Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

A Video Game That Helps You Manage Anxiety and Depression

Share
A Video Game That Helps You Manage Anxiety and Depression
Photo by Ben Maffin / Unsplash

Anxiety and depression are incredibly common. Millions of people seek help every year.

A proven treatment is Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, or CBT. It teaches you to identify and change unhelpful thought patterns. It works, but accessing a therapist can be difficult and expensive.

Digital CBT programs bring these lessons to your phone. They are a vital tool. Yet, a major problem persists: people often start them but don’t finish.

The challenge isn’t just having the tool. It’s making people want to use it.

The Surprising Shift

The old way of thinking was simple. Make the therapy program. Give it to the user. Hope they complete it.

But here’s the twist. Researchers realized the design of the program is just as important as the therapy inside it. If it feels like a chore, people will disengage.

What if the program itself could motivate you?

This is the core idea behind a new platform called My Cosmos. It doesn’t just deliver CBT lessons. It wraps them in an experience designed to feel more like a supportive game than a textbook.

How It Works: Therapy Meets Game Design

Think of your mind like a garden. Unhelpful thoughts are weeds. CBT gives you the tools to pull those weeds.

My Cosmos aims to make using those tools more rewarding. It uses “gamification.” This means it adds elements from games—like earning points, completing levels, and collecting virtual items—to the therapy process.

These aren’t just for fun. They act as little boosts of motivation.

For example, after you complete a lesson on managing worry, you might “unlock” a calming breathing exercise tool. That tool becomes yours to use anytime. It turns abstract skills into tangible, collected items. This helps bridge the gap between learning a skill in the app and using it in real life.

A Snapshot of the First Test

Before testing if My Cosmos improves mental health, researchers had to answer a simpler question: Do people like using it?

They asked 124 university students and 19 mental health professionals to try the platform and give their honest feedback. This wasn’t about curing symptoms yet. It was about checking the design.

The response was promising. The students, the people who might one day use it for help, described My Cosmos as intuitive and engaging. They said it felt emotionally supportive. Crucially, they highlighted how it helped with “self-regulation”—the ability to manage difficult emotions on their own.

The mental health professionals were cautiously optimistic. They saw real value in using a platform like this to support their work. They liked that it could give patients structured “homework” between sessions and provide a clear way to track progress.

Both groups agreed on one vital point.

This tool is meant to complement therapy, not replace the human connection at its heart.

The Expert Perspective

The feedback creates a clear picture. A tool like My Cosmos fits best in a “blended care” model. This means a therapist might assign modules in the app for you to work on during the week. Then, you’d discuss your experiences and progress in your next session.

It turns isolated homework into an interactive part of your care team. The professionals in the study emphasized that for this to work, the tool must be easy for them to use and integrate smoothly into their practice.

What This Means For You Today

It is essential to understand that My Cosmos is not currently available to the public. You cannot download it or sign up for it.

This research was a crucial first step: a usability study. It tells developers the design is on the right track. It does not tell us if the program actually reduces symptoms of anxiety or depression.

The study’s main limitation is its purpose. It was designed to test engagement and design, not clinical effectiveness. The participants were also a specific group (university students and their therapists), so we don’t know how others might experience it.

The positive feedback is a green light for the next phases of research. The team behind My Cosmos now plans to move into “beta” testing with a small group in a real-world setting.

After that, the gold-standard test is a randomized controlled trial. This is where hundreds of people would be randomly assigned to either use My Cosmos or a different tool. Researchers would then measure over several months to see which group had better mental health outcomes.

This process is meticulous and takes time—often years. It’s necessary to ensure the program is both safe and truly helpful. The goal is to build a tool that is not only smart but also sticky enough to support people through their entire journey to better mental health.

Share
More on Depression