Blizzard Awaits China's Approval For WoW Relaunch 75
angry tapir writes "The relaunch of World of Warcraft in China, where it has already been offline for six weeks, still faces an indefinite delay as it awaits government approval for its content. Problems for Blizzard Entertainment, the game's creator, started when it switched to a new local operator for World of Warcraft in China, online gaming company NetEase. New operators of foreign games have to submit the games for government approval, and China has objected to some of the content it found in its latest review of the game."
Now is the time to strike! (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
After all the time I used to freaking grind grind grind on that game, I'm not so surprised it takes time to check the content. Or maybe they just gave up :)
Re:Now is the time to strike! (Score:4, Funny)
They need to check exhaustively, I'm sure out there somewhere is Fizzle Sparksprocket, a fire mage gnome who contributed to the overthrow of Gnomeregan, and who immolates himself periodically in worship of an Old God.
Irony (Score:2, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
What's the big deal? (Score:4, Funny)
China. Pssht. They probably couldn't get more than 1% of the population to play and at $15/month...that's only...um...$150,000,000. A month.
Allrighty let's get China on board here! Start bringing in those tax dollars! (Blizzard does pay income tax for something like this?)
Re:What's the big deal? (Score:4, Informative)
Its different rates in china, as most people are quite cheap compared to us/europe.
Players will need to purchase a CD key to create an account and enter the game. The key comes at a price of 30 Yuan (about 3 euros or 2 pounds) and can be bought with a so-called Points Card which costs the same. While game time can be purchased on a monthly basis here, you can play WoW on an hourly basis in China - at an incredible rate of 0.45 Yuan/hour, amounting to 0.05 euros or 0.03 pounds respectively.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1, Informative)
Prices are cheaper over there. Last I knew (according to this Blizzard press release: http://eu.blizzard.com/en/press/050606.html) playing in China costs 0.45 Yuan per hour, which converts to 6.5 cents per hour.
So someone over there would have to play just over 230 hours a month to be paying $15/month.
Re:What's the big deal? (Score:5, Funny)
So someone over there would have to play just over 230 hours a month to be paying $15/month.
So in other words, a slow month for those of us who play WoW?
Re: (Score:2)
So someone over there would have to play just over 230 hours a month to be paying $15/month.
So in other words, a slow month for those of us who play WoW?
I swear it's not an addiction! I can quit anytime! *twitch*
Just like developing for an iPhone (Score:1, Offtopic)
The parallels are astounding: Indefinite delays, arbitrary conflicting decisions, and reapproval of already-approved content required when making minor changes!
You No Take Mao's Candle!!! (Score:5, Funny)
The Chinese Communist party got tired of people taking their candles.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:You No Take Mao's Candle!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Is OUR candle.
Re: (Score:2)
It can be YOUR candle, not a problem... unless the candle in question becomes a means of production of capital.
Then it becomes THEIR candle
Re: (Score:2)
It's EVERYONE's candle, thus NOBODY may use it unless we can use it to produce anything we can export, so we get foreign money, which we can use to buy foreign companies and patents, and they again belong to EVERYONE, but NOBODY may have it for himself, thus it has to be administered by the government which was chosen by EVERYONE, so essentially NOBODY...
*facepalm* You'll never become good Communists. Mao, why have you forsaken us?
Re: (Score:2)
Take the bloody candle and leave me the hell alone, or I'll sue your ass for genocide!
(I always thought it was a bit odd 'Candle or Death'.. 'Uhm.. Death please'..)
People going crazy? (Score:1)
So has anyone died? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
An addict can and will switch to replacements when their drug of choice is unavailable. There's more MMOs than simply WoW. I'm betting it will take a while for the subscriber base to recover after this, since they'll all be hooked on something else.
Re: (Score:2)
*shrugs* there's still gold farmers in wow, as well as organizations trying to sell powerlevelling and such. My guess is that the Chinese government hasn't blocked the game as well as they think they have.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
They haven't even tried to block anything. The company running the chinese version of wow and their servers just hasn't got permission to get the servers up. Chinese gold farmers are obviously playing on eu/usa servers and selling gold/powerleveling to them, as you cannot transfer gold and characters across usa/eu/china servers.
