This is a specific conversation about Kong and chew toys — for serious chewers — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Cane Corso is about as serious a chewing challenge as it gets — those jaws generate enormous pressure, and the wrong toy either gets destroyed in minutes or, worse, is hard enough to crack teeth. The right chew toy for a dog like yours needs to be tough but with some give. To point you in the right direction: is your Corso a relentless, focused chewer who'll work at something for an hour straight, or more of a casual opportunist? And what's driving the search — boredom, separation anxiety, or destructive behaviour around the house?
He's relentless. He'll chew for as long as there's something to chew. We got him a rope toy and a rubber ball last week — both destroyed within an hour. He's 40kg, very muscular. It's partly boredom, he doesn't always get as much exercise as he should.
inparticular.ai
Right, so you've got a high-drive, under-stimulated Corso who's treating toys as a job to finish. That tracks — these dogs were bred to work, and if they're not getting an outlet, they'll make one. The destruction isn't bad behaviour, it's just energy with nowhere to go. Before I give you my recommendation: does he settle once he's had a good chew session, or does he escalate — moving on to furniture, shoes, that sort of thing?
He does settle after a long chew, yeah. It's more that nothing lasts long enough to satisfy him. The furniture has had a few casualties but it's not constant.
inparticular.ai
That's actually a good sign — it means the drive is self-limiting once he gets the outlet. The problem is purely product durability. My clear recommendation for a dog of his size and chewing intensity is the Kong Extreme, size XL. It's made from Kong's toughest black rubber compound, specifically designed for power chewers — not the red Classic, which wouldn't last a session with a Corso. The key is to stuff it: pack it with something like peanut butter or wet food and freeze it overnight. That transforms it from a chew toy into a 30–45 minute mental work session, which is exactly what's burning off the energy that's costing you furniture. It's widely available on Amazon UK and it's the one product I'd back to actually survive regular use with a dog like him.
Is the Kong Extreme actually tough enough though? I've seen reviews saying even big dogs get through them.
inparticular.ai
It's a fair concern, and I'll be straight with you — no rubber toy is indestructible with a 40kg Corso, including the Extreme. What I'd say is this: if he's chewing it unsupervised for hours every day, anything will eventually show wear. The Extreme should last weeks to months with a dog like yours if you're using it as an enrichment tool — stuffed and frozen, supervised or time-limited — rather than leaving it down all day as a free-for-all. If you do see chunks coming off, take it away; that's the rule with any rubber toy. For a dog who chews to settle rather than to obsessively destroy, the Extreme is the right call. If he genuinely gets through the XL Extreme in a single session, that's unusual even for a Corso, and I'd look at adding structured exercise before chew time rather than searching for a harder toy — harder risks the teeth.
That makes sense. I'll try the XL Extreme stuffed and frozen. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
Good plan. Freeze it solid overnight — the longer it takes him to empty it, the more of that chewing drive it uses up. Start with something he loves, peanut butter or a bit of wet food mixed with kibble, so he's motivated to work at it. If you get into a routine of giving it to him after exercise rather than instead of it, you'll get even better results. He sounds like a brilliant dog — just one who needs a proper job to do.