffy thinks he or she is tearing up a famous painting, but the joke is on him/her.

copycat_art_scratchers_2zoom in

Now you can have the best of both worlds; fine art that a cat can trash. Let your cat destroy famous works like the Mona Lisa, Girl With a Pearl Earring, or Still Life with Flowers in a Glass Vase. Sadly, they cost about $192(USD) each, which would buy you a whole lot of thrift shop art.

copycat_art_scratchers_3zoom in

[via Toyland via Geyser of Awesome]