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China to nuke online and maybe mobile games

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
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Messages
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Bulgaria
Shares slide after China brands online games 'electronic drugs'


Shares in two of China's biggest online gaming firms have slipped after a state media outlet called them "electronic drugs".

Tencent and NetEase shares fell more than 10% in early Hong Kong trade before regaining some of those losses.

Investors are increasingly concerned about Beijing cracking down on firms.

In recent months authorities have announced a series of measures to tighten their grip on technology and private education companies.

An article published by the state-run Economic Information Daily said many teenagers had become addicted to online gaming and it was having a negative impact on them. The news outlet is affiliated with the official Xinhua news agency.

The article cited Tencent's hugely popular game Honor of Kings, saying students were playing it for up to eight hours a day, and asked for more curbs on the industry.

"No industry, no sport, can be allowed to develop in a way that will destroy a generation," it said before going on to liken online games to "spiritual opium".

Tencent has said it would introduce measures to reduce children's access to and time spent on its Honor of Kings game. The company also said it plans to eventually roll out the policy to all of its games.`

The recovery in share prices came as Economic Information Daily deleted the article from its account on the Wechat social media platform.

Tencent also saw its shares fall last week after being ordered to end exclusive music licensing deals with record labels around the world.

The move was aimed at tackling the technology giant's dominance of online music streaming in the country - it currently controls more than 80% of China's exclusive music streaming rights after an acquisition in 2016.

Tencent is only one of a number of Chinese companies listed in the US, Hong Kong and mainland China to see shares fall sharply this year as Beijing clamps down on the country's technology and education industries.

Last week saw shares in Chinese online tutoring firms slump after they were stripped of the ability to make a profit from teaching core subjects in China.

The new guidelines also restricted foreign investment in the industry.

The major shift in policy came as authorities try to ease the financial pressures of raising children.

Officials have been worried after China's latest census showed that the birth rate had fallen to the lowest in seven decades.

It is one of the biggest ever overhauls of the country's $120bn (£87bn) private tutoring sector.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-58066659





Fuck those chinks are based and actually work on the problems they face,unlike the west. I am very impressed by this.


EDIT:

China Limits Children’s Video Game Playing to 3 Hours a Week

China has put in place a new policy that limits online video game playing for young people to three hours a week.

The new rules restrict online gaming for those under age 18 to one hour in the evening on Fridays, weekends and public holidays.

The restrictions took effect on Wednesday. They were announced by China’s National Press and Publication Administration, NPPA. That agency is responsible for regulating video games.

The new rules place the responsibility for carrying out the policy on the gaming industry. The limits do not include punishments for individual gamers.

China is the world’s largest video gaming market. The Chinese government has worried for years about young people becoming addicted to games. Treatment centers have been set up in the country for people thought to have developed “gaming disorders.”

33D1FEB8-7CC4-4EA6-B9A9-C4E63B1405E7_cx4_cy9_cw96_w650_r1_s.jpg

A man plays online game on a computer at an internet cafe in Beijing, China August 31, 2021. (REUTERS/Florence Lo)


In 2018, Chinese officials also expressed concerns that gaming might be causing rising rates of eyesight problems among young people.

The NPPA said the new limits were issued to deal with a growing concern that online gaming was affecting the physical and mental health of children.

Chinese state media reported that about 63 percent of Chinese minors play online games often. And about 13 percent of underage mobile game users are believed to play them for more than two hours a day on weekdays.

Chinese technology company Tencent Holdings took the first step to restrict online gaming for young people in 2017. It limited playing time for some young users of its popular game Honor of Kings. The move came after concerns from parents and teachers that children were becoming addicted to the game.

The first government restrictions followed in 2019. Those rules limited minors to one hour and a half of gaming time a day and three hours on weekends. The policy also limited the amount of money minors could spend on virtual items in gaming each month. The limit ranged from $28 to $57, depending on the age of the gamer.

9B7B8D6F-CB0C-4B87-81C1-B30B05743BF7_cx4_cy6_cw96_w650_r1_s.jpg

In this file image, people are seen playing online games on computers at an internet cafe in Beijing, China August 31, 2021. (REUTERS/Florence Lo)


Current rules require minors to use their real names and national identification numbers when signing in to play. Gaming companies created systems to identify minors. But many young gamers found ways to avoid the requirement, such as signing in under the names of adult family members.

The NPPA said online gaming companies will now have to prove they have effective identification systems in place. The number and intensity of inspections will also be increased to make sure they follow the new limits. The agency said it will also increase measures to punish gaming companies that violate the rules.

Many young Chinese gamers criticized the new rules on social media.

One gamer questioned whether officials understood the importance of gaming for young Chinese. "This group of grandfathers and uncles who make these rules and regulations, have you ever played games?” the user asked on the Chinese messaging service Weibo. “Do you understand that the best age for e-sports players is in their teens?"

8C3A1240-0C54-472A-9158-1E01A39DDED5_w650_r1_s.jpg

A child plays with a toy gun during a promotion for online games in Beijing on Saturday, Aug. 29, 2020. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)


Another gamer noted that the sexual consent age in China is 14, and that young people can start working at age 16. “But you have to be 18 to play games. This is really a joke.”

The social media comments were reported by Reuters. Some parents, however, told the news agency they support the new limits.

Hotel manager Li Tong said he thinks the new policy will be a good thing for his 14-year-old daughter.

"My daughter is glued to her phone after dinner every day for one to two hours and it's difficult for me or her mother to stop her," Li said. "We told her it's bad for her eyes and it's a waste of her time, but she won't listen," he added.

I’m Bryan Lynn.



