Kuwait Times

‘Monster Hunter’ held as China hits pause on new video games

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SHANGHAI: China appears to have halted approvals of new online game licenses, with reports yesterday that a government shake-up was causing paralysis in the world’s biggest gaming market. The holdup has battered shares of market leaders like Tencent, which have plunged since the company said it had been ordered to remove hit game “Monster Hunter: World” from sale, only days after its debut.

Bloomberg News reported Wednesday that China had stopped approving any new mobile games as part of a wider shake-up of the market. Checks of the National Radio and Television Administra­tion’s online list of approved games showed that no new titles had been added since May. The list is normally updated regularly.

Quoting unnamed sources, Bloomberg said approvals for online, console and mobile games have been stalled for months by regulatory personnel

changes linked to President Xi Jinping’s ongoing consolidat­ion of power, leaving developers stranded. China’s Economic Daily in June had quoted the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, the other state body involved in approvals, as saying the agencies were undergoing “organizati­onal adjustment­s.”

Regulators have also balked at approving games featuring violence and gambling, Bloomberg quoted a source saying, as Xi pushes a “purificati­on” campaign in media and entertainm­ent. Hong Kong-listed shares in Tencent, which derives much of its income from games, dropped more than three percent on Wednesday and are down around 10 percent since last week’s announceme­nt.

A Tencent spokeswoma­n did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Other Chinese game developers also lost ground on Wednesday after reports of the approval freeze emerged. Perfect World ended 0.11 percent lower and 37 Interactiv­e was down 0.86 percent, after both fell more than one percent earlier in the session. Alpha Group shed 2.27 percent. “For new game approvals, there will continue to be a drag,” Alicia Yap, a Citigroup internet research analyst told Bloomberg. “If they previously didn’t get an approval, it seems that there will

continue to be a hold on that.”

China is the world’s largest gaming market, with an estimated $37.9 billion in revenue, according to research by Newzoo. Xi dramatical­ly strengthen­ed his grip at a Communist Party leadership congress late last year, becoming the most powerful Chinese leader since Mao Zedong. Subsequent government personnel changes are widely believed to have led to a logjam in some decisionma­king, partly as officials avoid making major moves until the dust settles. China’s gaming industry in particular has drawn government attention over concerns about violent content and game addiction. Under pressure to curb gaming marathons on Tencent’s smash hit “King of Glory” mobile multiplaye­r battle game, the company last year started restrictin­g daily playing times for children. Some analysts expect Tencent to post a drop in mobile gaming revenue when it announces earnings for the most recent quarter later yesterday.

 ??  ?? A screen grab from ‘Monster Hunter: World’
A screen grab from ‘Monster Hunter: World’

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