Other China Video Game Curfew

Demon_Skeith

Administrator
Staff member
Administrator
Credits
71,090
Steal Penalty
You're Rich Money Bags Award
Profile Music
A new Chinese law that went into place on Tuesday has placed extreme limits on the screen times of the nation’s youth, with everyone under the age of 18 now restricted from playing video games for longer than 90 minutes a day, or between the hours of 10pm-8am.

As the New York Times reports, China’s National Press and Publication Administration announced the changes earlier this week, which are aimed at addressing issues like video game addiction, nearsightedness and “poor academic performance across a broad swath of society”.

The curfew times apply seven days a week, while the 90-minute time limit applies Monday-Friday. On weekends, kids will be allowed three hours per day. They’ll also have to sign up for online gaming accounts using their real names and identification.

In addition to the stuff controlling time spent in front of a screen, an additional measure is also aimed at tackling the amount of money spent on DLC and microtransactions. There will now be a hard limit of between $28-$57 a month users are able to spend on items, which scales depending on how old the player is.
 
I feel banning kids from gaming at night would be hard to enforce if the kid's parents don't turn their kids into the police, or kids don't turn themselves in for gaming at 10PM-8AM.

Kids can play offline games on older handheld consoles like the Gameboy, and old consoles with no internet like the Playstation 1, and mini consoles like the Nes mini. There are also VPN, and porxy connections and privacy software like private web browsers and private operating systems for hiding people's online activity.
 
Back
Top