I guess he realises that you are both below him him in his perceived pecking order and he is establishing his position in the household. As a stud cat he probably was never really taught boundaries either, as he no doubt went into a pen pretty quick and didn't need to do a whole lot of normal interacting with humans.
Bengals can adopt this "attacking a human" behaviour and is one of the reasons that I do not advise any novice cat owners getting a Bengal as their first cat, and it is something that anyone getting a Bengal should be very aware of.
YOU need to recognise the signs he is about to strike and get yourself out of the area, before he has a chance to claw or bite. If he has grabbed you, then substitute your hand, leg or whatever bit of you he has hold of, with a large cuddly toy, I advice you to keep one to hand all over your house, until he calms down.
My theory is that Bengals, because they have a reputation for being athletic and NEED a lot of exercise, end up getting more exercise with their owner, than just about any other human interaction, So every time they see a human there is a game, a chase session, a grab and claw and bite session on the cards.
Add in a bit of a fiesty character, a need for control, a need to be top dog, a determined, "never give up" nature, an obsessive personality, a territorial bent - traits which which many Bengals have - then you have a recipe for a cat that is going to be spoiling for a fight quite a lot, whenever there is something they are annoyed with. I guess Loki was a bit shell shocked with the move, but is now more confident and into his stride and is showing it.
I believe reducing the play is the way to go, let the cat relax, do not become just another play thing, become someone he sees as a relaxing influence. Rather than hype him up, calm him down. If he is getting overexcited or unhappy, stop what you are doing immediately and walk away, do not ramp up the situation with screaming or running or shouting, or attempt to defuse the situation by escalating the play. Play may tire him out, but he has learned nothing. Some Bengals enjoy the excitement and the chaos of screaming, running, shouting and the escalated play and will thus be rewarded for the bad behaviour. "This is fun mum/dad, can we do that again..."
What I do is use my stern "that's enough" noise and stop interacting. I do not know what noise you use, but if you do not have one, decide on one between you and use it every time he steps out of line along with the walk away and stop interacting, he will get the message. It doesn't need to be a loud noise just consistent.
Forget mind numbing exercise and never ending chasing play for just now, throw out Da bird and the like in fact I wish they had never been invented as they are often overused by owners and cause so much trouble - calm is your new watchword. Try to get him some toys and games that make him think, start clicker training, Bengals are intelligent cats, they need stimulation, else they get bored and turn into delinquents. Small wild cats or outdoor cats do not spend a lot of time chasing things, they find a likely prey site, stake it out and watch and watch and wait, pounce, grab it, play with it for less than 5 minutes and kill it and eat it. Rinse and repeat. If you want a stressed out, anxiety ridden, potentially aggressive, exhausted adrenaline junkie, then keep going with Da bird. If you want a calm, friendly, happy cat then throw out the Da bird or the like and learn how to positively interact with your cat.
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