South China Morning Post

Green light for 95 new video games this month

Smallest batch of titles approved so far this year, with 107 granted licences during March

- Iris Deng iris.deng@scmp.com Warcraft, Hearthston­e, titles in the Warcraft, Overwatch, Diablo and StarCraft franchises.

The country’s video gaming regulator this month approved 95 new titles for domestic release, including Lost Soul Aside from the mainland unit of Sony Interactiv­e Entertainm­ent and Broken Land from NetEase.

This was the smallest batch of titles approved so far in 2024 by the National Press and Publicatio­n Administra­tion (NPPA), the government body in charge of licensing video games in China.

The NPPA granted licences to 107 video games in March, 111 in February and 115 in January. This year, the regulator has approved 428 domestic games as well as 46 foreign titles.

Action role-playing game Lost

Soul Aside received a licence for release on personal computers as well as for gaming consoles PlayStatio­n 4 and 5, according to the NPPA list.

NetEase, which recently resumed its partnershi­p with Blizzard Entertainm­ent on the mainland, was granted a licence to release shooting game Broken

Land, previously known as Code

56, as a PC and mobile title.

Tencent Holdings, which runs the world’s biggest video gaming business by revenue, received the regulator’s go-ahead for a mobile game on carbon neutrality.

Tan Tan Dao, which translates to “Carbon Island”, was first announced by Tencent in 2022 as part of its efforts to promote social responsibi­lity through video games.

Although the latest NPPA list is smaller in number compared to those in the past three months, the regulator has continued to step up the pace of approvals as mainland authoritie­s try to restore confidence in the industry.

In January, the regulator retracted a draft proposal it published in December that aimed to put a cap on user spending in games and ban “excessive” rewards.

That proposal caused at least US$80 billion of Chinese video gaming stocks’ market value to be wiped out in Shanghai, Hong Kong and New York.

A key government official later stepped down, as the National Press and Publicatio­n Administra­tion moved to withdraw that proposal, according to a Post report, which cited people familiar with the matter.

Separately, NetEase also received the NPPA’s green light to release a PC version of its hugely popular mobile game Diablo

Immortal, according to another document released by the regulator. Diablo Immortal was launched by NetEase in China in 2022 as a sequel to the 25-year-old Diablo franchise jointly created by the mainland company and Blizzard Entertainm­ent.

Following an acrimoniou­s break-up last year, NetEase and Blizzard Entertainm­ent earlier this month agreed to renew a publishing partnershi­p covering video games under their previous arrangemen­t, including World of

and other

 ?? ?? An image from Lost Soul Aside, which has been granted a licence.
An image from Lost Soul Aside, which has been granted a licence.

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