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Home»Game»How Chinese Online Retailers Get Around Game Bans
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How Chinese Online Retailers Get Around Game Bans

Loknath DasBy Loknath DasFebruary 8, 2019No Comments2 Mins Read
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Violent games keep getting banned in China. Last month, as r/gamingpointed out, China banned nine games and forced changes on 11 more. Many gory games have no chance of release. To slip past the country’s draconian censors, Chinese online retailers must get creative.

According to website Abacus, Taobao sellers have been trying to skirt around the bans with pseudonyms and hand-drawn box art.

Website Automaton Media reports that the game is being sold with titles like “Shoot And See: Remake 2″ and “Capcom Remake 2.”

Screenshot: Baidu

Gory and scary? No, Resident Evil 2 is adorable and nice. Sorry, I meant “First Day of Work at the Police Station: Remake Version.”

Screenshot: Taobao

Other workarounds include using art from Plants vs Zombies when selling RE2 or selling the survival horror remake as “Little Nightmares 2,” using box art from Little Nightmares.

Image: Taobao, Abacus

This kind of thing is not new. Online retailers in China have been trying to fly under the ethics board radar for years.

For example, the uncensored version of Diablo III has been sold as “Demon Buddy” or, as Kotaku previously reported, “Big Pineapple.”

Screenshot: Taobao

In Chinese, a big pineapple is “dà bōluó”, which sounds like Diablo. Chinese officials monitoring online retail sites would search using the game’s official Chinese name, which translates to “Dark God of Destruction”, and not “big pineapple.” That is, until all the Chinese game sites began covering the ruse.

Abacus adds that other pseudonyms include selling the banned Battlefield 4 as “Boyfriend Storm.”

These fake titles are great fun! Super strict ratings boards aren’t.

 

[“source=kotaku”]

 

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Loknath Das

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