The purpose of this study is to confirm the effect of bilateral eye movement, a treatment component of eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), which has recently been proven as a treatment for various mental health problems including PTSD, on game craving and intention to continue playing. will be. To this end, 48 college students who regularly play games were randomly assigned to a bilateral eye movement treatment group and a control group, and data from 40 students were used in the final analysis. After inducing game craving and continuation intention by having the participants play the game, the treatment group was treated with memory recall and bilateral eye movement, and the control group was treated with memory recall. Game craving and game continuation intention were measured before and after the treatment, and the vividness of the game scene, the intensity of emotion, and the degree of attention allocation were measured before, after, and during the bilateral eye movement task. As a result of the study, compared to the control group, the treatment group showed a significant decrease in both game craving, vividness of the game scene, and attention allocation after bilateral eye movement. On the other hand, there was no significant difference between the groups in the game continuation intention and the intensity of emotion about the game. Finally, in the discussion, the implications, utilization plans, and limitations of the results of this study were presented.