Re: (Score:2)
*shrugs* there's still gold farmers in wow, as well as organizations trying to sell powerlevelling and such. My guess is that the Chinese government hasn't blocked the game as well as they think they have.
Or that there are other countries with people who engage in these activities...
Re: (Score:2)
Hmm... I had the hunch that there've been more Chinafarmers in EvE lately. The price dip of Trit sure matches very curiously the moment WoW was cut in China...
Worse than Nintendo (Score:4, Interesting)
The game has been modified to meet the Chinese government's demands before. Skeletons added to the game in an update overseas appeared with flesh in China.
So you can't see people's bones in China but a dead corpse is just fine? I mean, heck, back in the NES days you could play Castlevania and kill skeletons all day long and that was just fine with Nintendo's censorship.
Government objections have also prevented the China release of Wrath of the Lich King, the game's latest expansion. The expansion twice failed to gain government approval despite content revisions, possibly due to elements like the "death knight" character class, according to local media.
So lets see, the Chinese government won't let you have a class called a "death knight" while the government constantly celebrates the "great leap forward" which ended up killing a ton of its own citizens, celebrates the Chinese Civil War as some great achievement which ended up with millions dying. I really don't understand China's censorship, especially since this will give them lots of tax revenue.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
What are you talking about? [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Best. Video game commercial. Ever.
Re:Worse than Nintendo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
If I remember correctly, in Japan breasts and testicles are perfectly fine to show, but other genitalia are strictly forbidden. There was a kids show where opossums blew up their testicles and fought with them, or something like that, and I've seen non-hentai anime with breasts (but no sex) that I believe was aimed at teens.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
There was a kids show where opossums blew up their testicles and fought with them, or something like that
Sounds like it may have been Tanuki [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
More specifically it was likely Pom Poko [wikipedia.org], a very non-hentai movie from Studio Ghibli, sometimes described as the Japanese Disney.
Re: (Score:1)
There was even a Pokemon episode featuring the guy from Team Rocket suddenly getting large boobs. Cue lots of ah... coloured jokes. For some reason they deemed it okay for Japan, but not so much for other countries... :P
Re: (Score:1)
Heh. Skeletons and Death Knights are not taboo. And even if they were, a game company wouldn't be successful releasing taboo content.
No no, this is typical China. 6000 years of bribery and corruption
Re: (Score:2)
In the summer, when you got to the beach in most of Europe you'll see naked breasts all day long.
Believe me, once it's commonplace it's not special anymore.
Re: (Score:2)
I distinctly remember this being the letdown of the century. WOW! JJ's boobs on TV!
You didn't even really get to see a nipple, or see them bounce, or anything. Hell, the average 10pm TV shows more boobies than that. Fire up YouTube for that? Hell, "Ding" from Seeed has more boobs in its video and it's been running on music TV in Germany all day. Ok, they're animated and they're a bit furry, but still boobs!
Re: (Score:1)
So you can't see people's bones in China but a dead corpse is just fine?
Nope - corpses are replaced with tombstones
Re: (Score:1)
So lets see, the Chinese government won't let you have a class called a "death knight" while the government constantly celebrates the "great leap forward" which ended up killing a ton of its own citizens, celebrates the Chinese Civil War as some great achievement which ended up with millions dying. I really don't understand China's censorship, especially since this will give them lots of tax revenue.
I don't think you really mean that the Chinese government is celebrating the casualties. It is more the reverse - people who try to publicly remember the casualties from the Great Leap Forward can still get into some serious difficulties, if it is taken as an implicit criticism of the ruling party.
And Chinese censorship is pretty simple: anything someone *in power* might find objectionable will be censored. Lots of Chinese get creeped out by ghosts. Besides that, believing in ghosts is pretty much a non-mat
Re: (Score:2)
This is just twisted enough to be awesome. We need some high-profile studies on this, STAT.
