BEIJING: Each generation of children has their popular games, be it a football match in the playground or jigsaw puzzle. As digital times arrived, online video games began to take the spotlight.
But it has a dark side — online gaming is far more addictive than its predecessors, and it has become a global challenge, as any kid who has access to a mobile device and the internet can fall victim.
China has roughly 158 million internet users aged between six and 19, accounting for 15.7 percent of the country’s total netizens.
The Chinese government this week took a bold step against the malaise of gaming addiction, rolling out tough measures to limit the minors’ gaming exposure, raising eyebrows and winning applause from home and abroad.
Dubbed the “strictest-ever” regulations targeting online gaming, the rules announced by the National Press and Publication Administration (NPPA) stipulate that online game providers can only offer one-hour services to minors from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, as well as on official holidays.
It requires strict implementation of real-name registration and logins, saying that online game providers must not provide any form of game service to users who fail to register and log in using their real identifications.
Buoyed by huge private investment, China’s gaming industry witnessed a boom in recent years, but the problem of addiction has also drawn huge attention from parents, educators and society at large, calling for government action to curtail the influence of capital. Data from the China Internet Network Information Center showed that the annual revenue of China’s gaming industry surged to 278.7 billion yuan (about 43 billion U.S. dollars) in 2020, up 20.71 percent from the previous year. The sector of mobile gaming contributed to over 75 percent of the total revenue.
With poor self-control, kids and adolescents are vulnerable to losing themselves in the virtual world, child psychologists said.
A research report on the internet usage by minors in 2020 revealed that “more than 60 percent of underage netizens frequently play games online, with mobile gaming making up for 56 percent.”
Observers have warned that online gaming addiction has adverse effects on kids, affecting their physical and mental health as well as academic performances, stirring up tensions between them and their parents, and even increasing the risk of youth crime.
“It’s time for our country to head-on address this problem,” said Tong Lihua, director of the Beijing Children’s Legal Aid and Research Center, adding that the latest move is a response to the unchecked profit-seeking nature of the gaming industry that banks on the high possibility of incurring addiction.
Tong called on internet service providers to take more responsibility for minor protection. “The enterprises should not develop at the expense of the interests and growth of the next generation,” he said. Calling for efforts from all sectors of society, the NPPA said it will guide gaming providers to join hands with parents and schools to jointly build a sound environment for children’s development.
– The Daily Mail-China Daily News exchange item