More Sushi! lots of sushi

More Sushi! Review

Game: More Sushi!
Genre: Casual, Simulation 
System: Steam (Windows)
Developer|Publisher: pixelqube
Controller Support: No
Steam Deck: Playable
Price: US $2.99  | UK £2.49  | EU € 2,99
Release Date: October 24th, 2025

Review code provided with many thanks to pixelqube.

More Sushi! – Clicking Good Time

There’s something wonderfully ridiculous about spending an evening clicking a gigantic floating sushi so that more sushi comes flying out of it. Yet somehow, More Sushi! makes that feel entirely normal. It’s an affordable little clicker that doesn’t pretend to be anything other than what it is: a low-pressure loop where tapping leads to coins, coins lead to upgrades, and upgrades lead to even more tapping. And honestly, that straightforwardness is one of the reasons it works. Sometimes the brain simply wants a task that requires no overthinking, and this game delivers that in spades.

More Sushi! serving sushi
Be patient with my new member of staff

A Sushi Shop With Problems… and Lots of Plates

The premise is you’re working in a sushi bar whose owner has racked up four hefty chunks of debt, and your job is to clear it by producing plate after plate of conveyor-belt sushi. Customers wander in, grab whatever rolls are drifting past them, and leave without a single complaint; frankly, an ideal customer base. Every plate they take pays into the shop’s overall takings and pushes you closer to unlocking new parts of the loop.

The art style suits the tone nicely. Everything looks a bit like it was sketched in the corner of someone’s notebook during a dull lesson: simple outlines, gentle colour palettes, and little characters with emotionless expressions. The giant sushi in the middle gives your sushi restaurant a notable personality and quirkiness, all adding to a tone that doesn’t take itself too seriously.

More Sushi! at the office
Still less than student debt

Clicking, Collecting, Upgrading, Repeating

Your early experience is all about clicking the massive sushi in the centre and watching smaller pieces tumble onto plates. These plates glide along the conveyor belt while customers drift in and out to grab whatever catches their eye. There’s no time pressure, no risk of disaster, and certainly no stress. You really can take it at your own pace.

Thankfully, you don’t have to do all the work forever. The game eventually lets you bring in helpers, starting with a lucky cat who sits by the belt and paws sushi out for you. The cat works slowly at first , very slowly,  but it’s an enormous relief when your fingers start to ache. The more you earn, the more options you get to strengthen your helpers, increase the pace of customer eating, and unlock new types of sushi to keep the money flowing. Everything opens up naturally as you play, and nothing about the system feels confusing or demanding. It’s all designed for you to dip in, upgrade something small, and keep going.

Once you manage to pay off the first section of debt, the game opens its biggest extra feature: prestige. This resets you right back to basics, but in return, you earn stars made from used plates. Those stars can then be traded for permanent upgrades that stay with you even after everything else is wiped away. It gives the game a sense of long-term progression, encouraging you to take another lap through the sushi-making loop, only a bit faster and a bit more powerful each time. It’s the kind of system that makes time disappear if you’re not paying attention.

More Sushi! cat and grabber helpers
These customers sure have deep pockets

A Relaxing Cycle 

More Sushi! never tries to expand into anything overly complex, and that’s a core part of its appeal. There’s no deep narrative twist waiting in the wings, no intricate combo systems, and no overwhelming menu trees to wrangle with. It’s just sushi, upgrades, prestige, repeat, and for a lot of players, that’s exactly the kind of distraction they want after a long day. It’s great as a companion game while studying or working, because you can leave it idling in the background and return to a pile of progress made by your helpers.

More Sushi! plates into stars
Looks like an old boiler

Conclusion: A Tasty Little Time-Waster

More Sushi! knows exactly what it wants to be, and it doesn’t pretend otherwise. It’s small, silly, and strangely addictive, the kind of game you open “just for five minutes” and then somehow keep around for much longer than planned. It isn’t deep, it isn’t ambitious, and it isn’t meant to be; it’s simply a fun way to zone out and make a growing pile of cartoon sushi.

For the low price, the gentle pacing, and the easygoing loop, I walked away enjoying it more than expected. It absolutely gets the job done.

Final Verdict: I Like itI like it

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