Sunday 7 March 2021 When Lindsey Migliore was six years old, her grandfather bought her a Nintendo 64 console and a copy of Ocarina of Time. She was captivated. Years later, as a medical school graduate, she still gamed regularly with a group of doctor friends. As they hooked up over the internet to pwn each other in multiplayer shoot ‘em ups, they’d end up talking about the pain many of them had begun noticing now and again: a sore pinky, a disgruntled neck or a strained back. Then, around three years ago, it caught up with Migliore, too. After shoving her ice hockey bag into the boot of a friend’s car and feeling a sudden snap at the back of her wrist, she realised video games had left her soft tissues in a troubled state.