Yes, you really can put on a special headset and have the electrical  signals from your brain help you play a videogame. It's still early  days, but there are a variety of products on the market and plenty of  others in development. 
NeuroSky's MindSet
 NeuroSky's MindSet includes an application called the Brainwave  Visualizer which can be used with iTunes to see how brainwaves change  with music. The white line across the towers represents raw brain waves.  The eSense meters (bottom right) allow users to practice controlling  attention and meditation. The moving shape on the left is a circular  representation of power spectrum bands. More yellows and greens means  the person wearing the MindSet is more relaxed, whereas red means the  wearer is more focused.
Judecca
 Judecca is a proof-of-concept game developed by Square Enix in which  players will only be able to see zombies and kill them once they have  attained a heightened state of concentration. This game isn't available  for consumers, but new titles by Square Enix are currently in  development. 
NeuroSky's sensor tech
 NeuroSky's dry sensor technology will soon allow players of massively  multiplayer online (MMO) games such as Warrior King, which is extremely  popular in Asia, to fight opponents using the power of their minds,  rather than quick draws with their hands. By concentrating, they will be  able to light something on fire or shoot more accurately as a sniper.  Likewise, meditation can make players stealthy and help them hide. Games  are also able to adapt to a player's mental state. For example, a very  calm state might lead to more creatures attacking a player.
MindSet headset
 NeuroSky CEO Stanley Yang wears the MindSet, which records and  amplifies raw brain signals, filters unwanted noise such as that coming  from muscle movements, processes them using algorithms and exports them  as digital commands. Currently, gamers wearing the MindSet are able to  use the emotional states of attention and meditation to affect their  gameplay.
Emotiv headset
 The wireless Emotiv EPOC headset uses 14 saline-based sensors which  ensure good electrical contact between the brain and the computer. Using  electroencephalography (EEG), the EPOC collects high-resolution brain  wave signals. Emotiv says it is working on a new sensor technology and  hopes to release it next year.
Emotiv's Apps
 Emotiv's EPOC headset comes with a few apps that allow users to do  things like move a cube around or make it disappear, as TEDGlobal  attendees saw in July. It also has an Emokey, which the company says  allows users to pair the headset with most PC games. That said, Emotiv  is focused on getting the EPOC into the hands of developers and  researchers who will create their own gaming apps, and use it to study  the brain or perform other sci-fi wonders.
NIA Game Controller
 Facial muscle tension, eye movement and thought all generate  electrical signals. The NIA (Neural Impulse Actuator) game controller  maps these signals into PC controls, allowing gamers to play PC games  without using their hands. The headband reads the signals, which are  then amplified, digitized and separated into different frequency bands,  which are mapped to keys and mouse clicks in the NIA software through  the use of NIA profiles for different games.






