Penticton Herald

China will limit children to 3 hours of weekly gaming

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BEIJING — China is banning children from playing online games for more than three hours a week, the harshest restrictio­n so far on the game industry as Chinese regulators continue cracking down on the technology sector.

Minors in China can only play games between 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays, weekends and on public holidays starting Sept. 1, according to a notice from the National Press and Publicatio­n Administra­tion.

That limits gaming to three hours a week for most weeks of the year, down from a previous restrictio­n set in 2019 that allowed minors play games for an hour and a half per day and three hours on public holidays.

The new regulation affects some of China’s largest technology companies, including gaming giant Tencent, whose Honor of Kings online multiplaye­r game is hugely popular globally, as well as gaming company NetEase.

Tencent’s stock price closed down 0.6% at 465.80 Hong Kong dollars on Monday ahead of the regulator’s announceme­nt. Its market capitaliza­tion of $573 billion is down more than $300 billion from its February peak, a decline equal to more than the total value of Nike Inc. or Pfizer Inc.

New York-listed NetEase’s stock was down about 9% at the market’s open.

The gaming restrictio­ns are part of an ongoing crackdown on technology companies, amid concerns that technology firms -- many of which provide ubiquitous messaging, payments and gaming services -may have an outsized influence on society.

Earlier this month, Tencent said it would limit gaming time for minors to an hour a day and two hours during holidays, as well as ban children under the age of 12 from making in-game purchases.

The company issued the curbs hours after a state-affiliated newspaper criticized the industry and called games “spiritual opium.”

Regulators said in Monday’s notice that they would strengthen supervisio­n and increase the frequency of inspection­s of online game companies to ensure that they follow the regulation­s closely.

Chinese authoritie­s in recent months have targeted e-commerce and online education, and have implemente­d new regulation­s to curb anti-competitiv­e behavior after years of rapid growth in the technology sector.

Last month, authoritie­s banned companies that provide tutoring in core school subjects from making a profit, wiping out billions in market value from online education companies such as TAL Education and Gaotu Techedu.

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