A dedicated app version for Windows was released on May 6, 2014. This version was later succeeded by a broader Windows Port for Windows 8.1 and 10 in April 2015.
During 2014, many users who could not access the official Flash version turned to like BlueStacks . This allowed the mobile version of Talking Tom Cat 2 to run on Windows 7 and Windows 8 systems by mimicking a mobile environment. Technical Requirements (Circa 2014) talking tom cat 2 desktop version 2014
However, not everyone had a smartphone. Many children and casual gamers still relied on home computers (Windows 7 and Windows 8 were dominant). The market responded with a wave of "desktop ports" – Android emulators like BlueStacks and YouWave were becoming popular, but users wanted a native .exe file they could download and run without fiddling with settings. A dedicated app version for Windows was released
I believe you're referring to (often called Talking Tom Cat 2: Flying Tom or similar variants) — specifically the desktop/PC version from around 2014 . This allowed the mobile version of Talking Tom
The core gameplay remained the same—Tom repeated everything said to him in his signature high-pitched voice. Desktop users could use their mouse to:
that allowed Tom to play an electric guitar. In the desktop version, this guitar was notably