What's new

China fears young people are addicted to video games. Now it's imposing a curfew

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China
China fears young people are addicted to video games. Now it's imposing a curfew
By Eric Cheung, CNN

Updated 1:29 AM ET, Wed November 6, 2019

191106114347-china-online-game-contest-exlarge-169.jpg

China is banning online gaming platforms from providing services to minors between 10 p.m. and 8 a.m., in the latest move to tighten regulations on the gaming industry.

Hong Kong (CNN)China has announced a curfew on online gaming for minors among new measures aimed at curbing video game addiction.

The official government guidelines will be applied to all online gaming platforms operating in the country, mostly notably Tencent, the world's biggest gaming company.

Under the new rules, gamers aged under 18 will be banned from playing online games between 10 p.m. and 8 a.m. On weekdays, minors can only play for 90 minutes, while they may play up to three hours per day on weekends and public holidays.

The guidelines also place restrictions on the amount of money minors can transfer to their online gaming accounts. Gamers aged between eight and 16 years old can only top up 200 yuan ($29) per month, while the maximum amount for those between 16 and 18 will be 400 yuan ($57).

China is the world's largest gaming market, accounting for a quarter of global revenue, according to market research firm Newzoo. It expected China's total gaming revenue to reach $38 billion in 2018.

The document was issued by China's General Administration of Press and Publication on Tuesday.

China is the world's largest gaming market, with an expected total gaming revenue of $38 billion in 2018.

Speaking to the state-run Xinhua News Agency, a spokesman for the administration said the new rules were aimed at creating a "clear internet space" and "protecting the physical and mental health of minors."

"(This notice) has emphasized on the responsibility of the corporations, and has executed the government's duty to supervise the problem," the spokesman said.

He said that government units would be required to study the rules and ensure corporations abide by the requirements.

The administration is also working with police to set up a real-name registration system, and to enable gaming companies to check the identity of their users against the national database, he added.

The new guidelines are China's latest move in an ongoing campaign to increase regulation of the gaming industry.

In August 2018, Beijing announced plans to limit the number of new online games to "reduce nearsightedness in children and adolescents." It also criticized a popular mobile game, "Honor of Kings", for allegedly causing addiction in young people in 2017.

Addiction to gaming, known officially as Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD), was added to the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases for the first time in June 2018.

IGD is diagnosed when an online gamer plays compulsively to the exclusion of other interests, including school and family life.

A 2018 study carried out by researchers at the Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine showed that men may be more susceptible to gaming addiction.

https://www.cnn.com/2019/11/06/asia/china-bans-online-games-minors-intl-hnk/index.html
 
.
Video games are a kind of new drug especially hurting young population, video gaming companies can not only think of making big money without caring people's health.
 
. .
Sad thing is nowaday parents in HK are hoping their kids playing video games at home other than going outside without any reason.
 
.
In the modern world, we are actually addicted to many things.

Videogames is just one of them.

But it's easy for older people to blame young people over videogames, while they themselves are addicted to TV, smartphone, alcohol, shopping, foods, etc.
 
.
self-killing for domestic gaming industry, dumb as ****
 
.
Online (mobile) video games are dumb. Most look way worse than many PC games from 1998 onwards. Most exist only to make players top up not to give them an enjoyable escapism channel or mild entertainment. IMO China should crack down hard on the (mobile) gaming industry like it did with Imperial palace dramas. Force the industry to change for the better of mankind.

Games like King of Glory/Honor of Kings (aka Arena of Valor) by Tencent make me wanna puke. You can try you tubing a game called Evolva from the year 2000. Still looks better graphics wise than many mobile games made today.

See how this game made in the late 1990's make many modern top-revenue generating mobile games especially ones like PUBG or King of Glory look like a joke in comparison:


(When I watched the gameplays of PUBG or King of Glory/Honor of Kings my first thought was "ppl put up with this crap when I seen better games from 19-20 years ago...)
 
Last edited:
.
Didn't China tried banning video games in the 2000s as well I recall bootcamps for youths then in the news
 
. .
Note sure Tencent and Bytedance (tiktkok) will be too happy with this news.
 
.
Note sure Tencent and Bytedance (tiktkok) will be too happy with this news.

This is a really dumb regulation.

It'll be like my parents on a national level. My parents did the exact same (banned me from playing game at night).

I just got better at sneaking out to internet cafe and silently unlocking the computer.
 
. .
Useless, minors will use adult ID card to register in the game.:D

When I was in elementary school, I registered with my parents' ID card to get rid of the playing time limit for minors.

不过那个时候限制也不是很严格,我记得是游戏时长超过五个小时,游戏收益就没有了(领不到任何奖励),但不会强制下线。

The state is stricter than my parents. :cheesy:

有一些小孩因为打游戏荒废了学习,或者因为游戏充值几万上过很多次新闻了,这种限制合情合理。虽然没有用就是了。There was solution ten years ago.

游戏同好群里的未成年女孩现在仍有一个月充值上千的,没遇到什么问题。

In addition, I suspect that this policy is learned from South Korea.

They has announced a curfew on online gaming for minors in 2016. :P
 
Last edited:
.
Don't think it will solve the underlying problem. People will always find new ways to do what they like.
It might only affect Chinese gaming giants like Tencent revenues/business. Apart from that I don't think it will have much an effect in changing youth gaming addiction.
 
.
You pay more money on it. You win. I don't think it should be called as "game"
 
.

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom