Good point, and done now:I haven't watched this but it's something that Solve are promoting on the site and social media so if it's wrong, it would be great if people could feed that back to them.
I went and tweeted my 2 cents worth too, FWIW. I think promoting the game will only annoy sufferers rather than evoke a good reception from them, and will perpetuate more wrong information to non-sufferers about how ME/CFS just = 'tired'.I haven't watched this but it's something that Solve are promoting on the site and social media so if it's wrong, it would be great if people could feed that back to them.
Random fluctuations in energy, if you go too high (actual threshold isn't displayed), your energy is severely reduced the next day. The bird probably croaks, and the plants don't have a chance. Dirty dishes form a mountain of stink. Writing your book? Maybe some incomprehensible babblePerhaps have the screen go blurry every 10-20 min to represent brain fog slowly fading away then turn the volume right up with screeching noises (presenter at the beginning of that video?) followed by bright glaring white light?
Perhaps you could have a random event generator where one spin,of the wheel you die on the way, another you manage to drag yourself to work but then perish by lunchtime, and another you could survive but have a slow campaign of work colleagues attacking your personality and quality of work.Random fluctuations in energy, if you go too high (actual threshold isn't displayed), your energy is severely reduced the next day. The bird probably croaks, and the plants don't have a chance. Dirty dishes form a mountain of stink. Writing your book? Maybe some incomprehensible babble
Then your nice long weekend is over, so you can snap out of it and face the work week. Unfortunately, you collapse halfway to the bus stop and die on the sidewalkAn LP practitioner walks by and tries to convince you that you can reverse death if you just start thinking positively and stop "doing" the dead thing.
Someone has posted a comment about him saying exercise is good, and another poster has mentioned unrest.It has the player live out three days in the life of Robin, a CFS sufferer, and try to manage her time as best they can.
The authors think it also applies to depression, which is a good indication of their beliefs about what's causing all that fatigue in ME/CFS:Apparently despite not being able to both feed the bird and herself on the same day, she's "well prepared for the coming week of work."![]()
Not really. It makes her lack of activities look like a choice, and that's what a lot of the reviews say.The game isn't perfect, but in terms of getting the basic principle across (of only having the capacity to do a limited set of activities, and how it's frustrating), I think it does fairly well
I think most of the reviews on steam seemed to get the basic message. To me, at least, her lack of activities didn't particularly seem like a choiceNot really. It makes her lack of activities look like a choice, and that's what a lot of the reviews say.
I think they put a decent effort into creating a game. But the content would suggest they put no effort into understanding the symptoms which ME/CFS actually entails. They are only showing the behavioral aspect - people with CFS don't do much.I think the developers (who are students) should be congratulated on their effort, at least. It seems like a pretty good effort to me