State of Mobile Games: Cognitive and Psychological Benefits
The report investigates how mobile games influence cognitive and psychological well‑being, drawing on a large U.S. sample of 483 participants (252 men, 213 women, 18 non‑binary) and a series of 28 individual game studies. Personality was measured with the Big 5 inventory, while gaming habits included frequency, genre preference and primary motivations. The study found that personality traits significantly moderate game effects: extraverts gravitate toward social and action games, while introverts prefer relaxation‑oriented titles; openness predicts immersion and inspiration motives.
Mood impact was quantified using Cohen’s d effect sizes for pre‑ to post‑play changes. Several games produced moderate to large positive effects on focus (e.g., Sound Sky, d = 0.90), creativity (Colorize, d = 1.17), determination (Nature Video, d = 0.76) and calmness (Color Breathing, d = 0.61). Puzzle‑centric titles consistently boosted creativity and curiosity, whereas timed or competitive games enhanced focus and grit. Non‑game controls such as a dripping faucet video yielded negative mood shifts, underscoring the relative benefit of game interventions.
The findings suggest that mobile games can serve as low‑cost, scalable tools for improving mental well‑being, particularly when game design incorporates personalization to match diverse personality profiles. Recommendations target developers (to broaden appeal through adjustable difficulty and genre alignment), players (to select games aligned with desired emotional outcomes), and health professionals (to consider mobile gaming as adjunct therapy for mood disorders or attention deficits). The report calls for future research incorporating real‑time behavioral metrics to refine these insights.