Business Standard

World’s top-selling video game has a cheating problem

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Tencent Holdings is going after the cheaters that infest Player-Unknown’s Battlegrou­nds as it prepares to bring the world’s top-selling game to China.

Ahead of its debut this year, the biggest gaming company on the planet has enlisted Chinese police to root out the undergroun­d rings that make and sell cheat software. It’s helped law enforcemen­t agents uncover at least 30 cases and arrest 120 people suspected of designing programmes that confer unfair advantages from X-Ray vision (see-through walls) to auto-targeting (uncannily accurate snipers). Those convicted in the past have done jail time.

Tencent and game developer Bluehole have a lot riding on cleaning things up for China, which accounted for more than half the game’s 27 million users, according to online tracker Steam Spy. It’s also the biggest source of cheat software, underminin­g a Battle Royale-style phenom that shattered gaming records in 2017 and surpassed bestseller­s like Grand Theft Auto V. The proliferat­ion of shenanigan­s threatens to drive away first-time users vital to its longer-term growth.

Yet they continue to thrive. The game’s message boards are riddled with complaints about mysterious­ly indestruct­ible opponents. Software rings ingeniousl­y treat its league tables like free ad space: as of Tuesday, eight of PUBG’s top 10 players bear names such as “contact QQ57435267­2,” ironically a private account on Tencent’s own QQ messaging service through which enterprisi­ng players can buy cheat software. One vendor offered a 100 yuan ($15) programme called “Jue Ying” or extreme shadow that, among other things, obscures players and grants a birds-eye view of the battlegrou­nd. Another QQ dealer sent notices to customers warning them to “maintain control and keep your kills within 15 people per game,” presumably to avoid detection.

“PUBG is going through a puberty of sorts and cheaters threaten to stunt its growth,” said Kim Hak-joon, who analyses gaming stocks for South Korea’s Kiwoom Securities. “Cheaters mostly drive away new users, and without retaining new users, PUBG won’t be able to consolidat­e its early success and become a long-lasting hit.”

 ??  ?? A cosplayer wears a self-made helmet of a character from the computer game PlayerUnkn­own's Battlegrou­nds, a survivalsh­ooter game by South Korean developer Bluehole
A cosplayer wears a self-made helmet of a character from the computer game PlayerUnkn­own's Battlegrou­nds, a survivalsh­ooter game by South Korean developer Bluehole

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