The house burned down. The owner disappeared. All that’s left for a young Border Collie named Duke is his sharp nose, his instincts, and a mysterious power called The Tide. Hounded, the upcoming third-person narrative adventure from UK indie studio IMPRNT STUDIOS, just unveiled itself with a publishing partnership announcement, a strong Kickstarter result, 50,000+ Steam wishlists, and its first gameplay trailer at the Insider Gaming Showcase. And it might be one of the more genuinely distinctive indie projects on the horizon, built around an unusual protagonist and an unexpected setting.

Animal-protagonist games aren’t new — Stray, Goose Game, Tokyo Jungle, and Endling have all built memorable experiences around non-human leads. But Hounded is doing something different with the premise: not the cozy register of Stray or the chaos comedy of Goose Game, but a dark narrative drama about loss, loyalty, and rebellion, viewed through the eyes of a dog who’s lost everything.

A Studio Built From AAA Veterans

The development team behind Hounded is worth establishing first. IMPRNT STUDIOS was founded by developers from Sony, TT Games, Cloud Imperium Games, and Sega — a roster of major-studio experience that doesn’t typically result in small indie projects about Border Collies. The decision by these developers to leave AAA work and build something personal and emotionally specific tells you what kind of project Hounded is going to be.

This is a meaningful pattern in current indie development. Designers and developers with extensive AAA backgrounds increasingly leave major studios to pursue projects they couldn’t make at scale — projects with unconventional protagonists, emotionally serious themes, or design philosophies that don’t fit corporate development structures. Hounded is the kind of project that probably wouldn’t survive a pitch meeting at a major studio (a Border Collie hunting for his missing owner in flintlock fantasy England isn’t exactly franchise material), and it’s the kind of project that justifies why indie development matters.

That AAA background also lends the project credibility in terms of craft. Studios founded by experienced developers typically deliver higher production values than first-time teams, and the early trailer footage suggests IMPRNT STUDIOS is bringing serious technical polish to their debut commercial release.

The publishing partnership with Silver Lining Interactive — known for Outbound and the Slain series — is itself a positive signal. Silver Lining’s catalog reflects a publisher with a taste for atmospheric, character-driven indie work, and founder Luke Keighran’s comment that Hounded represents “the kind of project we wanted to be part of, with intense emotional story, rich fantasy world, and vivid protagonist” suggests editorial fit rather than transactional publishing.

The Flintlock Fantasy Setting

The setting deserves specific attention. Flintlock fantasy — the subgenre blending early-industrial gunpowder-era aesthetics with fantastical elements — has been having a quiet moment in fiction recently (the Powder Mage book series, Flintlock: The Siege of Dawn, various tabletop RPG settings). Hounded sets it in a late-18th-century England, with the added layer of a dark alternate history where tyranny, unrest, and quiet rebellion shape the world.

This is an unusual setting choice for an animal-protagonist game, and that unusualness is the point. Most animal-led games place their protagonists in either contemporary urban environments (Stray, Goose Game) or post-apocalyptic landscapes (Endling). Putting a dog in a politically tense 18th-century-inspired fantasy world creates immediate narrative texture that pure animal-survival games can’t reach.

The political backdrop matters. A world filled with gunpowder smoke and revolutionary tension changes what the player is moving through. Duke isn’t just navigating environmental challenges — he’s moving through a society in upheaval, witnessing things that have political weight, encountering humans whose lives are shaped by forces larger than themselves. The dog’s perspective on human politics is the kind of narrative angle that opens up storytelling territory animal games rarely access.

The English late-18th-century framing also carries specific cultural resonance. This is the era of the American and French revolutions, of industrial transition, of widespread political instability. Setting Hounded in a flintlock-fantasy version of that period gives the rebellion themes historical weight while preserving the fantastical license that lets the studio do interesting things with The Tide and other supernatural elements.

The Scent-Tracking System

The mechanical signature of Hounded — and the design that justifies the Border Collie protagonist beyond pure aesthetic — is the scent tracking system. Players use Duke’s olfactory perspective to track trails and discover environmental clues, with smell becoming the primary investigation tool rather than a supplementary one.

This is a smart design choice for several reasons. First, it embodies the protagonist rather than just contextualizing them. Most animal-protagonist games treat the animal as essentially a small human with limited language — the gameplay rarely reflects what it would actually be like to perceive the world the way the animal does. Hounded, committing to scent as the central investigation mechanic means the gameplay engages with what it’s like to be a dog rather than just inhabiting one.

