Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

One woman received £170,000 after becoming addicted to Candy Crush

Add as a preferred source on Google
A screenshot of Candy Crush Saga.
King

The National Health Service (NHS) paid a six-figure compensation to an unnamed woman after she developed a crippling Candy Crush addiction after the side effects of a prescription drug impaired her impulse control.

The medicine (intended to treat restless leg syndrome and Parkinson’s) is in a class of drugs known as dopamine agonists. Dopamine is a neurotransmitter responsible for feelings of reward, and the artificial increase caused by these drugs can make someone seek out more of it — and that’s something mobile games excel at providing.

Recommended Videos

Small rewards, like opening a loot box, receiving a new item, or just finishing a level, all generate a boost of dopamine in the brain. Within weeks of her prescription, the woman began to “obsessively” play Candy Crush before progressing to virtual slot machine games.

The NHS has since admitted that her general practitioner failed to warn her of the side effects and prescribed her a dose double the recommended amount. She has since been granted £170,000 (roughly $215,000) in compensation from the NHS.

Candy Crush Saga being played on a web browser or tablet.
King

This isn’t the first time a situation like this has arisen. Another man was prescribed the same medication, and then went on to lose more than £100,000 in online gambling. The NHS covered those costs.

No update has been given on how either of the two patients are doing. Suggested treatment to correct the loss of impulse control is a gradual reduction of the dosage before switching to a different type of medication, as well as other medications and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

Candy Crush isn’t to blame for the situation, but it does reveal the risks of games designed to hook the player in with rapid rewards — especially on individuals who are more susceptible to gaming addiction.

The World Health Organization has considered video game addiction a mental health disorder since 2013. Though numerous studies have been conducted, the results remain unclear as conclusions vary across different groups.

Patrick Hearn
Former Technology Writer
Patrick has written about tech for more than 15 years and isn't slowing down anytime soon. With previous clients ranging from…
Microsoft’s Xbox handheld plans resurface with a mysterious new logo
An Xbox Handheld badge has appeared on several official game pages, raising questions about whether a first-party handheld console is still in the works.
ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X20 Anniversary Edition Hands On

A new Xbox Handheld logo has surfaced on official game pages, fueling speculation that Microsoft may be preparing a first-party portable console alongside the upcoming Project Helix.

What the new logo might mean

Read more
Black Ops and Black Ops 2 PS5 ports could cost $80 before DLC
The rumored price for these classic Call of Duty ports is hard to defend
Adult, Male, Man

Call of Duty fans were understandably excited when Treyarch confirmed that Black Ops and Black Ops 2 are coming to modern PlayStation consoles in July. Both games are among the most beloved entries in the series, and PlayStation players have been locked out of easy access to them for years unless they still had older hardware.

That excitement may not last if the latest pricing clues are accurate. As pointed out by Call of Duty tracker CharlieIntel (via Gaming Bible), Black Ops and Black Ops 2 recently received store updates on PC and Xbox. Each base game is now listed at $40, individual DLC packs cost $10 each, season passes are priced at $30, and microtransaction camos or personalization packs are now free.

Read more
Can an ice machine cool an Nvidia RTX GPU at gaming? A wild mod job proves it can
An ice machine helped cool an RTX 3060 to just 22 degrees in Cyberpunk 2077
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

A countertop ice machine is not exactly standard PC hardware, but YouTuber TrashBench has shown that it can be turned into a surprisingly effective GPU cooler. In a new video, the creator used an ice maker as the basis for a custom cooling setup for an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060, and the results were far better than expected.

The project was inspired by another creator, Mr. Yeester, who used an ice machine to cool a CPU. TrashBench took the concept in a different direction by trying to cool a graphics card with the machine itself, rather than simply dumping ice into a loop.

Read more