World Series flasher Julia Rose told The Post on Monday that she and her busty gal pals are planning more X-rated stunts.

“We definitely have some more stuff up our sleeves,” Rose said by phone, adding that her group’s future X-ploits would “100 percent” occur at sporting events.

She declined to get more specific.

Rose is a 25-year-old Instagram model and co-founder of the breast-obsessed digital magazine ShagMag. She said she and co-worker Lauren Summer flashed Houston Astros pitcher Gerrit Cole in the bottom of the seventh inning of Game 5 of the Series on Sunday night because they wanted to highlight that October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Another well-endowed pal was with them but kept her shirt on.

Rose said she and Summer weren’t specifically targeting Cole with the stunt, noting that she herself is originally from Texas and “inclined” to root for the Astros.

She said she and Summer just randomly picked that moment to lift up their yellow shirts and flash their boobs at the pitcher while he was on the mound preparing to throw the ball — although they were somewhat sympathetic to the home team, the Washington Nationals, because the game was on DC turf.

“We didn’t plan on a specific pitcher or anything. We didn’t even really know what moment of the game we wanted to do it at,” Rose said.

She said it was all about trying to boost subscriptions to ShagMag, which are $15 a month, so the magazine could contribute money to breast cancer victims.

“We thought, ‘What better way to promote [cancer awareness] … than show off our tatas,’ ” Rose said.

The curvy model said the site has already raked in close to $10,000 in new subscriptions since the flashing and that they are hoping to double that number in the next day.

Asked what amount the group hoped to donate to victims, Rose said, “We don’t have a set goal necessarily.”

She criticized the indefinite ban that Major League Baseball slapped on her and Summer after their flashing.

“There’s definitely a double standard,” Rose said. “I feel there’s a lot of men who are able to body-paint and be shirtless all the time, but because we were topless, we were banned for life.”

The digital magazine features mainly topless women while including general topical articles a la Playboy, said co-founder Stephen McHugh.

He told The Post that Rose created it to provide “a healthy and controlled environment in Los Angeles” for women in the industry because “Hollywood is a very sketchy place … It does not make them feel comfortable or appreciated.”