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China's Youth Are Now Only Allowed Three Hours Of Gaming Per Week

China's government continues to crack down on the gaming industry with new regulations that prevent minors from playing games during school weeks.

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China's rules for gaming just got stricter, as the country has issued new measures to crack down on an alleged video game addiction that has been blamed for everything from various societal ills to poor performance at schools. According to the Wall Street Journal, gamers under the age of 18 will not be allowed to play online games between 8 PM and 9 PM on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays.

"Gaming addiction has affected studies and normal life, and many parents have become miserable," China's National Press and Publication Administration said in a statement.

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There will be some relief during school holidays though, as children will be allowed 60 minutes per day for gaming. As for how China plans to enforce this, the country's government has a number of methods at its disposal for ensuring that its youth sticks to the gaming curfew.

Identity cards are required for playing online, while a facial recognition system introduced in July by tech giant Tencent has proven to be effective at catching any children pretending to be adults in order to get around the government gaming curfew. Companies are also prohibited from offering gaming services outside of those stipulated hours.

China had previously banned late-night games and players were restricted to 90 minutes per weekday and three hours on weekends and holidays. Over the last few months though, China's government has introduced a number of new rules to an industry that makes billions of dollars in revenue every year across the world with the likes of Genshin Impact and Tencent's League of Legends.

Meanwhile, South Korea announced recently that it was scrapping a law that prevented young people from playing online video games late at night. Introduced in 2011 and targeted at players aged 16 or under, South Korean minors were prevented from playing online PC games between midnight and 6 AM.

Out of respect for its younger citizens rights, the law will be abolished and replaced by a choice permit system that allows players to request a permit per game and play during self-assigned hours that their parents will sign off on.

Darryn Bonthuys on Google+

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Jarrkha

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Online gaming.

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sweeneystephen

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This article needs a big edit. You said WSJ is reporting "gamers under the age of 18 will not be allowed to play online games between 8 PM and 9 PM on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays."

The actual report is they will be only permitted to play between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m.

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Titanburner12

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Good. A whole lot less cheaters online now I bet.

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barnold81

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I think restricting game time is a good thing, but it needs to be self-imposed. Or imposed by parents. I'm an adult, and I have a video game addiction. It's an escape from the stress and dissatisfaction I have my life. It also makes it much worse.

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Jaxith

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"Look over here at the evils of video games and how we nobly protect you from it! We need to know everything you're doing at all times to do it, but that's a small price to pay for your protection! Pay no mind to our blatant corruption, incompetence, general hypocrisy, and passing semblance to a cartoon bear. Especially that last one! Don't make us un-person you!"

...And now I'm sad, for want of a change I'm unable to make in a part of the world too far for me to reach. Heck... I can't even change what's wrong in my country...

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ZombieVirolina

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<Nelson>

Ha-Ha!

</Nelson>

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santinegrete

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This is why you have to take care of democracy and stop CEOcracy to clowning it up.

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rancid36

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The Communist Chinese rarely have good Idea's.....we live in a free society at the moment. Good parenting is Good parenting.... you can pick out the kids in school that have good parenting......the others....well.....we always need a good "fry guy" at McDonalds.....:).

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Jaxith

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@rancid36: Wow... Way to assert your superiority over a bunch of children who didn't get to choose their parents. I'm sure yours are quite proud of you and your ability to insult random children on the internet...

...Seriously dude... Just leave it at that first sentence and you could have avoided looking like someone who gets validation from looking down on children...

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molinars

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West looking at China like: "Brillian! How can we adapt it?"

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BloodborneLore

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Edited By BloodborneLore

Where do they get the technology from to take away people’s freedoms? How do they do it? And how do they take away free speech? Free Speech isn’t a law in my country yet I would love to see someone try and take it away from me. And where’s the cap to stop people playing? How is that implemented? I’ve been to Asia and it’s really not as bad as the media makes it out to be.

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deactivated-67d9b4d176198

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@bloodbornelore: In some countries, taking away your freedom of speech is as easy as sending some armed men knocking on your door in the dead of night to take you away from your family without charge or reason. Be thankful you live somewhere this doesn't happen and hope that things don't change to the point where it can.

