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China society
People & CultureSocial Welfare

Tencent updates system that kicks off 17.84 million kid gamers per day with ‘midnight patrol’

  • Under Chinese law, it is illegal for kids to game between 10pm and 8am
  • But kids have found many clever loopholes to circumvent restrictions

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Tencent is integrating a system that tries to pinpoint kids who are violating Chinese laws regulating the time allowed playing mobile games. Photo: AFP
Kevin McSpadden

Imagine, if you will, a neighbourhood watch patrolling cyberspace in the dead of night, searching out ne’er-do-wells lurking in the dead of night.

Except, these culprits sneaking around are kids, using an adult’s accounts to play games at night and skirt China’s anti-gaming addiction rules.
On Tuesday, the Chinese gaming giant Tencent launched an update to its neighbourhood watch with a programme called “midnight patrol”, which aims to seek out accounts that may be kids, and then use facial recognition technology to verify their identity.
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‘Honour of Kings’ is a game that has been on the forefront of Tencent’s facial recognition technology. Photo: Bloomberg
‘Honour of Kings’ is a game that has been on the forefront of Tencent’s facial recognition technology. Photo: Bloomberg

The new updates will be rolled out for 60 titles, such as Honour of Kings, one of the most successful mobile games in history, and Game For Peace, the slightly altered Chinese version of PUBG Mobile.

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In a post on WeChat, Tencent said: “For accounts that have been played at night for more than a certain period of time, and whose real names are adults, we will conduct a focused face screening”.

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