Very common in Bengals, and can be a bit scary because some Bengals appear to be very determined and do not take no for an answer. There was a very good article about how to deal with wild cats and a lot of that applies to Bengals too. Unfortunately it is long gone, but the gist of it was that the writer had a Bobcat and in play, the Bobcat got rough. The writer tried to take control and the Bobcat loved it, his eyes shone and the rougher she was in return, the rougher the Bobcat became and the more excited and happy he was. She realised that was not the way to deal with the situation, as that was great for the bobcat but she could get hurt. Her ploy was to first of all recognise the signs that things were getting rough, ie the eyes, the ears, the general demeanour and take the heat out of the situation by ignoring the cat completely. Refuse to play, take yourself out of the room, start up doing something else without the cat, etc. If the cat takes hold of you keep your hand still, do not attempt to extricate yourself, stay calm. if you can substitute your hand with a toy then do so, if he will accept the toy. If not whine like an injured puppy, most cats are "playing" so they do not want to injure you. If you look at cats playing if one gets injured or screams out the other lets go immediately, the whining from you should make the cat let go, if even for a second and that may be long enough for you to escape.
However, my contention is that if you want a contented Bengal that is not going to attack you, then stop making yourself into prey. So many have trained their cats to be play machines, everything is about chasing and playing, so as soon as the cat sees its owner it is about play. Little kittens do no harm, they place their little paws and claws around you in play and we all love it as they do not hurt, but everything that is fun for a kitten is also fun for an adult. Start as you mean to go on. Adult claws are not fun for humans.
The fad for stirring up Bengals with Da bird and other chasing toys, sometimes for extended periods, makes then into athletes and adrenaline junkies, they need the buzz, they are super fit and everything in their life is about play. They may be exhausted but they are not contented. NO cat in the wild spends hours "playing", it is artificial and IMO bad for the cat's emotional well-being. The solution is to calm them down, put away the toys, have set times for short bursts of play, get toys that will stimulate the cat's mind, and spend the rest of the time getting to know the cat.
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