China targets video gaming to tackle myopia in children
Chinese
authorities have announced plans to control video gaming as a response to
rising levels of near-sightedness among children.
Regulators
want to limit the number of new online games, restrict playing time and develop
an age-restriction system.
A report in
2015 found 500 million Chinese suffered visual impairment, nearly half the
population over five.
China is the
world's biggest gaming market and shares of local tech firms dropped sharply in
response.
The Chinese
ministry of education released the new policy plans on Thursday after President
Xi Jinping earlier this week called for greater national attention on optical
health.
The document
blamed the high levels of myopia on a heavy study load, the spread of mobile
phones and other electronic devices, and a lack of outdoor activities and
exercise.
There is no
consensus that gaming is causing myopia but studies have raised it as one
possible cause.
There has
been a massive rise in short-sightedness around the globe in recent decades,
with East Asian countries having the highest rates.
The
authorities have, however, recently raised wider concerns about the industry.
Earlier this
month, regulators pulled Tencent's blockbuster video game Monster Hunter World
from sale after reporting they had received a number of complaints about the
fantasy title.
Last year,
another game by the same publisher - Honour of Kings - was described as being
"poison" and a "drug" by the People's Daily newspaper,
following concerns that children were spending too much time playing it.
Censors had
also stopped issuing local video games licences in March, which has caused
delays to the release of new titles and new features for existing games.
Stocks of
Chinese gaming companies plunged on Friday in response to the new policies.
Tencent's
shares fell more than 5%, wiping more than $20bn (£15.37bn) off its market
price.
The firm is
thought to account for 42% of the country's mobile gaming market.
Tencent has,
however, just announced plans to form a "strategic alliance" with one
of Japan's biggest video games firms, Square Enix - the maker of the Final
Fantasy series.
This has the
potential to further reduce Tencent's reliance on its home market.
It already
owns stakes in Fortnite's maker Epic Games, Assassin's Creed's developer
Ubisoft, Call of Duty's owner Activision-Blizzard, and League of Legend's Riot
Games, among others.
"More
Chinese companies will be looking at international markets as a way to offset
regulatory challenges in the domestic market," commented industry analyst
Piers Harding-Rolls from the IHS Markit consultancy.
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