Video Game Addiction Therapists in Newfoundland and Labrador

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Frequently Asked Questions About Video Game Addiction

What is gaming disorder?

Gaming disorder is characterized by a persistent pattern of gaming behaviour — online or offline — that involves impaired control over gaming, increasing priority given to gaming over other activities and interests, and continuation of gaming despite negative consequences, over a period of at least 12 months. The WHO's ICD-11 formally recognizes gaming disorder as a condition. It affects a small percentage of gamers — estimated at 3–4% — but that minority experiences significant impairment in daily life, relationships, education, and work.

How is gaming disorder different from enjoying video games?

Most gamers — including heavy gamers who play many hours weekly — do not have gaming disorder. The distinguishing features are loss of control (gaming more than intended, unable to stop), gaming dominating life at the expense of other activities and relationships, and continuing to game despite clearly negative consequences. The impairment to daily life and the loss of control are the key indicators — not simply the number of hours played. Passion for gaming is not pathology; disorder is.

What therapy approaches help with gaming disorder?

CBT is the primary evidence-based approach, addressing the thoughts and emotional patterns that drive compulsive gaming and developing alternative coping strategies. Motivational interviewing helps when the person is ambivalent about change. Addressing co-occurring conditions — depression, social anxiety, ADHD, and loneliness are common — is often essential since gaming frequently functions as a way of managing these underlying states. Family therapy is valuable for younger people where family dynamics contribute to or maintain problematic gaming.

What about gaming and ADHD?

ADHD and gaming disorder frequently co-occur. Games are engineered to provide immediate, frequent reward and feedback — conditions that are particularly compelling for brains that have difficulty with sustained attention and delayed gratification. For people with ADHD, video games may be one of the few activities where "hyperfocus" is possible, making them particularly engaging and difficult to stop. Treating ADHD effectively — through medication, therapy, or both — often helps reduce problematic gaming by improving the broader capacity for self-regulation.

How should parents respond to a child or teen's excessive gaming?

Abrupt removal of gaming ("cold turkey") often creates conflict without solving the underlying problem and can escalate household tension. A more effective approach involves understanding what gaming provides (belonging, achievement, escape, relief from something else), setting clear but collaborative limits, addressing underlying issues (social isolation, anxiety, depression, undiagnosed ADHD), and developing alternative sources of the things gaming provides. Family therapy involving both parents and the young person tends to be more effective than individual therapy for the young person alone.