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Super Tits Rush

Review · Action · PC

Super Tits Rush

By the LumiKin editors

Reviewed: 04 May 2026

PC

Manic Mind Game Lab · 2018

LumiScore

43/100

Caution

Super Tits Rush is an action racing game that may offer spatial awareness and hand-eye coordination, but features highly sexualized content.

Growth (BDS)

27

Risk (RIS)

0

Daily limit

120min

Age guidance

17+

Developmental benefits

B1Cognitive
0.32
B2Social-emotional
0.00
B3Motor
0.55

The game may offer some cognitive benefits related to spatial awareness, hand-eye coordination, fine motor skills, and reaction time, similar to classic arcade-style games. The level-based structure could provide a sense of accomplishment.

Design risks

R1Dopamine pressure
0.00
R2Monetization
0.00
R3Social risk
0.00

The game features highly sexualized content, which is inappropriate for younger audiences and raises concerns about objectification. The claim of supporting breast cancer awareness appears to be a cynical and misleading use of a serious cause to market a sexualized product. There are no indications of social-emotional benefits or positive social interactions.

Heads up

  • Monthly spendTypical real-money spend by engaged players: $0–0/mo.
Avg playtime~1 hReviewedMay 2026How scores are calculated →

Parents ask…

Is Super Tits Rush safe for kids?

LumiKin gives Super Tits Rush a LumiScore of 43/100, recommended for ages 17 and up. There are notable risks worth knowing before letting kids play.

What age is Super Tits Rush appropriate for?

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

How long should kids play Super Tits Rush?

LumiKin's recommended play time for Super Tits Rush is Up to 2 hours/day, calibrated to the game's dopamine, monetization, and social-pressure profile.

What are the main risks of Super Tits Rush?

The game features highly sexualized content, which is inappropriate for younger audiences and raises concerns about objectification. The claim of supporting breast cancer awareness appears to be a cynical and misleading use of a serious cause to market a sexualized product. There are no indications of social-emotional benefits or positive social interactions.