LumiKin
Coffin Dodgers

Review · Action · Xbox One · PlayStation 4 · Nintendo Switch

Coffin Dodgers

By the LumiKin editors

Reviewed: 27 May 2026

Xbox One · PlayStation 4 · Nintendo Switch · Linux · PC · macOS

Wales Interactive · 2015

LumiScore

44/100

Caution

Growth (BDS)

29

Risk (RIS)

7

Daily limit

120min

Age guidance

9+

Developmental benefits

B1Cognitive
0.40
B2Social-emotional
0.00
B3Motor
0.45

Coffin Dodgers offers a lighthearted racing experience that encourages strategic thinking in customizing mobility scooters and navigating tracks. It also promotes hand-eye coordination and reaction time through its core gameplay.

Design risks

R1Dopamine pressure
0.13
R2Monetization
0.00
R3Social risk
0.06

The game's combat elements, though cartoony, involve attacking other racers and zombies. There's a mild sense of peril from the Grim Reaper, and competitive toxicity could arise in multiplayer modes. The use of 'pimped up' mobility scooters and seniors battling for their souls could be seen as trivializing themes of aging and mortality.

Heads up

  • Monthly spendTypical real-money spend by engaged players: $0–0/mo.
Avg playtime~3 hReviewedMay 2026How scores are calculated →

Parents ask…

Is Coffin Dodgers safe for kids?

LumiKin gives Coffin Dodgers a LumiScore of 44/100, recommended for ages 9 and up. There are notable risks worth knowing before letting kids play.

What age is Coffin Dodgers appropriate for?

LumiKin's rubric recommends a minimum age of 9+ for Coffin Dodgers, based on benefits, risks, and content review.

How long should kids play Coffin Dodgers?

LumiKin's recommended play time for Coffin Dodgers is Up to 120 min/day, calibrated to the game's dopamine, monetization, and social-pressure profile.

What are the main risks of Coffin Dodgers?

The game's combat elements, though cartoony, involve attacking other racers and zombies. There's a mild sense of peril from the Grim Reaper, and competitive toxicity could arise in multiplayer modes. The use of 'pimped up' mobility scooters and seniors battling for their souls could be seen as trivializing themes of aging and mortality.