The latest batch of approvals, released by the National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA) on Monday, marked the first time Beijing had approved more than 100 titles in its monthly list since July 2022, when 135 titles made the cut. On Friday, the regulator also approved 98 imported titles.
China to curb excess spending on video games in blow for world’s biggest market
China to curb excess spending on video games in blow for world’s biggest market
The new list brings the tally of approved titles this year to 1,076, a drastic improvement for an industry beset by uncertainty following a sweeping crackdown two years ago. Licence approvals were frozen for the eight months from August 2021 through March 2022, resulting in just 748 titles being approved in 2021 and 512 in 2022.
CADPA said it hoped members, including giants Tencent and NetEase, would “make an effort to roll out more quality content and promote the high-quality development of the online game industry”.
The draft regulation, which is open for public comment until January 22, would require game developers to cap how much users can top up their accounts, and bans incentivising “excessive” gameplay by offering rewards for things like daily logins and topping up with fresh funds.
News of the regulation sent stocks spiralling, especially for China’s two largest game publishers. Tencent and NetEase closed down 12 per cent and 25 per cent in Hong Kong on Friday.
The market continued to slump in mainland China on Monday, when 26 gaming companies lost an average of 3.3 per cent, according to financial information provider East Money. The Hong Kong bourse is closed for the Christmas holiday.
That was accompanied by the freeze on licences that, once resumed, saw much smaller batches of monthly approvals.
In 2022, China’s total gaming industry revenue declined 10.3 per cent year on year owing to economic headwinds, slower user growth and regulatory scrutiny, according to the CADPA.
More favourable regulations this year are expected to help increase revenue 14 per cent to 303 billion yuan (US$42.5 billion), which would mark the highest annual sales since the data became available in 2003.