As gamers age, physical changes like shaky hands and vision loss challenge traditional play, prompting shifts to controllers and handhelds. A CNET contributor shares how adapting game types and devices restored fun amid anxiety and discomfort. Research shows many over-50s continue gaming weekly despite symptoms.
Lori Grunin, a CNET contributor on the cusp of Boomer and Gen X ages, describes developing gaming anxiety from fruitless searches in her Steam library, exacerbated by aging-related issues such as twitchy fingers, shaky hands, vision degradation, tinnitus, muscle weakness, and new anxieties. Sitting at a desk for long PC sessions became uncomfortable, leading her to favor controller-optimized games on handhelds, phones, tablets, and consoles. She now plays puzzles like Pangram on phones, point-and-click adventures like The Room or Balatro on tablets, roguelites like Hades 2 on handhelds or Xbox, and mouse-optimized titles like Doom on PC, matching capabilities to mood for more enjoyment. Hardware factors like screen size, battery life, and controls are crucial to avoid frustration from lag or dim displays. Niall White, principal gaming design engineer at Logitech G, notes changes in mobility, dexterity, eyesight, and hearing, adding that accessibility improvements rarely prioritize aging specifically. A 2025 Entertainment Software Association report indicates over half of Gen X, nearly half of Boomers, and more than one in three of the Silent Generation (80+) game weekly. AARP research finds 66% of gamers report at least one age-related symptom in mobility, vision, or cognition. Brittne Kakulla of AARP confirms fun as the top reason older adults game, followed by relaxation (two-thirds) and mental sharpness (60%). Kaitlyn Jones from Microsoft's Xbox highlights how gradual aging changes foster assumptions of declining skill rather than seeking settings. Handhelds emerge as ideal, with Nintendo Switch topping AARP's 2024 survey for popularity across ages due to variety and ease. Windows handhelds like Lenovo Legion Go and ROG Ally offer broad game access and accessories but face Windows setup hassles, higher prices amid AI-driven shortages, and performance variability. Grunin concludes adaptation preserves fun without abandoning beloved games.