Game Info
Updated: N/A
Category: Hypercasual
Score: 7.5
1 Player3D3D GamesAnimalBattleBest GamesCasualCollectingDragonMobileMonsterunity

How to Play

Joystick control on the screen or WASD keyboard To attack a target stand nearby and wait In the inventory select pets for the team To get a new pet go to the desired egg and break it

Description

Pets Master Simulator doesn’t just drop you into an animal-packed world and leave you wandering—it gives you a reason to care about every furry (or scaly) recruit you find. You’ll start with only a single companion at your side. The game begins pretty simply: run around these vibrant locations, looking for new creatures to join your squad. It’s not all cute collection, though. Things heat up quickly as enemies of different types block your path or gather in groups for bigger showdowns. There are dragons and flying critters up above, earthbound brutes skulking through the grass—you never quite know what’s next. Leveling up matters here. Both you and your animals grow stronger with every fight or bit of gold earned—if you slack off on upgrades, the game doesn’t forgive easily. Sometimes you'll realize halfway through an enemy raid that perhaps you rushed in unprepared; well, that teaches caution fast. To be honest, balancing upgrades between yourself and your pets is half the fun (and frustration). Teleporting to new worlds shakes things up just when it starts to feel familiar—but getting there takes some grinding. Not everyone will stick it out; younger players or anyone who loves building teams might be more hooked than those who want quick wins. It’s interesting how even the smallest pet can shift things in battle if upgraded right.

Editor's View

I went into Pets Master Simulator expecting a breezy collect-a-thon but found myself sinking hours into finding the rarest creatures—and figuring out which ones actually helped me survive longer than five minutes during tougher battles. At first I liked the simplicity: gather pets, smash enemies, repeat. After a while it gets trickier—the grind for coins (and crystals) sometimes dragged on more than I’d hoped, honestly. But discovering a surprise dragon perched behind some rocks? That made up for it. The visuals are bright enough to feel welcoming but don’t expect wild detail; they’re just decent—nothing jaw-dropping but not bad either. If there’s one thing I’d change, maybe it’s how much time upgrading eats up… Still had some fun trying out different combinations though.