Longer runs in Escape Tsunami for Brainrots come down to lane discipline and reading obstacle patterns early. Here are practical techniques that add distance to every attempt.
Default to the center lane. It gives you the widest range of escape options when obstacles appear. Players who hug the edges in Escape Tsunami for Brainrots often get trapped when a wall of barriers blocks their only remaining path.
Watch for obstacle clusters rather than individual barriers. The game tends to group obstacles in formations: two on the left with a gap on the right, or a zigzag pattern that requires alternating lanes. Recognizing these formations a second early lets you plan your path instead of reacting in panic.
Jump timing matters more than jump frequency. Tapping jump too early leaves you airborne when you need to be grounded for a lane change. Wait until the obstacle is close enough that your jump arc clears it cleanly, then immediately prepare for the next move.
Collectibles are tempting but not worth dying for. If grabbing a meme collectible requires a risky lane change with the wave close behind, skip it. Your score in Escape Tsunami for Brainrots depends on distance first and collectibles second.
Take a breath between runs. The fast pace can make your inputs sloppy after several consecutive attempts. A ten-second pause resets your focus and usually results in a better next run than immediately restarting.