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BloodborneLore

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@just_visiting: I’m not from one of those countries. I’m from a democracy. The political structure itself provides my freedoms. We don’t need laws for that. Freedom existed long before government and for a government to be accepted by it’s people, it can’t take those freedoms away within a democracy. Also, you’re assuming these soldiers won’t fear for their lives when told to round up it’s public. You’re not considering what would likely happen if they tried to do anything like that to somebody like me. Would they be willing to die for the cause? I think not.

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deactivated-67d9b4d176198

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@bloodbornelore: My god, I was embarassed for you while reading that.

"somebody like me". Such a bad ass.....

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stiefjac

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does this mean i can reinstall PUBG, after i got shot in the dome from 3.5 miles away by johnsmith1385413985613985619856 or bang ding ow for the 3 millionth time i quit playing because for some reason the chinese gamers in china must be being held at gunpoint

"you win pubg and sell skins for cash or you die peon"

does anybody still care about pubg anymore?

i was just kidding about reinstalling it

can you imagine

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esqueejy

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@stiefjac: One thing to give China credit on in terms of the cheaters is how illegal they make it haha. Because TenCent is so ginormous, they actually work with the Chinese gov't to track 'em down and punish them at the source. Look up the story on the cheating "ring" they dismantled....guys who were selling all sorts of auto-aimers, etc., to the point where they were actually selling subscriptions to people that allowed them access to cheat programs for almost any competitive game. They confiscated like $75M and 100 high-end cars like Ferraris and stuff hahaha

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phili878

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They should do the same in the west regarding social media use on smart-phones. Too many kids wasting away their best times of their lives looking into phone screens.

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Destructionzz

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@phili878: Take away free will while you're at it.

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phili878

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@Destructionzz: I'd take a way free will in a second in terms of censoring dumb group-chats and other brain degenerating school bullying promoting crap and replacing that with only educational apps and actually with things smart-phones were supposed to be created for.

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Jaxith

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@phili878: Huh. And here I thought smart phones were created to improve means of communication and data acquisition.

Well, either way, can I have your free will? I'll give it a nice loving home, care for it, clean it, and name it Fwilip. Oh, wait! You said take away! Awesome, I'll come down and pick it up next Tuesday!

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phili878

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@Jaxith: you don’t understand. Smart-phones screw our kids up the way they are used! Do some research and within minutes you’ll find articles on increased suicide rates amongst teenagers because of group chat bullying and harassment.

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Jaxith

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@phili878: And that's bad. But the problem there isn't the phones. It's the bullies. It's always been the bullies. That didn't change with smart phones. Before those, it was social media. Before that, it was internet messengers. Before that it was passing notes in class. The problem isn't new, and I don't believe the solution to it is punishing the children we're trying to protect, because the bullies will still bully, and the kids we want to protect will just feel more isolated, and even resentful over being punished because of other kids being mean to them.

You can't take away the rights of the people being victimized, and tell them it's for their own good. The bullying will remain, and they'll just feel like they're being punished for it. There's no easy solution to this problem. It's why it's been prevalent for so long. The fact is, you can't just flip a switch, shut off the internet, and expect everything to get better. It won't, because that was never the problem.

Dealing with bullies is stressful, time consuming, and a lot of hard work. But the best defense against it is making sure these kids have a strong support network and feel valued. They need to know how precious they are. Not be made to feel worse by adults rushing to fix the problem.

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stiefjac

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@phili878: see the thing is, who decides what is acceptable?

also what if your kids playd 3 hours all week and get all their chores and responsibilites handled on the weekend and thats what they'd like as a reward

wanna get a ticket for letting your kid play games for an hour?

stop worrying about other peoples kids and raise your own to be more grounded, busybodies who think this is a good idea are exactly why its not a good idea

Because the only ones running the show on "game time allotment" are the busybodies

we all look at our phones too much

kids are just more efficient at it

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phili878

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@stiefjac: don't care what haters say, but the youth today is a sad affair. Instead of socializing, going to places together, make a campfire and share ideas and stories, they look into their dumb-phones for apparently an average of 5 hours a day, what a damn waste, don't care what others say. Somewhat glad I don't have kids tbh. Wife is a teacher and she tells me how kids get bullied because of these stupid whatsapp group chats. All that aren't part = bullied. If girls in the group chat don't share at least a selfie wearing a bra (talking about 12-15 year olds here) she'll get bullied, or if she is too flabby gets bullied, always daily bullying problems because of those damn group chats and sad thing is, people like yourself can't do anything but let it happen and turn the other way and pretend this isn't happening with your kid, yeah yeah, dream on.

