ADVERTISEMENT

China Outlines New Approval Process for World's Top Games Market

China Outlines New Approval Process for World's Top Games Market

(Bloomberg) -- Chinese regulators have sketched out new requirements for videogame approvals following a year of scrutiny, providing more clarity to Tencent Holdings Ltd. and other players struggling with a crackdown in the world’s largest gaming market.

The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television issued notices on April 19 that detailed the documentation and processes required to get games approved for release in the country. Among other things, publishers will now have to submit more information from measures to curb play addiction to detailed scripts.

More concrete guidelines will likely benefit industry leaders from Tencent to Netease Inc. that’ve struggled with a government crackdown on gaming addiction and other perceived social ills. Beijing froze approvals on new titles for nine months in 2018 before restarting them in December -- creating a backlog of thousands of titles awaiting the green light.

“This helps clear another regulatory overhang,” Jefferies Hong Kong Ltd. analysts led by Karen Chan told clients in a note.

Tencent and Netease shares haven’t traded since the announcement because of holidays.

Daniel Ahmad, an analyst at Chinese game researcher Niko Partners, said the announcement was “extremely important.” The regulator will now simultaneously work through the backlog of titles submitted since August as well as new applications after April 22, the company said in a blog post. It expects fewer than 5,000 new games to get the green light this year, with low-quality copycat, poker and mahjong games most likely to fail.

Personnel and structural agency changes that had held up approvals have now been completed, the researcher added. Developers must now submit a host of details from screenshots and full Chinese scripts to specific anti-addiction systems they’ve installed within games, according to the notices.

“With a new more transparent approval process set to go live soon, we have a positive outlook for China’s digital games market in 2019,” Niko Partners said in its post.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yuji Nakamura in Tokyo at ynakamura56@bloomberg.net;David Ramli in Singapore at dramli1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Peter Elstrom at pelstrom@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan, Jeff Muskus

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.