
After the Credits: Researchers quantify post-game depression in immersive video games
A study in Current Psychology introduces the Post-game Depression Scale to quantify the sadness and emptiness some players feel after finishing highly engaging games. Across two studies (210 and 163 adult gamers), researchers found that post-game depression is linked to broader depressive symptoms and emotion-processing difficulties, with RPG players most at risk. The 17-item scale covers four domains: game-related rumination, the sadness/emptiness at game end, urge to replay, and media anhedonia. While not a clinical diagnosis, these findings show a measurable emotional impact of immersive gaming. The research is cross-sectional, so causality can’t be established; longitudinal work is planned to explore antecedents and consequences.