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How I Accidentally Broke My Doomscrolling Habit

NashGames2025-07-038674

As readers of this column know, there’s no shame in a mobile game. Despite the fact that at one point in my not-too-distant past I’d been embarrassed about my consumption of corny phone games, Merge Mansion captured my soul and in the process transformed my relationship with mobile gaming and social media. Tuning in to Merge Mansion made it possible for me to tune out doomscrolling.

Before we go further, a moment of honesty: This was not planned. I wasn’t trying to avoid social media when I clicked that Instagram ad for Merge (clearly). Instead, by investing in a mobile game rather than a console one, I was able to train my lizard brain to open Merge—rather than Twitter, TikTok, or Instagram—every time I reached for my phone. This, it turns out, is much easier than getting in the habit of picking up a controller instead of a phone. 

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How did this happy accident happen? Like (I’m assuming) many of you, my nights in the past year or so started taking on a toxic shape that always ended with me absentmindedly picking up my phone and just … scrolling. I wouldn’t even realize I was doing it until my 10 pm alarm went off, reminding me to get ready for bed. I’d become the reason journalist Karen K. Ho started sending out reminders to people on Twitter telling them to put down their devices. It was unhealthy; I never really got to relax and would wake up every morning feeling anything but rested.

Then I started playing Merge Mansion. The game works by having you produce objects and then merge them. To produce items, you have to use energy, and eventually it runs out. It only takes 15 minutes or so to deplete your resources, so there are lots of natural stopping points built in. Unlike doomscrolling, which can evaporate hours of your life before you know it, Merge Mansion’s energy mechanic makes it easy to keep track of the time you’re spending in the game. It is, simply put, a much more manageable pastime.

Social media usage is not nearly as tractable. Believe me, I’ve tried. I’ve tried hiding certain apps far away from my home screen; I’ve set Screen Time limits. At one point, I even attempted to remove them altogether, but as a person who relies on social media professionally, that just wasn’t practical.

Mobile games became a loophole. Instead of deleting Twitter or TikTok, I just kept games on my homescreen. Now when I pull out my phone, they’re the first thing I see. And it’s not just Merge Mansion, either. I’m also playing Family Farm Adventure. It’s not that I’ve convinced myself not to open the social media apps—it’s that I don’t want to anymore. I’d rather play games.

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Emira

Here's my English comment inspired by the prompt: In a devious twist of irony, I unknowingly shattered my doomscrolling habit through an unexpected commitment to manual handwriting tasks. The chaotic feeds were replaced with blissful moments spent scrawling out goals and hopes on paper.

2025-07-16 11:47:20 reply
Nehemiah

My unintentional journey to overcome my doomscrolling addiction served as a surprising reminder of the power personal nuisance over our digital habits.

2025-07-16 11:47:49 reply
Maximus

With a series of unintended consequences, my doomscrolling addiction dissolved into joke-of-'reel' moments as I accidentally discovered more fulfilling ways to manage stress.

2025-07-23 06:53:05 reply
Jamal

In 'How I Accidentally Broke My Doomscrolling Habit,' the author shares a hilarious yet insightful tale of how an unintended productivity spurt led to serendipity, breaking their endless scrolling through negativity online.

2025-07-23 06:53:21 reply

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