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Doing something woth your brain leeps it working better, just like how physical exercise works. If you traded gaming for doing nothing, that would make the occasional time you do something feel like a lot of work.
It is also possible that you have some level of depression or your brain adjusted to all the stimulation and other things aren't triggering the same feeling. It could lots of things.
The first step to try any of those for things is to find an activity that is mentally stimulating in some way. Not like a full dive into calculus, but maybe learning something new like a different hobby or maybe games that aren't as engaging for long periods of time. I would recommend games with a short completion time and no grinding or rewards if that is what you found to be addicting.
Note: I didn't stop computer gaming but I did drop another time consuming hobby and it took some adjustment to find something else.
There are a lot of sports that require you to learn how to use your body differently, or to quickly evaluate something. In counterstrike you need to learn spray patterns, in tennis you need to learn ball physics. In LoL you need to learn the timing of your abilities, in dancing you need to learn the timing of your moves.