Second, it gives the game a distinctive mechanical identity. Visual investigation is the genre’s default — L.A. Noire, Sherlock Holmes, the Detective Pikachu games, countless others use looking at things as the core verb. Scent-based investigation creates a different relationship with environments, where movement patterns, lingering traces, and accumulated smells form the investigation logic. It’s an underexplored gameplay space.

Third, it serves the narrative. Duke is searching for his missing owner — a quest that’s fundamentally about scent in the real world. Dogs find missing people through their noses. The mechanical and narrative truths align, which is rarer than it should be in games trying to put players in non-human perspectives.

The Tide and the Detective Drama

Beyond scent-tracking, Duke wields The Tide — a mysterious supernatural force that elevates the game from pure realistic animal-perspective drama into something with fantasy adventure stakes. This addition is what lets Hounded combine emotional drama with the broader action-adventure scope a full-length game requires.

The Tide’s specific nature hasn’t been fully revealed, but its presence in the design signals that Hounded isn’t trying to be a pure realism exercise. Duke isn’t just a regular dog navigating a world too big for him — he’s a young Border Collie with supernatural capability, hunting for his missing owner through a politically dangerous landscape. That combination makes him both vulnerable and capable, both ordinary and special, which is the kind of protagonist framing that supports a substantial narrative arc.

The detective-story structure layered onto this gives the game its progression logic. Duke is conducting an investigation — collecting clues through scent, investigating secrets, and uncovering conspiracies. The dangerous enemies and hidden plots that await him, along with the unexpected companions he’ll meet, suggest a substantial cast of characters and a layered mystery driving the plot forward.

This is the right structural choice for an animal-led narrative game. Pure survival or exploration loops can sustain shorter experiences (Stray runs about 6-8 hours, Endling is similar), but a longer narrative game benefits from an investigative structure that gives players ongoing goals and reveals. Hounded‘s detective framing should let the studio sustain engagement across a longer runtime while maintaining narrative coherence.

The Themes

The game’s central themes — love, loss, the moments of choice, and the bond between humans and dogs — anchor the project in emotionally universal territory. This is what gives Hounded its primary appeal: dog stories work on humans in a deeply specific way that few other narrative framings can match.

The human-dog bond is one of the most powerful storytelling tools available to any medium. Dogs in fiction don’t need elaborate characterization to land emotionally — their loyalty, their vulnerability, their dependence on human owners, produce immediate emotional response in audiences. A game where the dog is the protagonist, separated from the owner he loved, searching for them through a dangerous world, has a fundamental emotional engine that doesn’t require complex narrative machinery to function.

The loss-and-search structure is also genre-resonant. Animal-companion stories where the animal is lost from their owner have a long literary history (The Incredible Journey, Lassie Come-Home, countless others). Hounded inverts the perspective — usually these stories are told from the human’s side or as omniscient narratives — but the emotional template is recognizable enough that players will immediately understand what the game is doing emotionally.

The political dimension adds depth without overwhelming the core. Duke’s personal quest to find his owner is the emotional foundation, and the world’s tyranny and rebellion are the texture around it. That structural priority — personal stakes first, political backdrop second — is the right one for a narrative game that wants to land emotionally rather than serve as political commentary.

Crowdfunding Success and Pre-Release Momentum

The Kickstarter results — £52,086 against a £22,000 goal, achieving over 150% funding with 1,340 backers — represent strong validation for a debut commercial project. Kickstarter campaigns for indie games are an increasingly difficult environment, and exceeding the goal by 150% with a substantial backer count signals genuine audience demand rather than just friend-and-family support.

Stretch goal achievements have already added value to the project, with Duke’s collar and fur color customization options unlocked, and console version release confirmed. The console expansion is particularly meaningful — single-platform indie releases reach smaller audiences, and crossing into console availability significantly broadens the game’s potential reach.

The 50,000+ Steam wishlist count adds to the picture. Pre-launch wishlists at that level for a debut studio’s first commercial project signal real anticipation — most indie projects launch with wishlists in the low tens of thousands, and Hounded clearing 50,000 before public release suggests the project has caught attention beyond its Kickstarter base.

The GDC Festival of Gaming 2026 Scholarship Program selection adds professional validation. Programs like these recognize promising work and provide visibility within the industry — selection signals that Hounded is being noticed by people who follow indie development seriously.

How the Press Has Read It

International coverage has consistently emphasized the unusual protagonist framing and the cinematic execution. The animal-empathy elements, cinematic direction, and genre-blending composition have been singled out as the project’s primary strengths. The Kickstarter performance and high wishlist numbers have been noted as factors raising expectations.

