China resumes video game licensing after 8-month freeze in sign of regulatory easing
- The National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA) published a list of 45 approved new titles on Monday
- The freeze has dealt a heavy blow to the gaming industry, along with other measures aimed at bringing the sector to heel

The Chinese government has resumed licensing new video games, ending a freeze imposed last July and signalling that Beijing is now ready to ease regulatory pressure on the industry.
The National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA), which is in charge of licensing video games in China, published a list of 45 approved new titles on Monday. However, none of the newly-licensed games came from Tencent Holdings or NetEase, the country’s two biggest gaming companies.
The new games that secured approval include a number from Baidu, XD.com, Lilith Games and 37Games. The approved number of 45 is around half the 87 titles approved last July.
The NPPA traditionally publishes newly-licensed games on a monthly basis. Last year’s suspension was seen as a signal of official discontent with gaming content and the negative impact of video gaming addiction on the health of young people.
The freeze, a few days shorter than the previous record, has dealt a heavy blow to the gaming industry along with other measures aimed at bringing the sector to heel. China currently restricts gamers aged under 18 to playing between 8pm and 9pm only on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays and statutory holidays.