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Addicted teenage China online gamer wipes out father’s US$28,000 savings in 3 months, turns spotlight on wider societal problem

  • Boy, 15, gambles online with family money, salaries, sister’s bride price received after wedding
  • Father heartbroken, cannot work, broke legs in work accident last year

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An online gambling game addicted teenager in China has wiped out his father’s life savings of US$28,000 by betting on his phone, in a story that has turned the spotlight on a wider societal problem. Photo: SCMP composite/Shutterstock
Fran Luin Beijing

A teenager in China who developed a chronic habit for an online gambling game and spent his family’s entire 200,000-yuan (US$28,000) savings on it has highlighted the problem of adolescent internet addiction in the country.

In March, a man in central China’s Henan province sought help from a local television programme, Xiaoli to the Rescue, to retrieve his savings.

The man, surnamed Cheng, said his 15-year-old son had gambled family money, including 30,000 yuan in salaries and the 170,000-yuan bride price received from his daughter’s newlywed husband, on a lottery game in the short video app Kuaishou.

Bride price is a traditional Chinese wedding custom in which the groom’s family pays the bride’s family a large sum of money.

The 15-year-old boy kneels in front of his father in apology for squandering the man’s savings. Photo: Douyin
The 15-year-old boy kneels in front of his father in apology for squandering the man’s savings. Photo: Douyin

The boy admitted he had lost all the money in just three months, after becoming hooked on the game.

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