Can puzzles cure digital burnout? Take a Break bets on switching off in 2026
In a world of endless notifications, algorithmic feeds and screens that follow us from bedroom to bus stop, the idea of deliberately doing less has started to feel quietly radical.
Now one of the UK’s biggest puzzle brands is leaning into that mood with the launch of The Essential Digital Detox Puzzle Book — a paper-based antidote to digital overload that asks readers to put their phones down and pick up a pen.
Published by Take a Break Puzzles, the new title is framed as a guided 30-day challenge designed to help people “switch off, slow down and solve”. It arrives at a moment when digital fatigue is no longer niche, but mainstream — from growing concern about screen time and attention spans to the popularity of “dumb phones”, analogue hobbies and offline rituals.
The book forms part of Take a Break’s Essential Series, a range of one-shot puzzle titles that link traditional problem-solving with mindfulness and mental wellbeing. Unlike standard puzzle collections, this edition encourages readers to work through a structured month-long journey, mixing puzzles with creative exercises and reflective prompts.
Inside the 100-page book are daily puzzles tracked across 30 days, alongside colouring and doodling pages, journaling prompts and a quiz designed to help readers discover their “puzzle personality”. The aim is not speed or competition, but immersion — the kind that pulls attention away from scrolling and into something tactile and absorbing.
There’s growing evidence that such low-tech engagement has real benefits. Research has repeatedly shown that regular puzzle-solving can help reduce stress, improve focus and support cognitive function — offering a form of mental rest that contrasts sharply with the fragmented attention demanded by digital life. For many, puzzles also provide a sense of control and completion that social media rarely delivers.
John Simmonds, publisher of Take a Break Puzzles, says the book is a response to the way digital overload has seeped into everyday routines. “Research consistently shows that puzzles not only reduce stress but also improve cognitive function,” he says, describing them as a “therapeutic respite from digital overwhelm”.
The timing is deliberate. January has long been associated with self-improvement drives and wellbeing resets, but there is a noticeable shift away from high-pressure goals and towards gentler forms of self-care. Rather than promising transformation, the Digital Detox Puzzle Book offers something quieter: permission to slow down.
It also reflects a broader lifestyle trend in which analogue pleasures — from knitting and journaling to vinyl records and print magazines — are being reclaimed not out of nostalgia, but necessity. As digital spaces become noisier and more commercial, offline activities increasingly feel like refuge.
Priced at £6.99 and available nationwide, or online at www.greatmagazines.co.uk, The Essential Digital Detox Puzzle Book doesn’t promise to solve digital addiction overnight. But in asking readers to carve out small, screen-free moments each day, it taps into a growing desire to reclaim attention — one crossword, logic grid or doodle at a time.

