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The Chinese National Press and Publication Association has issued a new rule to regulate online gaming behaviour in China. It is the latest step in a series of events that has seen the government take a much harsher stance on gaming than before.
Gaming addiction as main problem
Earlier in August the official news agency Xinhua had already published an article decrying gaming as “spiritual opium” that is harming the country’s youth. It even went so far to single out Tencent, one of the largest game developer companies in the world and the parent company of Riot, as root of the gaming addiction problem.
Now the government has issued strict regulations to follow up on the increasing pressure on the gaming industry. Although PC and console gaming will be heavily affected as well, mobile gaming seems to be the main target of the new regulations as titles like Tencent’s Honor of Kings have huge player numbers in China.
The authorities in #China have today announced that for, anyone under 18 years old, they're to be limited to playing online games to only 3 hours a week! Plus only these 3 hours: 8 til 9 pm on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. There will be Chinese teenagers flipping out right now!
Under the new rules underage players (<18) will be limited to one hour of play between 8PM and 9PM on Friday, Saturday, Sunday and public holidays. This results in just three hours of gaming time per week.
The previous rules had already limited young players to no more than 90 minutes per day and three hours on holidays. Developers are now required by the government to implement real-name registration and login systems to prevent minors from circumventing the rules.
Whether or not these new regulations will have the effect desired by the government remains to be seen, as even the existing rules were largely being bypassed through borrowing IDs of adult family members.