GOOD 'N' FUN

Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs Review

Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs Chews for All Dogs, 24 Ounces, Treat Your Dog to Long-Lasting Chews Made from Beef Hide, Real Chicken, Pork Hide, Duck and Chicken Liver

100.0 Dude Score

I have a soft spot for treats that turn into an event. Not just a quick crunch, not just a crumbly biscuit that disappears before I can even say sit, but a chew that makes my dog trot off to a favorite corner and work at it for a while. Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs are exactly that kind of treat: a kabob-shaped chew built around beef hide and pork hide, wrapped with real chicken, and flavored with chicken, duck, and chicken liver. The listing positions them as long-lasting chews for dogs, with chewing action that helps remove plaque and reduce tartar buildup.

As The Pet Dude, I look at a treat like this through two lenses at the same time: the excited-dog lens and the safety-first pet-parent lens. On the excited-dog side, these kabobs have a lot going for them. The meat wrapping is the star, the stick shape gives dogs something to hold and gnaw, and in daily snack routines they can keep dogs occupied longer than a soft treat. On the safety side, they are still hide-based chews, and the listing itself says to supervise chewing, choose a treat slightly larger than your pet’s mouth, provide fresh water, and discard leftover chunks or fragments.

TL;DR: Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs are a high-interest dog chew made with beef hide, pork hide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver, and they work best as a supervised, intermittent treat. I would reach for them for small to medium dogs that enjoy chewing, picky dogs that light up for meaty flavors, and dogs that need a short chew session, but I would skip them for dogs known to swallow treats whole.

What it is: a meat-wrapped kabob chew for dogs

Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs are dog treats in stick form. The listing calls them rawhide treats and describes them as kabob-shaped chews made from premium beef hide, savory chicken, delicious pork hide, wholesome duck, and hearty chicken liver. They come in a pouch, and the listed unit count is one pack of 36 chews in a 24-ounce bag.

The basic idea is simple: give dogs a chew that combines hide with real protein flavors. The listing says the chews are wrapped with premium cuts of real chicken and are a great source of protein. It also says the natural chewing action helps reduce tartar buildup and remove plaque. I like that this product is not trying to be a soft training reward; it is meant to be chewed, and the listing is very direct about that.

There is one listing oddity worth calling out because I do not like glossing over details. The specifications label the flavor as Lamb, but the title, description, special ingredients, and feature copy focus on beef hide, pork hide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver. I would treat the ingredient and description language as the more useful buying information here, and if lamb flavor is a deal-breaker one way or the other, I would check the current package label before buying.

Key listing facts I care about

  • Brand: GOOD ‘N’ FUN.
  • Manufacturer: Spectrum Brands Pet LLC.
  • Product type: Rawhide dog treat.
  • Form: Stick, kabob-shaped chew.
  • Included components: One pack of 36 chews.
  • Bag size: 24 ounces.
  • Listed ingredients focus: Porkhide and beefhide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver.
  • Target species: Dog.
  • Age range description: All Life Stages.
  • Breed recommendation: All breed sizes, with dog size also listed as medium and large.
  • Specific use listed: Dental care.
  • Product benefit listed: Supports dental health through chewing action.
  • Animal food ingredient claim: No artificial flavors.
  • Container type: Pouch.
  • Colors available: The listing does not specify color variants; this is an edible chew, not a color-customized gear item.

That combination tells me this is a mainstream dog chew for pet parents who want flavor appeal and a bit of chewing engagement. It is not a complete diet, and the listing says it is intended for intermittent or supplemental feeding only.

First look: why dogs get so interested in these kabobs

The first thing I notice with this style of chew is that it gives dogs multiple textures and flavors in one treat. The kabob shape matters because dogs are not just biting one uniform stick. They can pick at the wrapped sections, chew the center, and work through the different parts. In real-life snack time, that makes the treat feel more exciting than a plain chew stick.

