Product Description
Product Dimensions : 13.3 x 13.3 x 2.5 inches; 2.64 Pounds
Item model number : BTP-Dog Slow Feeder
Date First Available : February 21, 2025
Manufacturer : Beitophome
ASIN : B0DY1GWT9H
Country of Origin : China
Slow Down Mealtime for Better Digestion & Health: The 4-in-1 dog puzzle feeder is designed to slow down your dog’s eating speed, reducing risks of choking, vomiting, and digestive problems. This interactive dog puzzle toy engages your dog’s mind, promoting healthier digestion while improving eating habits. Ideal for dogs that tend to eat too fast or struggle with digestive issues, it transforms mealtime into a fun and beneficial challenge.
Boost Your Dog’s Brainpower with Fun & Rewarding Challenges: Stimulate your dog’s cognitive abilities with this versatile dog puzzle toy. Featuring adjustable difficulty levels, it challenges your dog’s problem-solving skills, making it perfect for smart dogs and puppies alike. Offering hours of brain stimulation, it keeps boredom at bay while enhancing mental sharpness and focus. This toy is more than just a game—it’s a mental workout that helps your dog thrive.
Interactive Play to Relieve Anxiety & Stress: This dog puzzle toy is designed to ease separation anxiety and stress by keeping your dog engaged and focused. It offers effective mental stimulation, distracting your dog from destructive behaviors like chewing or excessive barking. This interactive play helps comfort your dog, promoting emotional stability, and making it an ideal choice for dogs who feel anxious when left alone.
Safe, Durable & Non-Toxic Design for Every Dog: Made with food-grade ABS material, this dog puzzle toy is completely safe and non-toxic. Free from harmful substances like BPA, PVC, and phthalates, it ensures your dog’s safety during playtime. With a smooth, durable design and no sharp edges, it’s built to withstand vigorous play, making it a perfect option for all dogs—whether puppies or large breeds. Ideal for interactive play with large dogs or as a puppy puzzle toy.
Tailored to Dogs of All Sizes and Ages: Whether you have an energetic puppy or a senior dog, this 4-in-1 dog puzzle toy adapts to your dog’s cognitive abilities. With customizable difficulty levels, it’s perfect for large dogs or small pups. It provides mental stimulation at every stage of your dog’s life, ensuring they get the right level of challenge and engagement to keep them happy, healthy, and mentally sharp.
Trustworthy –
This really satisfies me.
My dog gets really anxious when I leave the house, and I was looking for something to keep her occupied. This puzzle feeder does the trick! It keeps her busy and distracted, and I’ve noticed she’s been less destructive since I started using it. The adjustable difficulty is perfect for her, and I can tell she’s having fun while working through the puzzle. Plus, the material feels really sturdy and safe. It’s nice knowing I’m giving her something that’s both fun and beneficial.
Christopher M Bloomer –
Kibble Quest: Frustration, Focus, and Ultimate Victory
This puzzle is like a Rubik’s cube for dogs—and my boy is both baffled and obsessed. It’s definitely trickier than others we’ve tried, which means there’s a lot of dramatic sighing, pawing, and intense nose-work happening.Yes, he gets a little frustrated, but it keeps him focused for way longer than anything else. Watching him sniff, grunt, and occasionally look at me for help is half the fun. The satisfaction on his face when he finally gets kibble? Oscar-worthy.If your dog enjoys a good mental workout (and you enjoy a good laugh), this puzzle is a winner!
Stevie –
A Buffet of Brain Games (Hold the Slobber)!
As someone who’s been running an in-home dog daycare and boarding business for 25 years, I’ve seen a lot of toys come and go—but this 4-in-1 enrichment toy/slow feeder is something special. I’ve got a rotating cast of dogs with different play styles, brains, and mealtime habits, and somehow this thing works for everyone.Some dogs team up and problem-solve like little furry engineers. Some prefer solo time and treat it like their own private puzzle theater. The clever ones get a real cognitive workout. The chowhounds who eat like they’ve never seen food before? Slowed W A Y down. And honestly, I would 100% get a version of this for humans if it existed—it might finally slow me down at mealtime, make me think about what I’m eating, and earn my treats 😉 . It’s so fun! I feel like I’m watching a canine escape room in action.We skipped straight to Level 4 (whoops). Not because we’re too smart for the other levels or too dumb. But rather because the owner and set-up operator (me) was too excited and wanted to immediately get down to play with all the moving parts. I’m a blast on game nite’s and at amusement parks. Though I have the attention span of a flashcube (I just dated myself 😉). So anyway, we’re still figuring out how the other levels work, but that’s part of the fun. It’s got enough layers and surprises to keep the dogs and ME entertained long after the novelty wears off, and the squirrels have called it a day.A few practical things I love:It doesn’t skid on my LVT floors—seriously, it stays put. And it’s too heavy and awkward for a dog to pick up and drag around (though some have and will try).It’s tough. I dropped it from three feet, and all the parts remained attached, and nothing was chipped or dinged. Dogs have pawed at it and tried to bite it pretty intensely, and it’s held up like a Champ.Cleaning-wise? I’m usually hyper-vigilant with sanitizing everything, and while I thought I’d be in there with a toothbrush by now… it’s stayed surprisingly clean. (Still keeping my toothbrush on standby, though. Well, not my toothbrush, a toothbrush).The design is clever without being frustrating and durable without being bulky, and it encourages real mental engagement, not just “poke it and food comes out” simplicity. Call it an interactive buffet, a brain-teasing slow feast, or an edible Rubik’s cube—I just call it a hit. Tail wags all-around. 5 Sirius Stars!!!!![BeitopHome – 4 in 1 – Slow Feeder/Enrichment Toy]
Zachariah F. –
Doggo approved 🙂
One complaint up front: the instructions don’t use the best grammar and it can be a little tricky to understand the explanation they give for what each “level” is supposed to be.That said, this is about on par with every other dog puzzle toy I’ve purchased (all from Petco) in terms of both price and quality. There are a few different difficulty levels your pet can solve for getting treats out of the toy, so you can adjust to what works best for your specific dog.One of the most complex ones involves putting food into little containers on top which then have to be pushed along a groove until they reach a hole, causing them to drop into a drawer below. Your pet then has to open this drawer to get the treat. If you have a very smart dog who can future that out easily, you may need to find a more challenging puzzle toy. However, if that multi-step complexity is challenging for your pet, then this toy may be a great fit!The drawers on the sides are easily removable, making for easy cleaning. I do wish the included “funnel” actually fit into the little food holders, as this would make it easier to fill them with food without it slipping.Overall this seems like a pretty decent deal and I’m pretty happy with it.
KJ –
Not just for dogs!
I ordered this to try with our cats. They’re little hogs and are always demanding treats, so we thought we’d try making them work for them. At first, they just stared at it, then at us, then at this. They tried revolting and demanding treats louder, but we held our ground. We sat down beside it – with three cats intently watching what we were doing – and showed them several times how it works. Finally, one day – in desperation – we heard them moving it and digging treats out of the middle slots. Yay, they’re figuring it out! That was short-lived, though, because we soon discovered that their cat treats were just small enough to wedge themselves UNDER the moving parts, which then locked things up a bit. It’s difficult for them to dig them out once they’re stuck under the track.Next, I tried filling the little moving wells and turning the little drawers over so the treats would fall into them. One of the cats seemed to figure that out because we heard, then saw her digging treats out of one drawer. But, she grew bored with it pretty quickly. She also had a hard time pulling the drawers out far enough to dig into them.The price isn’t bad for an interactive toy. And, it seems to be made pretty well. I just wish the treats wouldn’t get stuck under the track so often.