Protect My Dog

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Protect My Dog
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Play Protect My Dog Walkthrough


Protect My Dog

Playful comparison Protecting the pup in Protect My Dog is like making a tiny umbrella… except the “rain” is angry bees. Draw the right shape once, then hope your shield holds. What you do in the game In Protect My Dog, each level starts with a dog standing near trouble. Your job is to draw a protective line that becomes a barrier. After you finish drawing, the bees rush in, and the game’s physics decides if your shield keeps the dog safe. The core loop is: Look at the level layout (platforms, gaps, hazards). Draw one defensive line (a wall/shield). Bees attack. Your drawing must block them. If the dog stays safe for the short countdown, you pass and move on. Some levels add extra dangers (like lava or thorns/spikes), so it’s not only about blocking bees—it’s also about stopping the dog from falling or being pushed into hazards. Real player moment: the first few levels feel easy… then you draw a “perfect circle,” and it rolls away like a tire. That’s when you learn: heavy shapes can move! Controls Desktop Click and drag with the mouse to draw your barrier. Mobile Tap and drag to draw (if your version supports touch). Many versions play the same way on mobile, just with your finger instead of a mouse. How you win and how progress works You win a level by keeping the dog protected while the bees attack. Many versions use a short survival timer (often around 10 seconds)—so your drawing needs to last, not just look nice. Progress is level-based. One common version lists 50 levels, and they get trickier as you go. Obstacles and “gotchas” you’ll see Protect My Dog is all about physics surprises. Watch for: Edges and slopes that make your line slide. Gaps where bees can slip through if you leave a tiny hole. Low ceilings that force you to draw flatter shapes. Extra hazards like lava or spikes/thorns in some levels. A shield can fail in two common ways: Bees reach the dog through a gap. Your drawing moves, falls, or tips over. Tips to play better (10 specific tips) Draw from solid ground. Start your line on a platform or wall so it “anchors” instead of floating. Close every gap. One tiny opening is enough for bees to sneak in. Make a roof, not a ball. Round shapes can roll. A roof shape (like a tent) usually stays put. Use the walls. If there’s a side wall, lean your shield against it so it can’t slide away. Keep it simple. Giant drawings are heavy and more likely to fall or wobble. Watch the first second of the attack. If your line shifts right away, restart and redraw—don’t wait for a slow fail. When there’s lava/spikes, protect the floor too. Sometimes you need a “fence” that blocks pushes, not just stings. Don’t trap the dog in a falling cage. If your shield hangs in mid-air, it may drop onto the dog or slide off. If you keep failing, draw earlier than you think. A quick, confident shape beats a shaky “fix it later” line. Coach voice: Pause. Plan the shape. Then draw once. Tiny extra help: If your shield keeps tipping, try making the bottom wider than the top—like a triangle. Wide base = better balance. Levels / modes / progression This game is mainly a level path. One common version says the bee-fighting puzzle continues for 50 levels, with difficulty rising over time. You don’t unlock weapons or characters—your “upgrade” is learning what shapes work best on different terrain. Common problems & quick fixes My mouse/pen won’t draw: click inside the game frame first, then try again. Lag makes the physics feel weird: close other tabs and refresh the page. Sound is missing: some browsers only play sound after your first click—click once, then check volume. Fullscreen looks stretched: exit fullscreen and set browser zoom to 100%. Bees sneak through even with a wall: look for a tiny corner gap. Redraw with the line touching the floor/wall. parent note: Protect My Dog is a gentle puzzle game about shapes and planning. Kids practice problem-solving and patience. Good reminder: after 10–15 minutes, take a short break and rest eyes and hands. 5) Quick Info: Platform: Browser (HTML5/WebGL) Genre: Drawing puzzle / physics logic Age fit: 6–13 Session length: 5–15 minutes (levels are quick; “one more try” is real) Controls: Draw with mouse (desktop) or tap-drag (Mobile -->if supported) 6) FAQ: Q1: What’s the goal in Protect My Dog? Draw a defensive line that protects the dog from bee attacks and level hazards. Q2: Do I need to draw fast? Not super fast—but you should draw confidently. A clean shape usually works better than lots of messy scribbles. Q3: Why does my shield roll away? It’s physics. Round shapes roll. Try a tent/roof shape with a wide base. Q4: Are there hazards besides bees? Some versions include hazards like lava and thorns/spikes, so your line may need to stop pushing or falling too. Q5: How many levels are there? One common version lists 50 levels, and they get tougher as you go. Q6: What if the game feels “stuck” on a level? Restart and change one thing: anchor your line to a wall, or make the base wider. Small shape changes make big differences.

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