Just as Bradley students have begun trading therapy sessions for cozy games, our generation has changed the way we consume entertainment. As classes intensify and
Not every hero wears a cape – some wear a headset. In “Dispatch,” AdHoc Studio’s new choice-driven narrative adventure, you play as a washed-up superhero
As the weather cools and the Bradley campus starts trading iced coffees for hot chocolates, something else happens too – students begin to hibernate.
Snow, finals and seemingly endless darkness are starting up and instead of doom-scrolling or scheduling yet another therapy session, more people are reaching for something different: cozy games.
Think “The Sims 4,” “Stardew Valley,” “Minecraft,” “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” – worlds where your biggest problem could be forgetting to water your plants, or deciding whether your room needs another couch.
There’s something poetic about curling up under a blanket while snow piles outside, listening to the soft pixelated soundtrack of “Stardew Valley” as you plant digital potatoes.
It’s calm. It’s safe. It’s self-care.
I used to feel guilty for spending hours on my “Animal Crossing” island, rearranging furniture instead of studying for class. But after one rough week, I realized those quiet hours were the only moments when my brain truly rested.
It wasn’t procrastination; it was permission to breathe.
And it’s not just college students feeling this shift. Even high-energy streamers are slowing things down.
Berleezy – famous for his chaotic playthroughs – has moments where he trades the screaming for silence, playing slower story-driven games where the goal isn’t to get a high score, but to feel.
Pokimane, one of Twitch’s biggest names, says that she’s drawn to games that feel more cozy and calm. It’s a reminder that connection with viewers doesn’t always come from competition. Sometimes, it’s found in decorating a virtual home or checking in on your digital garden.
Psychologists have also started to notice this trend. Studies suggest that routine-based “comfort games” can mimic mindfulness exercises, helping players regulate emotions through small, low-effort tasks.
In a world that feels overwhelming, pressing a single button to make something bloom can mimic reclaiming control.
When life feels cluttered with assignments, emails and notifications, I can open “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” and build a world where everything is mine to shape – from sidewalk patterns to the villagers I invite to stay.
Cozy gaming isn’t about escaping reality; it’s about softening it. It’s choosing peace, one pixel at a time.
So as winter closes in, I’m not apologizing for logging on instead of logging off. Maybe hibernation doesn’t mean shutting the world out – perhaps it just means finding softer reasons to stay in it.
Because mindfulness can look like meditation, journaling or yoga – but it can also look like building a house in “Minecraft.”
This season, self-care doesn’t have to mean silence. Sometimes, it sounds like calm music and the flick of a controller makes the world calm.
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Just as Bradley students have begun trading therapy sessions for cozy games, our generation has changed the way we consume entertainment. As classes intensify and
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As the weather cools and the Bradley campus starts trading iced coffees for hot chocolates, something else happens too – students begin to hibernate.
Snow, finals and seemingly endless darkness are starting up and instead of doom-scrolling or scheduling yet another therapy session, more people are reaching for something different: cozy games.
Think “The Sims 4,” “Stardew Valley,” “Minecraft,” “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” – worlds where your biggest problem could be forgetting to water your plants, or deciding whether your room needs another couch.
There’s something poetic about curling up under a blanket while snow piles outside, listening to the soft pixelated soundtrack of “Stardew Valley” as you plant digital potatoes.
It’s calm. It’s safe. It’s self-care.
I used to feel guilty for spending hours on my “Animal Crossing” island, rearranging furniture instead of studying for class. But after one rough week, I realized those quiet hours were the only moments when my brain truly rested.
It wasn’t procrastination; it was permission to breathe.
And it’s not just college students feeling this shift. Even high-energy streamers are slowing things down.
Berleezy – famous for his chaotic playthroughs – has moments where he trades the screaming for silence, playing slower story-driven games where the goal isn’t to get a high score, but to feel.
Pokimane, one of Twitch’s biggest names, says that she’s drawn to games that feel more cozy and calm. It’s a reminder that connection with viewers doesn’t always come from competition. Sometimes, it’s found in decorating a virtual home or checking in on your digital garden.
Psychologists have also started to notice this trend. Studies suggest that routine-based “comfort games” can mimic mindfulness exercises, helping players regulate emotions through small, low-effort tasks.
In a world that feels overwhelming, pressing a single button to make something bloom can mimic reclaiming control.
When life feels cluttered with assignments, emails and notifications, I can open “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” and build a world where everything is mine to shape – from sidewalk patterns to the villagers I invite to stay.
Cozy gaming isn’t about escaping reality; it’s about softening it. It’s choosing peace, one pixel at a time.
So as winter closes in, I’m not apologizing for logging on instead of logging off. Maybe hibernation doesn’t mean shutting the world out – perhaps it just means finding softer reasons to stay in it.
Because mindfulness can look like meditation, journaling or yoga – but it can also look like building a house in “Minecraft.”
This season, self-care doesn’t have to mean silence. Sometimes, it sounds like calm music and the flick of a controller makes the world calm.