Over 140,000 gaming firms close as China continues new license freeze

Posted:
in iOS edited January 2022
China is continuing to hold off from issuing new game licenses to app developers producing for the App Store and other platforms, in regulatory inaction that has reportedly led to the shuttering of around 140,000 small game studios and related companies in the country.




Under Chinese law, game developers must be licensed in order to sell games in the App Store and in other app marketplaces. While regulators stopped issuing new licenses in late 2021, it seems that the ban on new licenses is set to continue into 2022.

The National press and Publication Administration (NPPA), which issues licenses for games in China, is continuing to abstain from publishing lists of new approved games. Following on from a suspension that started at the end of July, the South China Morning Post reports it has now become the longest suspension of new game licenses since a nine-month blackout in 2018.

Regulators decided to suspend game license approvals in July as approvals for new games were considered "a bit too aggressive" in the first half of 2021, reports indicated. At the time it wasn't advised how long the hiatus would last, except that one unnamed source said it would be for "a while."

The lack of a license means a game cannot be submitted to the regional App Store, nor can it be updated. Apple has been suspending updates and pulling games from the China App Store that didn't have a license from the NPPA since July 2020, to comply with local laws.

The impact of the regulator's decision to avoid providing new licenses has caused problems for developers in the region. It is claimed that around 140,000 enterprises related to gaming, including studios and firms involved in publishing, advertising, and merchandising the titles, went out of business since July.

By contrast, 180,000 video game firms shut down during all of 2020.

The effects of the lack of new licenses are also being felt by major players. TikTok owner ByteDance, as well as Baidu and Tanwan Games have laid off employees in their gaming arms in response, while Tencent is putting more resources into foreign markets.

While the NPPA hasn't officially given a reason for the current suspension, it is thought that the freeze may be connected to a government crackdown on gaming addiction, which included restrictions on how long minors could play games.

Read on AppleInsider
harrywinter

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 16
    mcdavemcdave Posts: 1,927member
    The games are probably being used for political infiltration too.
    lkruppwatto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 16
    normmnormm Posts: 653member
    mcdave said:
    The games are probably being used for political infiltration too.
    So the government is banning licenses for games that it itself uses for infiltration?
    avon b7narwhalwatto_cobrabeowulfschmidt
  • Reply 3 of 16
    I don't get it.  Apple employs (indirectly) how many people in China?  A lot.  So China decides to (for whatever reason) stop issuing licenses to game developers to keep them from selling on the platform that is employing all these people who are making the devices the games run on?  

    Why does Apple continue to do business in China (both by manufacturing there and by selling)?  


    9secondkox2watto_cobraharrywinter
  • Reply 4 of 16
    mcdavemcdave Posts: 1,927member
    normm said:
    mcdave said:
    The games are probably being used for political infiltration too.
    So the government is banning licenses for games that it itself uses for infiltration?
    Cute. Western infiltration. There’s only one horrific ideology hell-bent on taking territory & it ain’t China.
  • Reply 5 of 16
    flydogflydog Posts: 1,124member
    ITGUYINSD said:
    I don't get it.  Apple employs (indirectly) how many people in China?  A lot.  So China decides to (for whatever reason) stop issuing licenses to game developers to keep them from selling on the platform that is employing all these people who are making the devices the games run on?  

    Why does Apple continue to do business in China (both by manufacturing there and by selling)?  


    Apple earns over $50 billion a year in China, and sales were up 87% in Q4 with this licensing requirement in place.

    But apparently you're confounded as to why Apple continues to do business in China?

    igorskytokyojimuwatto_cobrabeowulfschmidt
  • Reply 6 of 16
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member

    normm said:
    mcdave said:
    The games are probably being used for political infiltration too.
    So the government is banning licenses for games that it itself uses for infiltration?
    Cute. Western infiltration. There’s only one horrific ideology hell-bent on taking territory & it ain’t China.
    So please tell us, oh great wise one, what that ‘horrific ideology” is. Don’t let us guess although it wouldn’t be hard to. 
    narwhalh2pwatto_cobraharrywinter
  • Reply 7 of 16
    markbyrnmarkbyrn Posts: 661member
    The South China Morning Post states that 14,000 (not 140,000) small studios and gaming firms went out of business.  Typo?  
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 16
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    Last year China also limited the hours kids were able to play video games.  This sounds like an extension of that policy to discourage and limit video games -- especially among kids.

    They realize that video games provide zero benefit to society and instead promote both physical and mental debility and disease.

    Go China!  They have now shut down two causes of diseases:  the COVID virus and Video Games and their people and their industry are better for both!
    edited January 2022 tokyojimuravnorodom
  • Reply 9 of 16
    lkrupp said:

    normm said:
    mcdave said:
    The games are probably being used for political infiltration too.
    So the government is banning licenses for games that it itself uses for infiltration?
    Cute. Western infiltration. There’s only one horrific ideology hell-bent on taking territory & it ain’t China.
    So please tell us, oh great wise one, what that ‘horrific ideology” is. Don’t let us guess although it wouldn’t be hard to. 
    I think what he meant is China hating. 
  • Reply 10 of 16
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,096member
    For what it’s worth, so many garbage games come out of China.  Minimal love lost. 
    watto_cobraharrywinterviclauyyc
  • Reply 11 of 16
    narwhalnarwhal Posts: 119member
    I can understand China wanting to cut down on hours kids play video games; but shutting down game licenses (which hurts developers) is baffling.
    h2pwatto_cobra
  • Reply 12 of 16
    My heart breaks for Mainland Chinese youth these days.
    No games, no creativity, not even extracurricular schooling – all that's left really is to join the military. 
    edited January 2022 docno42
  • Reply 13 of 16
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    narwhal said:
    I can understand China wanting to cut down on hours kids play video games; but shutting down game licenses (which hurts developers) is baffling.

    My feeling, my guess, is that China values private enterprise not as the goal, but the means to an end -- with the end game (no pun intended!) being the betterment of society.  So how does a game developer contribute to or improve society?
    muthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 14 of 16
    GeorgeBMacGeorgeBMac Posts: 11,421member
    My heart breaks for Mainland Chinese youth these days.
    No games, no creativity, not even extracurricular schooling – all that's left really is to join the military. 

    Or to be well educated and successful -- all of them (not just the few able to afford private tutors).
    As for creativity, gaming stifles creativity -- so Chinese kids will be able to experience real life, interacting with nature, adults and other kids and build and create from their real life experience.
    muthuk_vanalingam
  • Reply 15 of 16
    docno42docno42 Posts: 3,755member
    lol - all the anti-capitalist and pro-socialism idiots: this is what you are advocating for.

    Freaking morons. 
  • Reply 16 of 16
    docno42docno42 Posts: 3,755member
    GeorgeBMac said:
    Or to be well educated and successful -- all of them (not just the few able to afford private tutors).
    As for creativity, gaming stifles creativity -- so Chinese kids will be able to experience real life, interacting with nature, adults and other kids and build and create from their real life experience.
    Only in the west can "educated" idiots proclaim that having less choice is actually MORE choice  :#
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