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stiefjac

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@phili878: I'm a little late to responding with this, but i'm not sure how old you are. I'm 29 goin on 30 and I grew up in the xanga, then myspace, then early facebook era.

i cant even tell you how many friendships were destroyed over who was "number 1" in your "top 10 friends" space on myspace, how many relationships broken over not wanting to make it "public" on facebook.

i fed into that stuff when i was a child, but that's just it. i was a child. looking back now, i see my behavior was stupid and juvenile.

just like it was when pre-internet you'd go into a bathroom stall and it would say "janice is a 2-bit slut" "steve p is a homo"

the public forum just changes. kids will always be kids. the youth gets bored with novelty, the problem is the internet is full of novelty. The thing is this article is about limiting game time.

its not doing anything to combat what you're positing in your response. matter of factly there's probably alot of socially awkward gamers on this site alone who will tell you the friends they make online give them an escape from the people they deal with at school and amongst their social media accounts.

i'm not denying all the stuff happens that you say, but it all happened when i was younger too, replace any desired behavior with being bullied for not being capable of it and take technology out of it.

the problem i have is with full fledged adults who act the same way online, games social media, whatever. i see more people in their 30's whining about their likes and friends on social media (ive been off since 2017 because you're right almost all of it is garbage) than i hear about young people doing it.

limiting something to 3 hours a week just puts the bullying back into a personal space, it wont go away, or those 3 hours are gonna be absolute $h!t hell if you condense all the time into that spot.

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Cydie

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This law is silly, it won't stop them from gaming. Just stop them from playing online games, there so many other game you can play without being online.

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YukoAsho

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@cydie said:

This law is silly, it won't stop them from gaming. Just stop them from playing online games, there so many other game you can play without being online.

There really isn't much of an offline gaming scene in China, owing to how pervasive software piracy is there.

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emanwell

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Edited By emanwell

As Liberty Prime would say "Communism is the definition of failure"

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esqueejy

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@emanwell: This isn't communism. It's just heavy-handed authoritarianism. Really wish people would learn what words mean....

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JanesAnsible

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@esqueejy: My dear boy it IS Communism. Take a class in political science sometime.

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deactivated-62d1b87aec423

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@JanesAnsible: Oh my god, he did it again! He cited his credentials! HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

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esqueejy

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@JanesAnsible: Not even remotely communism. Nice try. Did you take classes at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy while in undergrad at Tufts? No, you didn't and your attempt to pretend you know what you're talking about is laughable.

Just because it's a communist regime enacting the law doesn't make that law automatically "communism". The law is just basic, rank authoritarianism. There's nothing uniquely "communist" about this law.

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Erebus

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If you only do something for three hours a week, you will not become proficient. Video games were the seeds from which my career grew.

China's direction will ensure more growth in future technologies and less in entertainment.

As far as draconian governments go, it was a wise move.

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stiefjac

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@Erebus: idk i spend about a quarter of that time beating my meat every week and i'd say i'm at least a journeyman at this point

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zerojuice

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@stiefjac: Those are rookie numbers.

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Realityone

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Who knew that the fall of the Chinese Communist Party would be the revolt of young gamers. Gamers that grow up to work and run the country.

After all, the CCP and their cronies wont last forever.

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Jaxith

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@realityone: I'd really like to believe that, but there's a long and sad history of attempts made to overthrow tyranny in China failing in about the most awful ways possible.

Still, there's always hope the next generation won't just blindly repeat the mistakes of the last. So I'll hold onto that hope at least.

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