Business World

Google eyes Chinese e-sports market with investment in Chushou

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BEIJING — Alphabet, Inc.’s Google has joined an investment in Chinese live-stream mobile game platform Chushou that brings the start-up’s total funding to $120 million, as the US firm eyes new inroads to China where its search engine is blocked.

Founded in 2015, Chushou is an online e-sports platform where users can live stream their mobile phone games. The service has roughly eight million streamers and 250,000 live streams a day, said the companies in a statement on Friday.

Google will help the Chinese firm expand its services to target more overseas viewers, it said.

Live stream gaming platforms are a popular form of e- sports in China, part of a growing industry that involves competitiv­e game play viewed by spectators. Google’s YouTube launched a specialise­d service for live stream gamers in 2015, capturing a large chunk of the global market.

The companies did not reveal the size of Google’s stake or the valuation of Chushou after the round.

It is Google’s second investment in a Chinese start-up in recent years, as the search engine giant looks for new avenues into the Chinese market where its flagship search engine has been blocked by censorship authoritie­s since 2012.

The US firm took a minority stake in Beijing-based artificial intelligen­ce (AI) start-up Mobvoi in 2015 as part of a $75-million fund-raising round.

Google’s inability to access China’s large population of young, tech-savvy Internet users poses a challenge for the firm whose search engine has expanded to become the world’s largest and most ubiquitous.

Last year the firm began targeting China as a potential market to expand its AI offerings. In December, it launched an artificial intelligen­ce lab in China, and in May it held a Go match between its AI project Alpha Go and Chinese Go champion Ke Jie. The match was highly publicized in internatio­nal media but was not widely covered in local media. Last month, Google Chief Executive Sundar Pichai also spoke at a high-profile event in China organized by the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China, which oversees Internet censorship in the country. —

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