Many players complain about being addicted to osu!, and it really is an addiction to many, but said players can't force themselves to be unable to play.
Some players do suffer adverse health effects, such as RSI, Carpal Tunnel, and eye strain, yet still play the game.
If players do choose to exclude themselves, they should effectively be "banned" in a sense. Similar to the system provided by the British Columbia Lottery Corporation, found here, minus their fines. Players could exclude themselves, either indefinitely, or for a set period of time, to allow themselves to recover.
A normal ban, however, likely wouldn't suffice for this, due to offline usage of the client. When a user self-excludes themselves from osu!, the following should happen:
1) The user's profile is removed, as if the user was restricted and/or banned
2) The client(s) with a self-excluded user's log-in information stored, would be prevented from running, and if the user attempts to install osu elsewhere, the installer would check for a registry key, and if the user has excluded themselves, it would provide an error reading: "osu! cannot install on this computer, as the account associated with this machine has self-excluded themselves from play. Your exclusion will end: (Time of exclusion end)".
3) The user will be able to recover from any pain and/or injury resultant from the game play.
4) when a user attempts to login to the osu.ppy.sh portal, upon completion of login, an error preventing user access to the site should appear.
It'd be beneficial for the recovery of sufferers of RSI, as all that takes, is time to heal.
This will provide injured players, a proper chance to recover, and it could even be achieved via a simple form. It gives players who want to quit, a better chance at quitting, and at recovery.
Some players do suffer adverse health effects, such as RSI, Carpal Tunnel, and eye strain, yet still play the game.
If players do choose to exclude themselves, they should effectively be "banned" in a sense. Similar to the system provided by the British Columbia Lottery Corporation, found here, minus their fines. Players could exclude themselves, either indefinitely, or for a set period of time, to allow themselves to recover.
A normal ban, however, likely wouldn't suffice for this, due to offline usage of the client. When a user self-excludes themselves from osu!, the following should happen:
1) The user's profile is removed, as if the user was restricted and/or banned
2) The client(s) with a self-excluded user's log-in information stored, would be prevented from running, and if the user attempts to install osu elsewhere, the installer would check for a registry key, and if the user has excluded themselves, it would provide an error reading: "osu! cannot install on this computer, as the account associated with this machine has self-excluded themselves from play. Your exclusion will end: (Time of exclusion end)".
3) The user will be able to recover from any pain and/or injury resultant from the game play.
4) when a user attempts to login to the osu.ppy.sh portal, upon completion of login, an error preventing user access to the site should appear.
It'd be beneficial for the recovery of sufferers of RSI, as all that takes, is time to heal.
This will provide injured players, a proper chance to recover, and it could even be achieved via a simple form. It gives players who want to quit, a better chance at quitting, and at recovery.