Re:A humble proposal on how to defeat game addicti (Score:1)
I was even thinking maybe Blizzard should have a WoW server where bots are allowed.. In a few mins I'm set to read development economics with my warrior churning in the background.
If Blizzard were to allow such, I don't think it would really help the situation at all.
Instead of people running around clicking buttons, they'd have their bots running around pretending to click buttons, sure. All the while people would be learning how to tweak their bot to make it run that much better than the other guys.
Something similar (while entirely against game rules) happened with FFXI. A plugin (spellcast, iirc) for windower (the third-party DX-grabber that allowed FFXI to run in windowed mod
Re: (Score:2)
Those weren't "points" to be refuted line by line, those were his feelings, the things that fueled his gaming addiction. He wanted to stop the addiction because it was distracting him from doing other stuff. Having the bot* playing the game nearby so that he could see it satisfied his game-related urges enough to let him do that other stuff. So even if willing and able to move into the meta-game of modifying the bots, he no longer felt the need to.
That's his subjective psychological response. I would im
Re: (Score:1)
When tools like spellcast came out, I was one of the ones who traded the clicky-click rock-smoking for typey-type powder snorting of tool development and advancement.
Also, having traded drug addictions in the past for more socially acceptable addictions (higher intake of nicotine and alcohol), it's still just trading one addiction for another at the end of the day. People just look down on you a l
level 80 Rogue Alliance Eldre' Thalis (Score:1)
Ahh I was wondering why there are less Chinese gold spam messages in trade chat.
100 trade messages a day. It's amazing they are able to earn a paycheck by playing a game albeit not a lot but I am sure it's better than not working.
I wish we'd dump China (Score:2)
Maybe I'm just disgruntled because I spent all day reading proposed healthcare legislation and have decided that if one person puts something stupid forward, he's an idiot, but if a group do the same, it's "compromise."
The real reason for the delay (Score:4, Insightful)
It's pretty clear that the real reason for this delay isn't some minor quibble regarding content. It's that China doesn't want a Western/foreign company to dominate their online gaming market.
Clever, unethical (from certain standpoints), and frustrating for Blizzard, no doubt.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
wth? they're based in Irvine, CA.
Re: (Score:2)
Vivendi which owns a majority of stock in Activision-Blizzard is a French company.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Oops. (Score:1)
-source: a Chinese IT news website [cnbeta.com]
Translation? (Score:1)
I won't translate the whole thing, but I noticed this tidbit :
"The people's net - game channel country news General publications administration concerned people in charge on 21st in the evening pay attention to "Evil spirit Beastly World" on the society examine and approve the related question to accept reporter to interview."
World of Warcraft so
Re: (Score:1)
No it doesn't.
Mo Shou Shijie translates to Magical Beast World ("World of Magical Beasts" - a better translation). Mo can relates to devils in certain contexts, but it more often just means magic. Not the sinister kind.
Re: (Score:1)
Whats this REALLY about? (Score:1)
Remember that article a while ago about China banning Gold Farming?
You think whoever passed the bill is finding alternative ways to enforce the law?
Re: (Score:1)
Remember that article a while ago about China banning Gold Farming?
You think whoever passed the bill is finding alternative ways to enforce the law?
Remember that article a while ago about China banning Gold Farming?
You think whoever passed the bill is finding alternative ways to enforce the law?
This is a good market for the Chinese apparently. Too good. http://games.slashdot.org/story/09/06/29/1839205/China-Bans-Gold-Farming [slashdot.org]
Isn't this harmful to China's GDP? (Score:2, Funny)
China's changes (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The eagerly awaited Rage of The Ogres: Crush Christians!! Crush Christians!!! is set to hit stores August 15. Preorders have already topped 100 million.
Isn't suppression of Muslims all the rage now in China?
Already moved on (Score:1, Informative)
The majority of the high level player population in China has already moved on to Taiwanese servers. I don't know if they'll move back once the China servers are back up, especially after the huge delays in getting both TBC and WotLK released there. I also don't know if these high level, "hardcore" players constitute any significant majority of the WoW China playerbase (they probably don't).
It takes them six weeks to check for Pandaren? (Score:1)