Live like a cat or kitten and raise a family of your favorite cat breeds in Cat Sim Online, a new RPG adventure set in a massive 3D world!
Live like a cat or kitten and raise a family of your favorite cat breeds in Cat Sim Online, a new RPG adventure set in a massive 3D world!
Explore the big world for yourself as one of the many popular cat breeds and make a new adventure! Play with friends in online multiplayer games and form clans to battle enemies to keep your family safe. Unlock new cat breeds as your family grows and play with cats in Cat Sim Online!
Cat Sim Online Features:
Cat Games - Raise a Family
- Animal simulator: Customize each cat by name, gender, fur color, clothes and more!
- Breeding: Watch the family tree grow as your generations of cats expand!
- Raise a family by having new kittens and continue the family legacy
- Cat breeds can be unlocked with coins earned by leveling up as you explore the world
- Become pregnant: help the mom the give a birth!
3D RPG Games – Adventure & Battle Enemies
- Adventure in this new cat simulator full of your favorite cat breeds
- Battle against dangerous enemies in simulator games to know how a cat fights
- Unlock fighting achievements when you take down specific enemies
Explore the Massive 3D World
- Adventure calls in this 3D simulator full of unique locations to travel
- Explore the world from the city to the countryside and experience simulated weather conditions
- RPG games come with a map that is easy to navigate – just zoom or rotate the compass
Online Multiplayer Games
- Play with friends in online RPG games and share the glory as you defeat enemies
- Multiplayer games make fighting enemies and protecting your family easier
- Battle in online adventure games and prove your strength against others
Clans & Online Leaderboards
- Adventure in clans with other online players and battle in the Clan Wars
- Online leaderboards rank the best cat by level, clan war points and battles won
- Clans members can see when other players are online and join their adventure
Raise a family, explore a massive 3D world and battle enemies solo or in online multiplayer games! Play free cat games and make your own adventure in Cat Sim Online!
Download today and start playing as your favorite cat breeds!
The young lifters nod. They tighten their belts. And somewhere in the silent, chalk-dusted rafters of the old Zawiercie hall, the ghost of Tadeusz Kuna—the Auschwitz strongman—smiles. The bar is still rising. The union endures.
Then came a quiet renaissance. In the 2000s, a new generation, born after communism, discovered the PZPC not as a state tool but as a rebellion of the self. Adrian Zieliński, a lyrical lifter with a poet’s face, won gold in London 2012. His teammate, Bartłomiej Bonk, took bronze. The union headquarters in Warsaw, now modern and glass-fronted, buzzed with young lifters in bright spandex, their phones filming every snatch for Instagram. The old guard grumbled about “soft hands,” but they smiled secretly. polski związek podnoszenia ciężarów
The union’s story, however, began long before the ashes of 1945. Its first incarnation was born in the spirited, fractured years after Poland regained independence in 1918. Back then, weightlifting was a carnival act, a strongman’s brag. But men like Walenty Kłyszejko, a visionary coach of Lithuanian-Polish descent, saw it differently. He saw geometry in motion, poetry in a clean and jerk. The early PZPC, founded in 1922, was a fragile thing—a union of iron enthusiasts who met in cellar gyms, lifting mismatched plates by gaslight. Their first national championship, held in Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine) in 1925, had more spectators than lifters, but the seed was planted. The young lifters nod
The cold hung in the air of the Warszawa sports academy like a held breath. It was January 1957, and the war-scarred city was still learning to stand straight again. In a cramped, high-ceilinged room that smelled of chalk, sweat, and old tobacco, a group of men gathered around a scarred oak table. They were not politicians or generals. They were blacksmiths, teachers, former partisans, and railway workers. Their hands, calloused and thick-knuckled, had spent the last decade lifting not just barbells, but the rubble of a nation. Today, they were here to formally re-establish the Polski Związek Podnoszenia Ciężarów (PZPC). The bar is still rising
The Communist authorities were suspicious of the PZPC. It was too individualistic, too primal. A man alone with a barbell, grunting against gravity—this was not the socialist collectivist ideal. But the Party underestimated the iron will of the union’s second generation. Throughout the 1960s, the PZPC played a clever game. They organized “Workers’ Strength Days” in factories, disguising elite training as proletarian fitness. They built the legendary training center in Zawiercie, a grim, beautiful place where the walls sweated rust and champions were forged in silence. The coach there, a squat, fiery-eyed man named Janusz Gortat, ran a dictatorship of the bar. His philosophy was brutal: “The barbell does not care about your politics. It only cares about your back.”
And so, the 1957 meeting was a resurrection. The men at the table elected Zygmunt Smalcerz, a former middleweight with a broken nose and unbowed spirit, as the first post-war chairman. Their first decree was not about records or medals. It was simple: “We will build a platform in every powiat (county). Because a nation that lifts together, heals together.”
That seed almost rotted during the Nazi occupation. Barbells were melted into weapons. Gyms became hospitals or execution sites. The PZPC vanished, its records burned, its champions scattered—some to the forests as resistance fighters, others to concentration camps. One such champion, a silent heavyweight from Poznań named Tadeusz “Kuna” Kuna, spent four years in Auschwitz. He survived by secretly doing squats and presses in the latrine, counting repetitions as a prayer for another dawn.