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China Games Technology

Tencent Shuts Down PUBG Mobile in China For Patriotic Alternative (theverge.com) 53

Tencent has pulled the plug on its wildly popular video game PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG) in China, a likely victim of government restrictions on gaming. From a report: Instead, the company is migrating users over to a similar title, Heping Jingying or Elite Force for Peace. Heping Jingying has already been approved for monetization by the Chinese Communist party, thanks in no small part to its patriotic overtones. One analyst described the game as "a tribute to the People's Liberation Army Air Force" -- part of China's national military -- with anti-terrorism themes. PUBG Mobile launched in March last year, and has become one of the world's most popular video games, with as many players as Fortnite. According to estimates from China Renaissance, the game had roughly 70 million domestic players, which would have allowed Tencent to generate annual revenues from in-app purchases of roughly $1.18 billion to $1.48 billion.
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Tencent Shuts Down PUBG Mobile in China For Patriotic Alternative

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Remember, this company has a controlling interest in Epic, the company trying to force itself into the global gaming market with bought exclusivity agreements. Epic, further, has deals with Microsoft, which is pushing for a walled-garden Windows.

    If you aren't afraid for the future of gaming, you should be.

  • I would very much prefer to be able to choose my own video games, thank you. I can avoid horror games if I don't feel like it, or play "Manhunt" if I am in the mood. It does not affect my real life behavior (thanks to so many studies proving that), and I do not need to be encouraged to improve my support in the Army, or play AmA to do just that, but only when and if I choose to do so.

    For lack of a better term, our luck, and perseverance of industry leaders gave given us a very good verdict:
    https://kotaku.co [kotaku.com]

    • and everything to do with keeping the money inside the country. PUBG is run by a Korean company. China is not going to pump millions into another country's economy.
    • There's no first amendment in China. Globally, it's seen as a crazy, extremist idea. Not all opinions are worth discussing. Not all statements are worthy of notice. People need to be protected from views that are injurious to them. Ordinary people are neither deep, original, nor articulate. Controversial speakers negatively impact students by forcing them to invest time and energy in rebutting the speakers' arguments. [thefire.org]
      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        There's no first amendment in China. Globally, it's seen as a crazy, extremist idea.

        Thus: American exceptionalism.

        . Controversial speakers negatively impact students by forcing them to invest time and energy in rebutting the speakers' arguments.

        There's nothing more important to learn than critical thinking. And sometimes, controversial speakers are right! Like crazy speakers who said slavery was wrong, or those controversial, disruptive speakers who just wouldn't shut up about how women should have the right to vote. All progress begins as controversy.

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