The Associated Press and Reuters reported on this story. Bryan Lynn adapted the reports for VOA Learning English. Mario Ritter, Jr. was the edito


https://learningenglish.voanews.com...o-game-playing-to-3-hours-a-week/6080716.html
 
Last edited:

Bester

⚰️☠️⚱️
Patron
Vatnik
Joined
Sep 28, 2014
Messages
11,128
Location
USSR
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese government newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China (yeah, they have that) published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese government newspaper called games opium"...
 

Tacgnol

Shitlord
Patron
Joined
Oct 12, 2010
Messages
1,871,752
Codex 2016 - The Age of Grimoire Grab the Codex by the pussy RPG Wokedex Strap Yourselves In Codex Year of the Donut Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag. Pathfinder: Wrath I helped put crap in Monomyth
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese official newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese official newspaper called games opium"...

It's not his fault. The internet in Bulgaria is always a couple days behind everyone else.
 
Last edited:

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
37,181
Location
Bulgaria
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese government newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China (yeah, they have that) published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese government newspaper called games opium"...
Yeah,because everyone fallows every news and give a shit to post it on the codex at the second it comes out lol.
 
Unwanted
Dumbfuck
Joined
Oct 29, 2020
Messages
999
Location
Free Market Paradise
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese government newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China (yeah, they have that) published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese government newspaper called games opium"...
Free market fucks and cucks. The Donut is always right and China will always be the bitch of people with big dicks and fat wallets. Where are your chink overlords now, fantadomat? That's right. In their proper place. Devaluing your industries is worse than getting bombs dropped on you.

ZrPJJGf.jpg
 

ADL

Prophet
Joined
Oct 23, 2017
Messages
3,752
Location
Nantucket
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/tech/china-announces-blanket-ban-new-24943641
No video games will be released for the foreseeable future in China, after the government suspended the approval of all new online games indefinitely.

The Chinese authorities maintain a strong grip over the video game industry, with each new release having to go through a strict approval process to obtain a licence. Now, new video games won't reach gamers for months or even years.

According to the South China Morning Post, the ban was reportedly revealed during a meeting between Chinese gaming companies Tencent and the authorities. Neither company has commented on the suspension, which has not yet been given an end date.
 

Raghar

Arcane
Vatnik
Joined
Jul 16, 2009
Messages
22,702
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese official newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese official newspaper called games opium"...

It's not his fault. The internet in Bulgaria is always a couple days behind everyone else.
C'mon censors can't work realtime.
 

Bester

⚰️☠️⚱️
Patron
Vatnik
Joined
Sep 28, 2014
Messages
11,128
Location
USSR
No video games will be released for the foreseeable future in China, after the government suspended the approval of all new online games indefinitely.
Again with the fake news. Not only is this from 4 days ago, but they released a statement that the title was clickbait and misleading. They're not suspending, but slowing it down.

League of Legends mobile releases next week, for example.

I'm tired of westerners feeding on trash news about China.
 

dbx

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Dec 14, 2009
Messages
3,897
No video games will be released for the foreseeable future in China, after the government suspended the approval of all new online games indefinitely.
Again with the fake news. Not only is this from 4 days ago, but they released a statement that the title was clickbait and misleading. They're not suspending, but slowing it down.

League of Legends mobile releases next week, for example.

I'm tired of westerners feeding on trash news about China.

:lol:
 

Zeriel

Arcane
Joined
Jun 17, 2012
Messages
13,467
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese government newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China (yeah, they have that) published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese government newspaper called games opium"...

Eh, it's not really good news if you're in China. That sort of backtracking in the face of huge financial loss is not a "Oh they made a mistake moment" it is "This is what they want to do and will continue to do, but they pulled back slightly for a day because people with money at stake got scared".
 

Bester

⚰️☠️⚱️
Patron
Vatnik
Joined
Sep 28, 2014
Messages
11,128
Location
USSR
Eh, it's not really good news if you're in China.
Are you? Cause I'm not.

That sort of backtracking in the face of huge financial loss is not a "Oh they made a mistake moment" it is "This is what they want to do and will continue to do, but they pulled back slightly for a day because people with money at stake got scared".
Alright, short Tencent then, if you know it all.
 

fantadomat

Arcane
Edgy Vatnik Wumao
Joined
Jun 2, 2017
Messages
37,181
Location
Bulgaria
Tsk. So what happened is this:
- Chinese government newspaper called games opium
- Shares dropped
- The article was pulled 30 minutes after publication
- The article came back later, but all the hardcore stuff was removed, so the remaining article basically says "some games can be bad mkay"
- Then the Ministry of Games of China (yeah, they have that) published a counter-article saying that games can do a lot of good too
- Shares back up to their initial level, everything is cool
- [skip 2 days]
- Fanta creates a thread that says "Chinese government newspaper called games opium"...

Eh, it's not really good news if you're in China. That sort of backtracking in the face of huge financial loss is not a "Oh they made a mistake moment" it is "This is what they want to do and will continue to do, but they pulled back slightly for a day because people with money at stake got scared".


They didn't,they when full on chad dictatorship. They decided to go after all the gamers and made a law that kids could play only a few hours per week or something. Them they went after all the cute popstar faggots and all that modern faggot garbage,just nuked all the pop culture lol. It is glorious incline,may God bless Xi and his people! Finally some common sense in a government on this fucking planet!
 

Morenatsu.

Liturgist
Joined
May 6, 2016
Messages
2,649
Location
The Centre of the World
Based China deleting all forms of deviancy so no one can be distracted from living soulless normie worker life in one of the worst countries in the world.
 

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