The flavor mix is the obvious hook. The product description says the chews contain beef hide, chicken, pork hide, duck, and chicken liver, and the about-this-item copy mentions flavors like real chicken, duck, and peanut butter. The bullet features emphasize triple flavor wrapping with chicken, duck, and chicken liver. That is a lot of aroma and taste cues for a dog. In my pet-parent brain, I put these in the category of high-interest chews rather than bland dental sticks.

I also like that the listing is clear about chewing action. The product is designed for a dog’s urge to chew, and the brand connects that chewing action to plaque removal and tartar reduction. I would not treat any chew as a replacement for professionalerinary dental care, and the listing itself says to visit a qualified professional regularly. But for dogs that enjoy gnawing, this has a more natural role in a routine than a treat that is swallowed in one bite.

Package and everyday convenience

The container type is listed as a pouch, and in daily use the 24-ounce bag format feels more like a stock-up treat than a tiny impulse pouch. The research notes I worked from consistently point to the bag keeping treats fresh when resealed, and that matters with a meaty-smelling chew. A good treat pouch is not glamorous, but it makes a difference when you are grabbing a snack after walks, after morning potty breaks, or when you need a short distraction.

The aroma is part of the appeal. In use, the smell is noticeable enough to get a dog’s attention but not so overwhelming that I would refuse to keep it in the treat area. That balance is important because some meat-based treats smell amazing to dogs and absolutely rough to people. These sit more in the practical treat zone for me: interesting to the dog, manageable for the human.

In daily use / hands-on testing

Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs make the most sense when I use them as a planned chew session, not as a mindless handout. I think of them as an after-walk chew, a settle-down treat, or a reward when I want my dog to be busy for a few minutes. The listing recommends daily snacking, dental health, appetite stimulation, and bone health as uses, but it also says treats should not exceed 10% of a dog’s daily caloric intake. That 10% note is the number I keep in my head when a dog starts acting like every trip past the pantry should involve a kabob.

The chew time depends heavily on the dog. Based on long-term use patterns, small dogs may take a while to work through one, and very small dogs may need the treat divided into smaller sessions. Small chihuahuas, for example, can spend more time chewing while still clearly enjoying it. Small and medium dogs get the best balance from these because the chew lasts longer than a soft treat and gives them a real project.

Larger dogs can absolutely love them too, but they may finish them faster. In homes with big enthusiastic dogs, these kabobs can be a short distraction rather than a long-lasting chew. I have seen that 10- to 15-minute style of engagement with bigger, determined chewers, which is useful, but it is not the same as a heavy-duty chew built for serious power-chewing sessions. The product listing calls them long-lasting, and compared with soft treats they are; compared with tougher chew formats, they are more of a flavorful activity snack.

For small dogs

For small dogs, these can be very exciting, but size judgment matters. The listing says to select a treat slightly larger than your pet’s mouth. That is a smart safety rule because a chew that is too small for a dog’s mouth can become a gulping risk. In real use with very small dogs, breaking or cutting the treat into portions can make snack time more manageable, but I still supervise because smaller pieces can also become swallowable pieces.

Small dogs that enjoy chewing may get the most satisfaction out of the kabob format. They can nibble the meat-wrapped sections, work at the stick, and stay busy. I would be especially careful with tiny dogs that try to run off and guard high-value treats, because excitement can turn into rushed chewing.

For medium dogs

Medium dogs are the sweet spot in my mind. The listing includes all breed sizes and dog size as medium and large, and real-world use fits that middle lane well. A medium dog gets enough chew resistance to stay interested, but not so much size mismatch that the treat becomes a huge project. If your dog likes crunchy-chewy textures and meat flavor, this is where Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs shine.

This is also the dog size where the dental-care angle feels most realistic to me. The product supports dental health through chewing action, and a medium dog is likely to chew rather than simply inhale the whole thing. Again, I do not treat this as dental care, but I do appreciate a treat that encourages actual chewing.

For large dogs and strong chewers

Large dogs may love these, but I would set expectations correctly. The listing says snack for all dogs and breed recommendation all breed sizes, yet daily use shows bigger dogs can go through them faster. If your large dog is a power chewer, this may be a quick, high-value treat rather than a long occupation chew.

