Partially, I don't have more games on my list because I don't really know anything about video games anymore, and partially it's because I'm not thinking very hard about this.
But it's also partially because I spent the morning coming up with an 8 page document exploring the constraints around the selection process for each kid.
There are all kinds of constraints and requirements going in to this.
Most of it is directly informed by the treatment plan their therapists developed, so I'm doing some things that feel counterintuitive to me at the doctor's recommendation. (like prioritizing games that are very limiting or otherwise frustrating as a way for the kid who gets frustrated easily to learn to cope.)
The rest of it comes from their individual likes/preferences/triggers/trauma. There are topics we're trying to avoid, there are topics we're trying to encourage.