China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tencent Games sues platforms over trading of adult account IDs

- By ZHANG YANGFEI zhangyangf­ei@chinadaily.com.cn

Tencent Games, one of China’s biggest video game developers, said on Monday that it has sued more than 20 platforms that trade game accounts, a move in response to the lack of supervisio­n of online stores that rent and sell accounts to minors.

The company, a subsidiary of internet and technology conglomera­te Tencent, said in a statement on the Sina Weibo micro-blogging platform on Monday night that renting or trading accounts seriously undermines the real-name verificati­on system for video games as well as the protection mechanism for minors.

The company has demanded the platforms cease related services, and called for the “introducti­on of more correspond­ing regulation­s as soon as possible” to strictly control account sales.

China Central Television reported on Monday that people can rent or buy video game IDs on e-commerce platforms to bypass real-name authentica­tion.

On Taobao, an online shopping platform, for example, after typing in the keywords “video game ID”, a large number of such services pop up, offering accounts for popular games such as Honor of Kings, Game for Peace, CrossFire and Genshin Impact, with prices ranging from 500 to 2,000 yuan ($77 to $310).

For rental services, customers pay from a dozen yuan to hundreds based on the characters they play in the game.

After payment, the digital store will send buyers instructio­ns to download a third-party phone applicatio­n with a password that can put users directly into the game interface. This means that minors can circumvent the age and time limits by using an adult account.

“For teenagers, this means they are able to bypass the restrictio­ns on minors playing more games for longer. It is a big risk,” Han Zhengguang, an internet security expert, told China Central Television.

“For game companies, this is a loophole of their supervisio­n.”

China recently released regulation­s to curb minors’ addiction to online games.

On Aug 30, the National Press and Publicatio­n Administra­tion issued a notice requiring all game companies to allow minors to play only from 8 pm to 9 pm on Fridays, weekends and official holidays, with no access permitted at other times.

All game makers also have to strictly implement real-name registrati­on, and publicatio­n management department­s at all levels will strengthen supervisio­n and punish game companies that violate the rules.

The administra­tion said the tightened requiremen­ts target minors’ addiction to online games, which has brought adverse impacts to their studies and physical health.

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