The safety concern also increases with dogs that gulp. The product description specifically says to supervise pets during chewing activity, especially if they are known to swallow treats whole. That sentence is doing a lot of work. If my dog had a history of swallowing big chunks, I would not hand over a hide-based kabob and walk away. I would either choose a different treat style or stay right there and remove leftover pieces before they became a problem.

For picky eaters

This is one of the better use cases. The mixture of real chicken, duck, and chicken liver wrapped around beef hide and pork hide gives a picky dog more reasons to care. In daily routine, these can produce that little treat-jar excitement where the dog knows exactly what is coming. The kabob format also lets dogs deconstruct the treat a bit, which can be satisfying for dogs that like interactive chewing.

I would still avoid treating it like a complete food or a nutritional fix. The listing says it is for intermittent or supplemental feeding only. If a dog is not eating regular meals or has appetite concerns, that is a professionalerinarian conversation, not a reason to lean harder on a treat.

Flavor and ingredients: what is actually in the chew

The headline ingredient story is hide plus real proteins. The listing names beef hide, pork hide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver. The special ingredients field lists porkhide and beefhide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver. The bullet copy says the chews are wrapped with premium cuts of real chicken and calls them a great source of protein.

The listing also includes the claim of no artificial flavors. That is helpful, but I do not stretch that into claims the listing does not make. It does not say the product is grain-free, organic, limited ingredient, human-grade, or free of every common allergen. It lists allergen information as Abalone Free, which is a very specific listing field and not the same as saying the treat is suitable for every dog with food sensitivities.

Ingredient highlights

  • Beef hide: The listing identifies this as part of the chew base.
  • Pork hide: Also listed as a major component of the chew.
  • Chicken: Featured in the title, description, and wrapping claim.
  • Duck: Listed as one of the real protein flavors.
  • Chicken liver: Included in the flavor and special ingredient details.
  • No artificial flavors: This is the product’s listed animal food ingredient claim.

Because this is a hide-based treat, I would pay attention to how your individual dog handles it. One sensitive-stomach dog may do fine with these, while another dog may not tolerate hide-based chews well. The listing advises consulting a qualified professional if you have questions about whether the product is right for your dog, and I think that is especially important for dogs with dietary restrictions, digestive history, or medical concerns.

Dental care claims: useful, but not magic

The product listing gives Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs a dental-care angle. It says chewing action helps remove plaque and helps reduce tartar buildup, and the specifications list dental care as a specific use. I like chews that encourage a dog to use their mouth in a slower, more deliberate way because that is at least directionally aligned with dental enrichment.

That said, I do not treat any snack as a magic dental solution. The listing itself tells pet parents to visit a professionalerinarian regularly and discuss daily caloric requirements based on weight, size, breed, age, and activity level. That is the right framing. These kabobs can be part of a chew routine, but they do not replace dental exams, professional guidance, or whatever home dental care a qualified professional recommends.

The dental value also depends on chewing behavior. If a dog gnaws and works at the treat, there is more chewing action. If a dog strips the meaty bits and swallows pieces quickly, the dental benefit is less convincing and the safety risk goes up. That is why I keep circling back to supervision.

Materials & build quality, translated for a dog treat

Since this is a consumable, I do not score it like a leash, crate, bed, or aquarium filter. There is no hardware, stitching, buckle, motor, or frame to judge. But there is still a kind of construction quality: how the kabob is formed, whether the wrapped sections keep the dog engaged, and whether the chew format fits the intended use.

On that front, the kabob design is the best part. A plain rawhide stick can be boring for some dogs. This one adds meat wrapping and different protein flavors, so dogs have something to investigate. In practical use, the separate parts are part of the fun. Some dogs will remove the wrapped bits first and leave the stick behind, which is not a failure exactly; it is just how high-value wrapped chews often get dismantled.

The listing describes the chews as made from premium beef hide and wrapped with premium cuts of real chicken. I can repeat that because it is in the listing, but I cannot verify processing details beyond the label copy provided. The listing does not provide a full nutrition panel, calorie count, country of origin, or detailed sourcing information in the data I have, so I would check the physical package or manufacturer information if those details matter to your dog’s diet.

