Apps Games Articles
My Talking Tom
Outfit7 Limited
Rating 4.5star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon empty star icon
4.1

One-line summary My Talking Tom is still one of the most charming and easy-to-love virtual pet games on Android, but its constant ad interruptions keep it from feeling as relaxed and wholesome as it should.

  • Installs

    1B+

  • Developer

    Outfit7 Limited

  • Category

    Casual

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    7.2.2.2712

  • Package

    com.outfit7.mytalkingtomfree

Screenshots
In-depth review
After spending real time with My Talking Tom again, what stands out most is how well the core idea still works. You adopt Tom, feed him, clean him, put him to bed, play mini-games, collect items, and gradually watch him grow. That loop is simple enough for a child to understand in minutes, but it is also polished enough to keep adults poking around longer than they expected. There is a reason this app has lasted so long: the basic care-and-reward cycle is immediately satisfying. The best thing about My Talking Tom is its personality. Tom is not just a static pet sitting in a menu. He reacts, repeats what you say, makes goofy expressions, and generally gives the app a playful sense of life. The voice mimic feature is still the first thing most people will try, and it remains an easy crowd-pleaser. It is silly, light, and exactly the kind of feature that gives the game its identity. Even after the novelty wears off, Tom himself remains the reason the app has charm rather than just becoming another task manager with cartoon graphics. The second big strength is how approachable the app feels in short bursts. This is a good game for a minute here, five minutes there. Check on Tom, send him to the bathroom, feed him a snack, play a mini-game, collect a reward, maybe change his outfit or tweak the room, and you are done. It does not demand deep commitment, and that works in its favor. For younger players especially, the structure is intuitive: every action produces an obvious response, and progress is easy to read. Tom gets happier, sleepier, cleaner, taller, and better dressed. That constant feedback makes routine interaction feel rewarding. The mini-games do a lot of work here too. They break up the pet-care loop and give you a more active reason to stay in the app. Some are quick reflex games, some feel more like simple puzzles or arcade diversions, but in general they serve their purpose well. They give you something to do while also helping you earn currency and keep the broader progression moving. Without them, My Talking Tom would risk becoming repetitive much faster. With them, it has enough variety to remain engaging for casual play. Customization is the third major strength. Outfits, furniture, and collectible touches give the app a sense of ownership. Even if the systems are not especially deep, they do help make Tom feel like your Tom. Kids will likely get the most from this, but there is also an undeniable nostalgic appeal for older players who remember the app from years ago and want that same cozy loop back. That said, using My Talking Tom in 2025 also means running into some very familiar free-to-play frustrations. The biggest problem by far is advertising. Ads are not just present; they often feel woven into too many actions. In a game built around light, relaxing interaction, repeated ad breaks damage the flow more than they would in a faster or more competitive title. At its worst, it starts to feel like every burst of play is being stretched by interruptions, pop-ups, or extra taps to close things and return to what you were doing. For a game aimed at children and families, that is particularly irritating. The second weakness is pacing. Parts of My Talking Tom rely on waiting, and sometimes that waiting is longer than it should be. Sleep is the most obvious example. Putting Tom to bed makes sense as part of the pet simulation, but when you want to keep playing and are told to slow down unless you spend currency, the app can feel less like a companion game and more like a timer. That friction is manageable in moderation, but it becomes annoying when paired with ads and other nudges. The third issue is that the app occasionally feels a little too static for such a long-running virtual pet. Tom is expressive, yes, but there are moments when you wish the world around him had more natural life to it. Much of the interaction still comes down to tapping through rooms and triggering expected animations. It works, but it can also make the app feel closer to a polished toy than a truly evolving pet simulator. Some players will be perfectly happy with that. Others may eventually want more spontaneous behavior, more interaction depth, or more meaningful variety in the day-to-day loop. Even with those flaws, I came away liking My Talking Tom more than not. It remains bright, accessible, and genuinely comforting in a way many mobile games fail to be. There is something timeless about checking in on a cartoon pet, hearing it parrot your voice back in a ridiculous tone, and knocking out a few mini-games before moving on with your day. That emotional simplicity is the app's real strength. Who is it for? It is an easy recommendation for kids, parents looking for a generally simple virtual pet game, and adults returning for nostalgia who can tolerate a modern free-to-play wrapper. It is also a decent fit for anyone who likes low-pressure mobile games that can be enjoyed in quick sessions. Who is it not for? If you have no patience for ads, dislike wait timers, or want a deeper life-sim with richer interactions, this probably will not hold your attention for long. Likewise, if you are looking for a premium-feeling experience without constant monetization reminders, My Talking Tom can feel more intrusive than charming. In the end, My Talking Tom still has a warm, playful heart. The pet care loop is polished, the mini-games help it stay lively, and Tom himself remains instantly recognizable and fun. But the app is at its best when it lets you enjoy that charm uninterrupted, and too often it gets in its own way.