VAIDS

Wednesday, May 8, 2019

Tencent to Ceases Offers PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, in anticipation of bans

Chinese tech and games giant Tencent on Wednesday ceased offering hugely popular multiplayer combat game PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG), which has been targeted for bans in three other countries.

Often likened to the blockbuster book and film series The Hunger
Games, PUBG pits marooned characters against one another in a virtual fight to the death, and has become one of the world's most popular mobile games.
But authorities in Iraq, Nepal and the Indian state of Gujarat have moved to ban it over fears that it incited violence.
Tencent had been offering a mobile version of PUBG Mobile — which is published by a subsidiary of South Korean firm Bluehole — for about a year.
But a posting on the game's official account on China's popular Weibo platform said “testing” for PUBG Mobile ended Wednesday, an apparent indication that Tencent failed to win approval from Chinese authorities to offer it permanently.
Instead, it directed users to a newly launched and nearly identical Tencent-licensed title called Game for Peace.
A separate Tencent posting said Game for Peace designers sought advice from China's air force in developing the game, which may have helped it to win approval.
AFP was not immediately able to reach Tencent for comment.
Tencent has been rattled by a Chinese government crackdown on gaming launched in 2018 that has choked off game approvals.
Smartphone-based gaming has surged in popularity in China, particularly violent, multiplayer titles such as Honor of Kings, making China the game industry's biggest market.
But official concerns over gaming addiction prompted the government to impose new controls in 2018 such as limiting the number of new releases, and safeguards that reduce playing time for underage gamers.
The crackdown shaved about $250bn off the company's stock market value by late 2018, though shares have largely recovered as some game approvals subsequently resumed.
The China gaming industry had been watching to see whether Tencent would gain approval to permanently offer PUBG Mobile due to its potential to generate big profits for the company.
But Tencent's Hong Kong-listed shares rose 1.05% on Wednesday, with analysts saying Game of Peace would give the company something to monetise in place of PUBG Mobile.
  • AFP

No comments:

Post a Comment

Share

Enter your Email Below To Get Quality Updates Directly Into Your Inbox FREE !!<|p>

Widget By

VAIDS

FORD FIGO

+widget