What the build gets right

  • Interesting shape: The kabob style gives dogs more to do than a plain stick.
  • Chewable structure: It is intended to be chewed, not swallowed whole.
  • Meat-forward appeal: Chicken, duck, and chicken liver are part of the listed flavor story.
  • Bag format: The 24-ounce pouch is convenient for keeping a supply on hand.
  • Works as a reward ritual: Dogs can recognize the treat and get excited for it, especially in a consistent routine.

Where the format has limits

  • Not for unsupervised chewing: The listing specifically says to supervise.
  • Not equally long-lasting for every dog: Larger dogs and determined chewers may finish one quickly.
  • Not a complete diet: The listing says intermittent or supplemental feeding only.
  • Not ideal for gulpers: Dogs known to swallow treats whole are specifically called out in the safety directions.
  • Not fully transparent on every detail: The provided listing data does not include calories, warranty terms, or a complete sourcing breakdown.

Safety considerations: the part I will not sugarcoat

Rawhide-style treats require attention. I know dogs love them, and I know these particular kabobs can be a huge hit, but love is not the same as automatic safety. The listing gives several important safety directions, and I would follow all of them.

First, select a treat slightly larger than your pet’s mouth. That is meant to reduce the chance that a dog simply swallows the treat whole. Second, supervise your pet during chewing activity, especially if your dog is known to swallow treats whole. Third, provide plenty of fresh drinking water. Fourth, discard leftover chunks or fragments. Fifth, keep treats to intermittent or supplemental feeding and do not let treats exceed 10% of daily caloric intake.

Those instructions are not optional fine print to me. They are the difference between using this chew thoughtfully and using it carelessly.

My rawhide-style chew rules

  • I do not give these unsupervised. If I cannot watch the chew session, I choose something else.
  • I watch for gulping. A dog that tries to swallow chunks whole is not a good match.
  • I remove small leftover pieces. The listing says to discard chunks or fragments, and I do.
  • I keep water available. The product directions specifically say to provide plenty of fresh drinking water.
  • I count it as a treat, not a meal. It is supplemental, and the listing includes the 10% daily caloric intake guideline.
  • I talk to a professional for special cases. If a dog has digestive issues, dietary restrictions, or medical concerns, the listing’s own advice is to consult a qualified professional.

Choking and gulping risk

The most important safety issue is swallowing. The product is intended to be chewed, but some dogs do not read the manual. They crunch, soften, strip, and then try to swallow whatever remains. That is why I do not like these for dogs with a known history of inhaling treats. The listing specifically singles out dogs known to swallow treats whole as needing supervision, and I would go a step further: if your dog repeatedly tries to gulp hide-based chews, this is probably not the treat I would choose.

Digestive sensitivity

Some dogs with sensitive stomachs can handle these kabobs without issue in real-life use, but that does not make them universally easy on every stomach. The treat includes beef hide and pork hide along with chicken, duck, and chicken liver. If your dog reacts poorly to rich treats, hide-based chews, or certain proteins, start cautiously or ask a qualified professional. The listing does not provide a special digestive-health claim, so I would not invent one.

Life stage safety

The age range description says all life stages. That tells me the product is marketed broadly across ages, but life stage still matters in practical use. Puppies, adults, and seniors can have very different chewing styles, tooth condition, and digestive tolerance. I would be especially thoughtful with puppies that are still learning how to chew appropriately and seniors with dental issues. For any health-specific concern, I would follow the listing’s recommendation to consult a qualified professional.

Feeding guidance and treat frequency

The listing gives two feeding guardrails I really appreciate. It says the product is intended for intermittent or supplemental feeding only, and it says treats should not exceed 10% of your dog’s daily caloric intake. That is enough to tell me these are not meant to be a free-for-all snack.

I use treats like this as a planned part of the day. After a long walk, during a calm-down window, or as a special reward, a kabob makes sense. Handing one out repeatedly because a dog begs for it does not. The product may be labeled for daily snacking, but daily snacking still needs portion awareness, especially because the listing does not provide calorie details in the data here.

