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    1. Feeling empty after finishing a video game? Researchers say post-game depression is a real phenomenon

      A recent study published in Current Psychology has found that many video game players experience a specific sense of emptiness and sadness after finishing highly engaging games. The research introduces a new psychological scale to measure this phenomenon, showing that post-game depression is linked to general depressive symptoms and difficulties in processing emotions. These findings offer new insights into how deeply immersive media can impact a person’s emotional well-being.

      Video games are the third most popular leisure activity in the world. Modern video games are not solely designed to provide simple entertainment or pleasure. Many of these titles feature complex narratives that evoke deep emotions, existential reflection, and a profound sense of achievement.

      https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s12144-025-08515-2

    2. I felt this after finishing Alan Wake 2. It was a whole mixture of feelings. Very similar to that shattering feeling after finishing a great book.

    3. Absolutely a real thing, yeah.

      Luckily it’s quite short term. A few days off from gaming and your brain will reset and you can go and enjoy other games.

      Interestingly, social media can help mitigate those feelings for a while by providing you with communities you can engage with, to ride the high’s of pleasure you got from the game. Though it can extend those negative feelings too.

    4. brockington69 on

      I genuinely had this after I finished persona 5 royal, I genuinely felt empty after I finished it. Didn’t help that it came out right when covid lockdowns started as well

    5. I knew someone once who named this feeling „kell.“ I think she used it for when you finish a book, but either way, that’s what I’ve always called it in my head since then. 

    6. No-Profession5134 on

      I find finishing a game immediately satisfying until I realize now I need something new to play.

    7. ExtremePrivilege on

      This happens with books, television series, games. I’ve had it from visual novels.

    8. Last year I played Cyberpunk.2077, Expedition 33 and Spiritfarer for the first time… I’m still not ready to commit to a new game. Ball Pit is a blast, and is as emotionally draining as I’m prepared to handle for a bit.

    9. Same with shows. I almost never seem to get around to finishing the last episode of shows. I guess subconsciously I’m avoiding that finality of a journey. That said, when I finished portal it was a cathartic happy experience.

    10. FowlOnTheHill on

      Definitely felt this with Red Dead redemption 2. The epilogue kind of eased me out of it though. Couldn’t free roam and do stuff as much as earlier.

    11. SemanticTriangle on

      Title needs „… Unless the credits song is a banger,“ appended to the title. Phantom Liberty I am thinking of you.

    12. BoringWozniak on

      It’s like one day new things stop happening in the world and everyone says the same 3 or 4 things on loop forever

    13. Dragon age inquisition+trespasser DLC… the characters felt so alive I forgot it was a game

    14. I play since the end of the 70s. I also learnt very fast to avoid games that brought me down. I didn’t need to read about, there was no research on it. I learnt that if a game left me empty then it was time to change my expectations and attitude while playing that game or play something else. It worked.

    15. I felt that way with Sonic 2, I don’t want to imagine how I would feel with today’s games.

    16. The real strategy is never to finish games

      Source: hundreds of unfinished singleplayer campaigns / stories

    17. oh yeah, that really sucks, for me if the game or show was really good, and i was immersed in it, then it can take several days to get over it.

    18. How I feel after every rewatch of The Lord of the Rings (extended cuts, of course)

    19. SmokinJunipers on

      Thats why you play an online game that never ends, but then depression never ends either.

    20. I get this which is probably why I always quit games before I finish them. Is that a phenomenon as well? Play 80% of a game realize I’m near the end then slowly but surely that game just falls out of my rotation. It’s still installed I see it on my desktop but I just won’t click it.

    21. Wow. Almost like a sense of loss where there’s nothing to revert to in the real life. Pretty sure it’s called “depression”. No, you may not overcomplicate it for the kids.

    22. probably your brain that got used to a high level of dopamine being sad to go back to normal levels

    23. VanessaAlexis on

      I have like a thousand or more hours on Mass Effect 3 alone. Idek how much I have in the previous games. 

      If I beat that trilogy again today I’d feel that sense of emptiness. 

    24. i get this with anything long that hits its end, tv series/animes, games, books etc

    25. Not being able to replay Outer Wilds felt like a hole in my heart, at least I did vicariously experience it again through playthroughs and friends :,)

      „The pain of your absence is sharp and haunting, and I would give anything not to know it; anything but never knowing you at all (which would be worse)”

    26. This is the reason Gannon can safely assume he will control Hyrule Castle for many years to come

    27. I was definitely depressed a couple weeks after beating silksong. I waited years and it was such an amazing experience that left me feeling amazed but also melancholic. Definitely relatable

    28. I’ve gotten in a bad habit of not finishing games because of this. Same with TV shows

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