China announces new restrictions on youth livestreaming and tipping
It’s part of a two-month campaign to clean up the “chaos” around gaming and livestreams.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
China is one of the largest gaming markets in the world and home to major games companies such as Tencent, but its regulators have also labelled online games “spiritual opium” and imposed tough restrictions, such as a mandate for companies toprevent youthfrom playing online games for more than three hours a week and make their games"good, clean and secure."
In the country’s latest move to restrict videogame exposure and internet usage among youth, China’s State Administration of Radio and Television and other agencies are ordering online streaming platforms to impose new age-based restrictions. Guidance published over the weekend (which caught our attention by way ofReuters) states that a recently mandated “Youth Mode” on major Chinese livestreaming sites must prevent under-18s from tipping streamers or sending virtual gifts, and a 10 pm viewing curfew must be in place “to ensure sufficient rest time for teenagers.”
The rules are similar to rules already in place for services like WeChat, whichNikkei Asiareported last year has an identical 10 pm youth curfew and tipping ban.
Domestic livestreaming services will also have to prevent users under the age of 16 from becoming livestreamers themselves, and to obtain guardian consent before allowing older teenagers to stream. Customer service teams dedicated to youth issues will be required for the companies in question, which have also been told to strengthen internet literacy education relating to security, safety, and conduct.
These measures are part of an ongoing campaign by the Chinese government to clean up the “chaos” it perceives to be growing among livestreaming and video platforms. The affected platforms include Douyin (the name for TikTok in China), Kuaishou, Bilibili, Huya, and Douyu.
Last month, Chinaapproved its first batch of new videogames in almost a yearfollowing a freeze that wasintended to"reduce gaming addiction," and curb the representation of “obscene and violent content,” same-sex relationships, and behavior such as “money-worship and effeminacy.”
That freeze took a big hit on major Chinese companies like Tencent and Bilibili, which were among the dozens of companies wholast September agreed to abide by new rules going forward. Among those rules was the imposition of facial recognition technology to track the amount of time children spend in front of the screen.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Robert is a freelance writer and chronic game tinkerer who spends many hours modding games then not playing them, and hiding behind doors with a shotgun in Hunt: Showdown. Wishes to spend his dying moments on Earth scrolling through his games library on a TV-friendly frontend that unifies all PC game launchers.
Sony isn’t giving up on PSN account requirement for PC games: Company president says it’s necessary so people can ‘safely’ play its games
Feeling the post-Suicide Squad ennui, Warner Bros. announces it won’t be ‘trying to launch 10, 12, 15, 20 different games’ anymore
I desperately hope Dragon Age: The Veilguard, Baldur’s Gate 3 and Disco Elysium inspire more RPG devs to reject the traditional drip, drip, drip of DLC and expansions