What science says about games and learning
Children learn through play. This truth has been known for decades in developmental psychology — and is increasingly confirmed by neuroscience. For children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), however, traditional ways of teaching social skills often fail to reproduce the safe, predictable, judgment-free environment that learning requires.
This is where therapeutic games come in with full force.
Predictability as an ally
One of the greatest sources of anxiety for children with ASD is the unpredictability of social interactions. In a real conversation, stimuli are many, simultaneous, and hard to interpret. A digital game, on the other hand, offers:
- Controlled environment — no unexpected surprises
- Time to process — no pressure to respond immediately
- Clear, direct feedback — no ambiguity about what was right or wrong
- Opportunity for repetition — the same situation can be presented as many times as needed
This predictability is not a limitation of the format — it's exactly what makes games effective for this audience.
Intrinsic motivation and engagement
Neuroscience studies confirm that games activate the brain's reward system in a sustained way. Level progression, positive feedback, and the sense of competence create a flow state that favors learning. For children with ASD, who often show resistance to structured activities, the playful format lowers the entry barrier and increases engagement.
Autigames is designed to leverage exactly these mechanisms — without, however, creating dependency or using predatory retention mechanics. Sessions are short, with a clear beginning, middle, and end.
Skill transfer
The most common concern among parents and therapists is: does what the child learns in the game transfer to real life?
The evidence suggests yes — especially when the game is designed with ecological validity, meaning when the situations presented approach real contexts in the child's life. Autigames works with everyday scenarios (school, family, park) precisely to increase this transfer.
Moreover, when the game is used together with therapeutic follow-up — which we strongly recommend — the therapist can use the game's situations as a starting point for conversations with the child and their family.
A tool, not a solution
It's important to be clear: therapeutic games are complementary tools. They do not replace therapy, medical care, or family support. What they do — and do very well — is offer additional moments of safe practice, at the child's own pace, in the comfort of home.
When parents, therapists, and technology work together, the results are significantly better. It's this synergy that Autigames was created to catalyze.



