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How gamers from India and Pakistan teamed up for esports, despite conflict
- India banned the PUBG mobile game, which is licensed by Tencent, after a border dispute with Chinese troops in the Himalayas
- This left an Indian team in Kashmir without players, so they reached out across the border to gamers in Pakistan, despite tense relations
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Why you can trust SCMP
When India banned the hit PUBG mobile game over its diplomatic row with China, Zeyan Shafiq’s esports team was suddenly left without players. So Shafiq, who is based in war-torn Kashmir, did something very unusual: he reached across the border to Pakistan.
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Shafiq, 18, feared reprisals over his move, but none came. It resulted in an unheard-of alliance between Indian and Pakistani gamers, forged in one of the most dangerous regions in the world.
“Of course we had lot of things in the mind when we made this move including a possibility of backlash,” Shafiq said.
“But by God’s grace everything went well and people supported us on both sides. They understood that this is esports and there is no partiality between these two countries.”
PUBG, or PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, is a military-style war game where teams battle online. The mobile app has been downloaded hundreds of millions of times around the world.
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