App Feature
Crushy Fingers: Relaxing Games is an ASMR-style, stress-relief runner where you crush and squeeze soft objects while racing to the finish, avoiding hazards like knives and hot pans. It offers quick sessions, bright 3D visuals, simple tap/slide controls, a variety of squishy items to destroy, and a light competitive layer with leaderboards and social sharing.
Verdict
Verdict: A satisfying, low-friction ASMR runner best for quick stress relief, but ad-heavy and shallow for long-term depth.
Who is it for
Best for:
- Casual players seeking quick, tactile stress relief
- ASMR and fidget-game fans who enjoy squishy, sensory feedback
- Kids and families looking for simple, bright, easy controls
Not ideal for:
- Players sensitive to frequent ads or online-gated rewards
- Gamers seeking depth, story, or complex progression
- Competitive racers wanting precise controls and high skill ceilings
Real-world User Experience
Users like it:
Fun, oddly satisfying squish-and-crush mechanics; relaxing vibe with easy controls; good for short, de-stress sessions.
Users complain about:
Frequent ads interrupt flow; some ad-related features (e.g., unlock via ad button) may fail; best experience often requires playing offline, limiting online features.
Is it Worth Paying For?
The app is free, contains ads, and offers no in-app purchases. It’s risk-free to try; the main cost is tolerating ads. Playing offline can reduce ads but may disable leaderboards and ad-gated unlocks.
How it Compares to Alternatives
Compared with other antistress/ASMR titles (e.g., squishy or cutting simulators), Crushy Fingers adds a light runner/racing twist and hazard avoidance. It’s more kinetic than pure fidget simulators but generally shallower than premium puzzle or adventure games. Ad load feels typical for the genre, though some competitors offer more reliable ad-reward flows or optional IAP to remove ads.
Summary
Crushy Fingers blends ASMR satisfaction with a simple runner format: crush soft objects, dodge hazards, and reach the finish for quick stress relief. It’s visually bright, mechanically accessible, and ideal for brief play sessions. Users praise the satisfying squish mechanics but report frequent ads and occasional ad-reward hiccups, with offline play being a common workaround at the expense of online features. With millions of installs and a mid‑3s rating, it delivers exactly what it promises—short, tactile fun—without deeper progression. If you want a casual de-stress tool and can tolerate or mitigate ads, it’s an easy download.













