Playing video games like Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed can boost your ability to learn motor skills.
Video Games Like Call of Duty Boost Motor Learning
If you've ever been told to put down the controller and do something productive, science has your back. Research from the University of Toronto reveals that playing action-packed video games like Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed actually makes your brain better at learning new motor skills—the kind of hand-eye coordination that matters in everything from surgery to driving.
The catch? You won't magically be great at something new just because you're a gamer. When researchers tested gamers and non-gamers on unfamiliar motor tasks, both groups started off equally clumsy. But by the end of the experiment, gamers were significantly more accurate at learning repetitive motion patterns. The difference wasn't talent—it was the rate of learning.
Your Brain on Action Games
What's happening in there? Action games demand constant, precise motor control as you track moving targets, dodge attacks, and coordinate complex button sequences. This isn't just mindless button-mashing—it's sensorimotor training that teaches your brain to rapidly integrate visual information with physical responses.
Graduate student Davood Gozli, who led the University of Toronto study, found that gamers developed an enhanced ability to learn the dynamics of new sensorimotor tasks. When the patterns changed mid-experiment, neither group improved, confirming that learning was the key factor—and gamers were learning better.
Real-World Superpowers
This isn't just about gaming bragging rights. The ability to quickly master motor patterns has practical applications:
- Laparoscopic surgery requires precise hand movements guided by visual feedback—exactly what action games train
- Driving skills improve as gamers develop better visual-motor coordination for tracking and reacting to moving objects
- Learning new sports or instruments becomes easier when your brain is primed to pick up motor patterns quickly
A 2016 study even found that action game players showed enhanced visual-motor skills specifically related to safe driving, including better ability to track and predict the movement of other vehicles.
Not All Games Are Created Equal
Before you argue that any screen time counts as brain training, know this: the benefits come specifically from action games that require fast-paced visual processing and precise motor responses. Turn-based strategy games or puzzle games might make you smarter in other ways, but they won't give you the same sensorimotor boost.
The University of Toronto researchers worked with Daphne Bavelier, a neuroscientist who has extensively studied gaming's cognitive effects. Her work consistently shows that the type of game matters—action games create unique neural adaptations that other game genres don't.
Virtual reality gaming takes this even further. A 2025 meta-analysis of 19 studies involving 850 children found that VR motor games significantly improved both gross and fine motor skills, particularly in children with motor challenges like cerebral palsy.
The Learning Advantage
Here's the fascinating part: you don't need to be naturally gifted to benefit. The research shows that regular exposure to action games literally changes how efficiently your brain learns new motor patterns. It's not making your hands faster—it's making your brain better at figuring out the task.
This has implications beyond gaming. If action games can enhance motor learning, they could potentially be used as training tools for professions requiring fine motor control, or as therapy for people recovering from motor impairments. Some researchers are already exploring video games as digital therapeutics for cognitive and motor development.
So the next time someone questions your gaming habits, you can tell them you're not just playing—you're training your brain's motor learning systems. Just maybe don't mention this while you're supposed to be doing something else.
