Tencent Holdings said it will shut down a service that allowed Chinese gamers to access overseas platforms to play unapproved foreign games, in a sign of tightening compliance as Chinese regulators more closely scrutinize the industry.
The
country's largest social and gaming firm said late on Wednesday it will on May
31 update its games speed booster mobile and desktop apps to new versions that
would only support games operating in China. The new versions will no longer
allow users to access foreign games.
Tencent
first launched the apps in 2018. Such apps, which other companies like NetEase
also offer, act as network acceleration tools that help users boost their
Internet speeds.
Unlike most countries, gamers in China are only allowed to
play titles approved by the government and are not allowed to play with
foreigners on foreign servers. While such foreign games are not explicitly
blocked by online curbs, local Internet speeds are generally too slow for
gamers to access them.
As such, many gamers in China used such apps in practice to
access unapproved foreign games such as Grand Theft Auto or Nintendo's
smash-hit Animal Crossing. The apps also over the years became grey-area
channels for foreign game developers to reach users in the world's largest
gaming market.
Tencent declined to provide further comment on why it had
decided to make changes to the app.
The move was greeted by Chinese gamers with dismay but also
many said it was not surprising.
"This is expected given the direction things are going.
It is harder to be a gamer in China by the day," a Chinese Internet user
wrote on microblogging site Weibo.
The move comes days after China lifted a nine-month freeze
on gaming licences. During this period gaming companies including Tencent made
major adjustments to their business practices to comply with regulatory
requests. © Reuters