Opinion | Hong Kong’s co-hosting of National Games is about much more than sport
It’s also a chance to display Greater Bay Area cooperation and a powerful lesson in civic pride for Hong Kong youth

This year marks the first time that Hong Kong, together with Guangdong and Macau, will co-host the Games. It’s a powerful step forward for the Greater Bay Area, not just in sports cooperation, but in soft power and civic connection. It is already shaping new experiences for Hong Kong’s next generation, from students and athletes to volunteers.
These are just the start. With Kai Tak Sports Park expected to look at hosting more than 100 large-scale events annually to remain commercially viable, the National Games will be an anchor event. Beyond headline numbers, the Games will offer something more enduring: a test of whether Hong Kong can be a regional convenor, not just a competitor.
The impact will not just be economic, but cultural as well. The 15,000 local volunteers are not only being trained in event logistics but also exposed to systems-level thinking, sustainability and problem-solving. These are skills that go a long way in Hong Kong’s events economy.
