Pro-you.
Not anti-gaming.
Respec exists for one person: the gamer who loves games and can feel them eating the life he wanted. Not a rehab, not a lecture, not a purity club. A guild, a map, and ninety days of walking it together.

Where this ends: games on the table, life around them.
What we hold ourselves to
The adversary is the design, never the player.
Games are engineered by brilliant people to be hard to put down: variable rewards, streaks that punish absence, teams that need you tonight. Losing to that machine isn't a character flaw. Blaming yourself for it was never going to work, and we don't.
Balance, not lifelong abstinence.
The goal isn't a life defined by what you don't do. It's a life so good the game goes back in its proper place: a thing you do, not the thing doing you in. The full reset comes first, because moderation is earned, never offered on Day 3.
Shame is structurally impossible.
Slips are respawns from the last checkpoint, never resets to zero. Posts about hard days end with a plan, not a confession. If a mechanic could make a member feel like dirt, it doesn't ship.
Honest science only.
We say stimulation reset, not miracle brain rewiring. We cite the two-week dip and the 66-day habit average because they're real, and we skip the claims that aren't. If a skeptical Redditor could dunk on a sentence, we rewrite the sentence.
Never anti-gamer, never pro-binge.
You'll find zero "games rot your brain" panic here, and also zero nostalgia threads hyping the next release. Gaming's past shows up for one reason: understanding what it gave you, so you can source the real version.
Who runs this
Respec is built and run by Connor, a gamer who has lived the reinstall cycle and built the program he needed: the structure of the best recovery science, translated into the language of the people it's for. He reads every member's Day 1 post, and the monthly VIP calls are with him directly.
The longer version of that story, in his own words, is coming to this page soon. He'd rather write it himself than have a website do it for him.
See it for yourself.
The community is free to join, the first 14 days of the program are free to run, and the honest self-assessment is free forever.