Courtesy of Blackburn Family
“It wasn’t just about playing the game. It was a chance to talk about our lives.”
— Anna, 13
For Anna Blackburn, the Covid-19 pandemic was a struggle. Last spring, her middle school in Vermont shut down. So did her social life. For months, there were no sleepovers. There was no soccer. “I was pretty lonely,” Anna says.
Then a friend discovered the game Among Us. Anna, who’s 13, started playing a couple of times a week. She’d get on FaceTime with a few people and open the app. She liked cruising the spaceship, looking for aliens. But most of all, she loved hanging out with her friends. It didn’t matter that they weren’t in the same room.
“It wasn’t just about playing the game,” she says. “It was a chance to talk about our lives.”
The Covid-19 pandemic was hard for Anna Blackburn. Anna is 13. She lives in Vermont. Last spring, her middle school shut down. So did her social life. There were no sleepovers. There was no soccer. “I was pretty lonely,” Anna says.
Then a friend told her about a video game. It’s called Among Us. Anna started playing it. She would play online with other people. She liked cruising the spaceship. She liked looking for aliens. But most of all, she loved hanging out with her friends. They weren’t in the same room. But that didn’t matter.
“It wasn’t just about playing the game,” she says. “It was a chance to talk about our lives.”
Anna Blackburn was struggling to adjust to life during the Covid-19 pandemic. Last spring, her middle school in Vermont shut down—and so did her social life. For months, there were no sleepovers and there was no soccer. “I was pretty lonely,” Anna says.
But then a friend discovered the game Among Us, and Anna, who’s 13, started playing. A couple of times a week, she’d get on FaceTime with a few people and open the app. She enjoyed cruising the spaceship, searching for aliens. But most of all, she loved hanging out with her friends. It didn’t matter that they weren’t in the same room.
“It wasn’t just about playing the game,” she explains. “It was a chance to talk about our lives.”