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Tencent to expand underage ID check to all games

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Tencent Holdings will expand an addiction-prevention system for underage gamers to all of its games, the company said yesterday, as the industry faces increased government scrutiny.

A “healthy gaming” system that includes time limits on daily play and can perform facial recognitio­n-aided ID checks, already in use on Tencent’s most popular Honour of Kings smartphone game, will be applied to nine other mobile games this year and expanded to cover all Tencent games next year, the company said in a post on its official WeChat account.

The move marks Tencent’s latest attempt to meet the Chinese government’s call for tighter controls to combat gaming addiction and increasing near-sightednes­s among young people. A state announceme­nt in August called for the publishing regulator to control the number of new online video games and to limit the amount of time young Chinese spend playing such games.

Tencent, the world’s largest gaming company by revenue, has run into regulatory roadblocks this year and Chinese authoritie­s have not approved any new games since March.

Without approval for in-app purchases Tencent has been unable to make money from some of its hugely popular games, such as PlayerUnkn­own’s Battlegrou­nds Mobile (PUBG Mobile), which is a game that CLSA estimates could generate up to $1bn in annual revenue if given a monetisati­on licence.

Shares in Tencent, which have slid by 28% this year to knock $138bn off the company’s market value, were down 3.7% at yesterday’s close, lagging a 2% drop for the benchmark Hang Seng Index.

Tencent in September announced the plan to add the real-name registrati­on system for new gamers on its mobile battle game Honour of Kings.

The fantasy role-playing battle game has proved so popular that Tencent introduced restrictio­ns to playing time for children in July last year in response to criticism by state media over game addiction.

Children aged 12 and under are allowed one hour a day on the game except for a curfew peirod of 9pm to 8am.

Minors older than 12 can play for two hours a day.

Tencent said in the Monday’s post that it tried out facial recognitio­n-aided identity verificati­on for new players in Beijing and Shenzhen in September.

Since October, they have been verifying existing users’ ID informatio­n and expects to complete the process by the end of this month.

 ??  ?? A Tencent Games logo from an app is seen on a mobile phone in this illustrati­on picture. Tencent will expand an addiction-prevention system for underage gamers to all of its games, the company said yesterday, as the industry faces increased government scrutiny.
A Tencent Games logo from an app is seen on a mobile phone in this illustrati­on picture. Tencent will expand an addiction-prevention system for underage gamers to all of its games, the company said yesterday, as the industry faces increased government scrutiny.

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