Silver Lining Interactive’s framing — that Hounded is “the kind of project we wanted to be part of, with intense emotional story, rich fantasy world, and vivid protagonist” — captures what’s distinctive about the project. This isn’t typical indie animal game territory. It’s a more ambitious, emotionally and aesthetically richer project that combines elements that don’t usually appear together.

Who This Is For

Strong fit for: Stray fans interested in similar animal-protagonist experiences with darker emotional registers; Endling fans drawn to emotionally heavy animal narratives; players interested in flintlock fantasy or 18th-century-inspired settings; fans of investigation-driven narrative games seeking unusual mechanical perspectives; dog owners and animal lovers prepared for emotional weight; players who appreciate AAA-veteran indie work.

Cautious fit for: players who find dog-in-peril narratives too emotionally difficult; anyone who prefers human protagonists for narrative engagement.

Less ideal for: players who specifically want gameplay-focused experiences without heavy narrative emphasis; anyone allergic to fantasy settings or supernatural elements; players who dislike investigation-driven progression structures.

What to Watch For

A few questions will shape Hounded‘s path to release.

The first is whether the scent-tracking mechanic delivers the satisfying gameplay loop the design suggests. Olfactory perspective in games is rare for good reason — translating smell into compelling interactive gameplay is genuinely difficult. How IMPRNT STUDIOS visualizes and gameplay-ifies scent tracking will significantly affect whether the central mechanic feels innovative or gimmicky.

The second is the emotional pacing. Dog narratives carry significant emotional weight, but sustaining that weight across a full-length game without becoming either numbing or melodramatic requires careful pacing. Whether Hounded maintains emotional precision across its full runtime is the central narrative question.

The third is the political backdrop’s depth. The flintlock-fantasy rebellion setting is intriguing but needs to develop into something substantial rather than just atmospheric flavor. How seriously Hounded engages with its world’s political dimensions will affect whether the setting feels integral or decorative.

The fourth is The Tide’s role and definition. The supernatural element is the project’s least-defined feature in current marketing, and how it integrates with the realistic dog perspective will significantly shape the game’s tone and gameplay.

The Takeaway

Hounded is shaping up to be one of the more genuinely distinctive indie projects on the horizon. The combination of an AAA-veteran development team, unusual protagonist (a Border Collie in a flintlock fantasy world), an emotionally serious thematic foundation (loss, loyalty, the human-dog bond), and a detective-driven gameplay structure adds up to something that doesn’t fit neatly into any existing indie category.

The Kickstarter success, 50,000+ Steam wishlists, GDC Festival of Gaming selection, and Silver Lining Interactive publishing partnership all signal that the project has cleared the bars that separate ambitious announcements from credible upcoming releases. The first gameplay trailer at the Insider Gaming Showcase added concrete footage to the conceptual pitch, and the early response has been positive.

For players drawn to animal-protagonist narratives, atmospheric indie adventures, or AAA-veteran indie work, this is one to wishlist immediately. For everyone else, Hounded is worth watching as it develops toward release — the kind of indie project that, if it delivers on its promises, will be discussed alongside the genre’s standout entries.

A burned house. A missing owner. A young Border Collie with a sharp nose, a mysterious power, and one purpose. As indie pitches go, Hounded is one of the more emotionally direct of the year — and coming from developers with AAA experience and a publisher with editorial taste, it has the foundations to deliver on its promise.

The trail leads somewhere. Duke is going to follow it. And players, when the time comes, will follow him.


Information regarding ‘Hounded’
item detail
Developer IMPRNT STUDIOS (UK / Founded by developers from Sony, TT Games, Cloud Imperium, and Sega)
Publisher Silver Lining Interactive
Genre Third-person narrative adventure/action adventure
Release platform PC (Steam) + Console (to be announced later)
Scheduled for release Undetermined (TBA)
background Pintrock Fantasy / Late 18th Century English Inspiration
hero Duke — Border Collie
Kickstarter results Fundraising Goal £22,000 → £52,086 (150%+ achieved / 1,340 sponsors)
Steam Wishlist 50,000+ cases
premier Selected for the GDC Festival of Gaming 2026 Scholarship Program
First reveal Insider Gaming Showcase May 28, 2026 Gameplay Trailer
Main Keywords Dog, Border Collie, Narrative, Pintrock Fantasy, Rebellion, Scent Tracking, Loyalty, Touching
Official Channel Kickstarter · Steam · X (@IMPRNTSTUDIOS)
Steam Page Go to Wishlist
Editorial Team

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