China gaming crackdown: Bilibili says violent titles such as Grand Theft Auto and The Witcher 3 cannot be live-streamed
- Bilibili said it will prohibit the live-streaming of games with bloody, violent and pornographic content
- Increased regulatory scrutiny is making it harder for games developed by overseas studios to access the country’s 666 million gamers
Chinese video platform Bilibili said it will ban live-streaming of more than 60 video games, including the popular Grand Theft Auto (GTA) series and The Witcher 3 to comply with regulatory guidelines, in the latest sign that companies are falling into line with Beijing’s efforts to purge the domestic gaming industry of content it disapproves of.
The live-streaming unit of Bilibili said in a statement on Monday that the decision to ban live-streaming of these games and others such as Heart of Iron, Rainbow Six Siege and the World of Tanks had been made to comply with guidelines from the Ministry of Culture and other authorities, which regard these titles as unfit for public broadcasting.
“Bilibili will prohibit the live-streaming of games with bloody, violent and pornographic content,” the Shanghai-based company said in the statement.
Chinese authorities have been tightening their control over gaming content, treating games like films and television series when it comes to censorship and pushing on with an anti-gaming addiction drive.
The increased regulatory scrutiny is making it harder for games developed by overseas studios to access the country’s 666 million game players though, as Beijing has placed an emphasis on approving content that promotes positive social values.
China has already banned certain games, including Plague Inc, a real-time strategy simulation game that allows players to create a pathogen to wipe out humanity.