Video game approvals may have resumed in China but poker and mahjong are out in the cold

  • In the first quarter, Chinese regulators approved 795 domestic video games, none of which came from the poker and mahjong genre
  • The world’s biggest video gaming market was once full of low-budget poker games

China’s video game market has been packed with low-budget, nearly identical card and board games, where players can use real money as chips for gambling – this in a country where gambling is illegal. Photo: Reuters

It looks like China’s government has crossed poker and mahjong games off the approvals list as regulators this week gave the green light to another batch of new video games after a nine-month halt last year, signalling stricter controls over online gambling.

In the first quarter this year, Chinese censors approved the launch of 795 domestic video games, none of which were from the poker and mahjong genre. That compares to 962 approved poker games, or nearly 50 per cent of the total, in the same period a year ago, according to government data tracked by gaming research firm Niko Partners.
Print option is available for subscribers only.
SUBSCRIBE NOW
Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.