LumiKin
CONSORTIUM

Review · Action · PC

CONSORTIUM

By the LumiKin editors

Reviewed: 16 May 2026

PC

Interdimensional Games · 2014

LumiScore

74/100

Recommended

Growth (BDS)

62

Risk (RIS)

8

Daily limit

120min

Age guidance

17+

Developmental benefits

B1Cognitive
0.74
B2Social-emotional
0.53
B3Motor
0.45

CONSORTIUM offers a rich narrative experience that heavily engages problem-solving, strategic thinking, and critical thinking through its branching story and dialogue choices. Players will develop reading and language skills due to the extensive script and will experience adaptive challenges as their choices impact NPC attitudes and the storyline. The game also promotes ethical reasoning as players navigate complex moral dilemmas.

Design risks

R1Dopamine pressure
0.17
R2Monetization
0.00
R3Social risk
0.00

The game contains moderate violence and some mild language and substance references. While it does not feature direct dopamine manipulation through typical game mechanics like variable rewards or FOMO events, the engaging narrative and branching story could lead to extended play sessions. There are no direct monetization or social risks.

Heads up

  • Monthly spendTypical real-money spend by engaged players: $0–0/mo.
Avg playtime~4 hReviewedMay 2026How scores are calculated →

Parents ask…

Is CONSORTIUM safe for kids?

LumiKin gives CONSORTIUM a LumiScore of 74/100, recommended for ages 17 and up. It scores well on developmental benefits with manageable risks.

What age is CONSORTIUM appropriate for?

LumiKin's rubric recommends a minimum age of 17+ for CONSORTIUM, based on benefits, risks, and content review.

How long should kids play CONSORTIUM?

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

What are the main risks of CONSORTIUM?

The game contains moderate violence and some mild language and substance references. While it does not feature direct dopamine manipulation through typical game mechanics like variable rewards or FOMO events, the engaging narrative and branching story could lead to extended play sessions. There are no direct monetization or social risks.