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Editorial | US$80b market rout on games rules shows there is much to lose

  • Calm may have been restored for now, but mainland China regulators will now only be too aware to consider the financial impact of what they propose

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Feng Shixin has left his official role as the publication bureau chief at the Communist Party’s Central Propaganda Department, people say. Photo: Xinhua


新华社照片,北京,2022年9月1日
    服贸会上感受科技亮点
    9月1日,在国家会议中心,观众体验工体元宇宙GTVerse。
    2022年中国国际服务贸易交易会于8月31日至9月5日在位于北京的国家会议中心和首钢园区举办,众多科技产品亮相展区,吸引观众驻足参观。
    新华社记者 任超 摄

Beijing giveth and Beijing taketh away, or is it the other way round this time?

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First, the industry watchdog inadvertently caused a market rout of almost US$80 billion after it announced a plan to tighten online gaming restrictions.

Then, just before Christmas Day, the National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA) approved 105 domestic online titles, along with 98 imported ones.

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Calm was somewhat restored in the market. Certainly it helped that the NPPA quickly clarified the proposed restrictions were still at a draft stage.

Feng Shixin, the long-serving publication bureau chief, has left his post. Some observers think the NPPA may now reconsider some of the more severe restrictions.

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