u/Top-Watercress2928

Please fill my Gaming Survey
▲ 3 r/IndiaTechnology+1 crossposts

Please fill my Gaming Survey

Hey everyone,

I’m working with a team trying to understand mobile gaming habits in India right now—specifically around casual micro-games (think quick brain breaks, word games, and sorting puzzles).

👉Link to the Quick Gaming Survey

It feels like the market is flooded with heavy, high-pressure games or endless cash-grab rewards apps. We want to know if people still care about genuinely fun, quick-burst strategic puzzles that you can play for 2 to 5 minutes just to unwind.

If you have a minute, I’d love your take on things like:

  • How long your typical casual gaming session actually lasts.
  • Whether features like daily win-streaks or competing on local leaderboards actually motivate you, or if they are just annoying.
  • What specific formats (math/logic vs. reflex arcade) you get tired of the quickest.

It's completely anonymous, has zero email collection, and literally takes under 90 seconds.

Would also love to hear your hot takes in the comments: What is one mechanic in a mobile game that instantly makes you uninstall it? Let's discuss!

u/Top-Watercress2928 — 8 days ago

Does anyone actually play those annoying mini-games inside apps like PhonePe or Paytm, or do you just close the app immediately?

Whenever apps throw in daily puzzles, streaks, or casual games right after you finish a core task (like a scan or a transaction), do you ever actually pause to play them?

If you are usually in a rush, what is the ONE thing a mobile app could do to make you stay for an extra minute instead of immediately closing it? Or do you find all gamification loops completely useless?

reddit.com
u/Top-Watercress2928 — 11 days ago

Do you actually play the mini-games and daily streaks inside apps, or do you find them annoying?

Whenever apps throw in daily puzzles, check-ins, or casual games right after you finish a core task, do you ever actually pause to play them?

If you are usually in a rush, what is the one thing that would actually make you stay on an app for an extra 60 seconds instead of immediately closing it?

reddit.com
u/Top-Watercress2928 — 11 days ago

How do mobile apps create a 60-second "daily ritual" puzzle loop that actually keeps people engaged?

If you look at the success of things like the New York Times puzzles (Wordle/Sudoku), what are the psychological triggers that make a 1-minute daily mental challenge engaging enough for people to never skip it?

reddit.com
u/Top-Watercress2928 — 11 days ago