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Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game

Review · Simulation · iOS

Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game

By the LumiKin editors

Reviewed: 06 May 2026

iOS

The Game Storm Studios · 2018

LumiScore

25/100

Avoid

Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game is a simulation that fosters creativity and fine motor skills through virtual pizza making.

Growth (BDS)

14

Risk (RIS)

0

Daily limit

120min

Age guidance

10+

Developmental benefits

B1Cognitive
0.20
B2Social-emotional
0.00
B3Motor
0.20

Pizza Maker 3D allows children to engage in a simulated cooking experience, fostering creativity through various topping combinations and developing fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination as they mix ingredients and assemble pizzas. The game offers a low-pressure environment for imaginative play.

Design risks

R1Dopamine pressure
0.00
R2Monetization
0.00
R3Social risk
0.00

While generally benign, the game offers minimal cognitive or social challenges beyond basic following of instructions and ingredient selection. Its simple nature may lead to repetitive play without much depth for sustained engagement or learning transfer. The game's marketing directly targets children, which can be a concern if future versions introduce monetization.

Heads up

  • Monthly spendTypical real-money spend by engaged players: $0–0/mo.

Parents ask…

Is Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game safe for kids?

LumiKin gives Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game a LumiScore of 25/100. Significant risks make this hard to recommend for younger players.

How long should kids play Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game?

LumiKin's recommended play time for Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game is Up to 120 min/day, calibrated to the game's dopamine, monetization, and social-pressure profile.

What are the main risks of Pizza Maker 3d: Cooking Game?

While generally benign, the game offers minimal cognitive or social challenges beyond basic following of instructions and ingredient selection. Its simple nature may lead to repetitive play without much depth for sustained engagement or learning transfer. The game's marketing directly targets children, which can be a concern if future versions introduce monetization.