How I would fit them into a routine

  • After walks: The chew gives a dog a satisfying post-adventure activity.
  • During quiet time: It can help redirect chewing energy into an approved treat.
  • As a high-value reward: The meat flavors make it feel more special than a basic biscuit.
  • For dental chewing: The chewing action supports the listed dental benefit, as long as the dog actually chews.
  • Not as a meal replacement: The listing is clear that this is supplemental.

Because the product data I have does not include calories, I would not try to calculate portions here. The listing says to discuss daily caloric requirements with a professionalerinarian based on weight, size, breed, age, and activity level. That is the honest path if your dog is on a calorie-managed diet.

Value: where these sit in the treat drawer

I would describe Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs as a budget-friendly to mid-range chew option depending on current Amazon pricing, but I would not lock in a specific price because online prices move around. The value comes from the 24-ounce pouch, the 36-chew count, and the fact that the treat lasts longer than many soft snacks for small and medium dogs.

For big dogs, the value calculation changes. If a large dog finishes one quickly, this becomes more of a high-value treat than a long-lasting chew investment. That is not necessarily bad; sometimes a short, exciting reward is exactly what I want. But if your goal is maximum chew time for a large power chewer, I would not expect these to compete with tougher chew formats.

For small dogs, value can be stronger because one kabob can feel substantial. Some pet parents with very small dogs divide a treat into smaller portions, which can stretch the bag, but again the safety rule still applies: smaller pieces need supervision because they can become easier to swallow.

Who this is for / who should skip

No treat is for every dog, and that is especially true with hide-based chews. Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs have a very clear best-fit profile: dogs that enjoy meat flavors, dogs that like to chew, and pet parents who are willing to supervise.

Best for

  • Small to medium dogs that enjoy chewing: They tend to get the best chew-time balance from this kabob format.
  • Picky dogs that respond to real meat flavors: Chicken, duck, and chicken liver give the treat a strong flavor appeal.
  • Dogs that need a short distraction: The chew can keep a dog occupied for a bit, especially compared with soft treats.
  • Pet parents who want a treat with dental chewing action: The listing connects chewing with plaque removal and tartar reduction.
  • Multi-dog homes with treat routines: The 36-chew pack works well if you hand out chews regularly and supervise each dog.
  • Dogs that like deconstructing treats: The kabob design lets them work through different parts.

Use with caution

  • Very small dogs: The treat may need portioning, but portioning creates smaller pieces that still require close supervision.
  • Large dogs: They may love the treat but finish it quickly.
  • Sensitive-stomach dogs: Some dogs do fine, but the product includes hide and multiple proteins, so individual tolerance matters.
  • Puppies and seniors: The listing says all life stages, but chewing ability and dental condition vary.
  • Dogs with dietary restrictions: The listing does not provide every detail a restricted-diet dog may need.

Skip it if

  • Your dog swallows treats whole. The listing specifically warns to supervise dogs known to swallow treats whole, and I would choose a different style for repeat gulpers.
  • You need a non-rawhide treat. This is listed under dog rawhide treats and includes beef hide and pork hide.
  • You need exact calorie data from the listing. The provided product data does not specify calories.
  • a qualified professional has advised avoiding hide-based chews. Follow a professional’s guidance.
  • You want a chew that keeps a large power chewer busy for a long time. Larger dogs may go through these faster.

Pros and cons

What I like

  • Dogs find the flavor exciting. The chicken, duck, and chicken liver flavor profile has strong appeal.
  • More engaging than a soft treat. The kabob shape gives dogs something to chew and work through.
  • Good fit for supervised chew time. It can turn snack time into a short activity.
  • Dental-support angle is reasonable. The listing says chewing action helps remove plaque and reduce tartar buildup.
  • Large pouch size. The 24-ounce bag and 36-chew count make sense for regular treat routines.
  • No artificial flavors claim. That is a useful listing claim for pet parents comparing treat options.

