Advertisement

China gaming crackdown: freeze on new video game licences extends into 2022 as 14,000 gaming-related firms shut down

  • Regulators have not released a list of approved new video game titles since the end of July, marking the longest suspension since a nine-month hiatus in 2018
  • As a result, about 14,000 small studios and gaming-related firms in China went out of business over the past several months

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
3
The National Press and Publication Administration, which is in charge of licensing video games in China, has not published a list of approved new titles since the end of July 2021. Photo: Agence France-Presse

China’s freeze on new video game licences is extending into 2022, dashing hopes that the process might resume by year-end, which has led many small gaming-related firms to close their operations and prompted the industry’s biggest publisher to pursue expansion overseas.

Advertisement

The National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA), which is in charge of licensing video games in China, has not published a list of approved new titles since the end of July. This marks the country’s longest suspension of new game licences since a nine-month hiatus in 2018 that followed a regulatory reshuffling.

As a result, thousands of small studios and video gaming-related firms – including those involved in merchandising, advertising and publishing – went out of business over the past several months.

About 14,000 of these enterprises have been deregistered since July, according to a report on Friday by state-run newspaper Securities Daily, which cited data from business registry tracking firm Tianyancha. That number signified a considerable acceleration from the 18,000 video gaming firms that shut down throughout 2020.

Larger firms such as TikTok owner ByteDance, online search giant Baidu and Tanwan Games trimmed their losses by laying off a number of employees involved in the video gaming segment of their operations.
Advertisement
Advertisement