Hello Jabre,
I was once addicted to video games. Madden was my choice, followed by any quest style games. Eventually I got tired madden... Going undefeated every year and winning the Superbowl by a score of 73-0 no longer was interesting. As for the quest games, I lost interest in that too. It took 10 years, but they all seemed the same, and it wasn't a challenge. I knew I would win given enough time and googling tutorials.
There are other things to focus on. One for me was athletics. Its exercise and competition (my gig there is triat

ns). You basically are a real character in your game.
There is also of course, the Bible, which has many challenges to engage in. I became engrossed in how much I could learn.
One game I used to play was the Sims. It was a game of ordinary people doing everyday stuff... Sleeping, eating, going to the bathroom, going to work, chasing after girls... Etc. So strange that a game that simulates real life is more interesting than real life! With that... I started treating my life like the sims game. In other words, i focused on my real life.
Overall, I focused on my fitness, my career, my marriage, my walk with God and peppered it with a few other hobbies like biographies/history, the stock market and cooking.
This is what worked for me. I am not saying you should do the same, but try the pattern. Find better, enriching things to take the place of games.
If whatever you find doesn't overpower the desire to play games, don't give up on it; cultivate it further. Allow it to grow.
But let me give you a challenge: Can you list (from memory)
1. All 12 Tribes of Israel
2. All 12 Apostles
3. Every book of the OT
4. Of the NT
I am not trying to shame you... But if you like games and challenges, take this one. Learning stuff like this helped me. Maybe it'll help you. Think of it as levelling up like a video game character does.