What I do not love

  • Rawhide-style supervision is mandatory. This is not a set-it-and-forget-it chew.
  • Gulpers are a poor match. Swallowing chunks or whole treats is the big safety concern.
  • Large dogs may finish them quickly. They can be tasty without being truly long-lasting for every dog.
  • Listing details are not complete for every shopper. The data here does not include calories, full sourcing detail, or a complete nutrition panel.
  • Flavor listing is inconsistent. One specification says Lamb, while the main description focuses on beef hide, pork hide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver.

Verdict: my Pet Dude take

Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs are a fun, flavorful, high-interest chew for dogs, and I understand why they become a favorite in the treat drawer. They combine beef hide and pork hide with chicken, duck, and chicken liver, and the kabob shape gives dogs a satisfying little project. For small to medium dogs that chew thoughtfully, they can be a great supervised snack that lasts longer than a soft treat and brings some dental chewing action into the day.

My hesitation is not about whether dogs like them. Dogs tend to get very excited about this kind of meat-wrapped chew. My hesitation is about fit. If your dog gulps, guards, swallows chunks, or has trouble with hide-based treats, this is not the product I would casually hand over. The listing’s safety language is clear: supervise, choose a treat slightly larger than your pet’s mouth, provide water, and discard chunks or fragments.

So my verdict is positive but conditional. I would buy Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs for a dog that enjoys chewing, handles hide-based treats well, and eats under supervision. I would not buy them as an unsupervised crate chew, and I would not choose them for a dog with a known habit of swallowing treats whole.

Check before you buy

  • Is your dog a chewer or a gulper? Chewers are a better fit; gulpers should skip.
  • Can you supervise? The listing says supervision is important, especially for dogs that swallow treats whole.
  • Is hide acceptable for your dog? These include beef hide and pork hide.
  • Does your dog tolerate chicken, duck, and chicken liver? Those are part of the listed flavor and ingredient profile.
  • Are you using it as a treat, not a meal? The product is for intermittent or supplemental feeding only.
  • Can you manage treat calories? The listing says treats should not exceed 10% of daily caloric intake, but the provided data does not list calories.
  • Do you need exact sourcing or full nutrition details? Check the current package or manufacturer information because the listing data here does not provide everything.
  • Do you have a very small dog? Portioning may help, but smaller pieces still require close supervision.

Pet Dude bottom line: This is a tasty, engaging kabob chew with strong dog appeal and practical value for supervised snack time. It is best for dogs that chew patiently and pet parents who take rawhide-style safety seriously.

Frequently asked questions

Are Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs safe for dogs?

They are intended for dogs and the listing says to select a treat slightly larger than your pet’s mouth, supervise chewing, provide fresh water, and discard leftover chunks or fragments. I would not use them unsupervised, especially with a dog known to swallow treats whole.

Are these kabobs rawhide treats?

Yes. The Amazon category lists them under dog rawhide treats, and the product description says they are made with beef hide and pork hide along with chicken, duck, and chicken liver.

What size dog are Good ‘n’ Fun Triple Flavor Kabobs best for?

The listing says all breed sizes and all life stages, and it also lists dog size as medium and large. In daily use, small to medium dogs tend to get more chew time, while larger dogs may go through them faster.

How many chews come in the bag?

The listing says the included component is one pack of 36 chews. The unit count is listed as 24 ounces.

Do these help clean dogs’ teeth?

The listing says the natural chewing action helps remove plaque and reduce tartar buildup, and dental care is listed as a specific use. I would treat that as a helpful chewing benefit, not a replacement for regular dental care.

Can puppies and senior dogs have these?

The age range description says All Life Stages. Because puppies and seniors can have very different chewing habits and dental needs, I would supervise closely and consult a qualified professional if there are any health or diet concerns.

Do these contain artificial flavors?

The listing includes the animal food ingredient claim No Artificial Flavors. The listed flavor and ingredient focus includes beef hide, pork hide, chicken, duck, and chicken liver.

Are they long-lasting for big dogs?

The listing describes them as long-lasting chews, and they last longer than many soft treats. In daily use with larger or more determined dogs, they may be finished fairly quickly, so I see them as a short high-value chew rather than a heavy-duty power-chewer option.

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