Tencent
Revealed: Documents Show How Roblox Planned to Bend to Chinese Censorship
Filtering games. Blocking maps with Taiwan. Handling "historical facts." Roblox was prepared to go all in on Chinese censorship, according to newly released internal documents.
Inside The ‘World’s Largest’ Video Game Cheating Empire
The cheat-making group known as "Chicken Drumstick" made more than $70 million selling cheats for PUBG Mobile. This is the story of its rise and fall.
Chinese Police Dismantle ‘World’s Largest’ Video Game Cheating Operation
Working along with tech giant Tencent, police arrested 10 people and seized more than $70 million as part of a clampdown on a massive video game cheating ring.
Here's How China Is Hunting Down Coronavirus Critics
Post something about coronavirus online? Expect a visitor at your door.
Here’s How China Is Silencing Coronavirus Critics in the U.S.
As Chinese tech companies have gone global, so has China’s ability to censor communications outside of the mainland.
PUBG Will Now Impose a 10-Year Ban on Any Player Caught Cheating
After banning more than 30,000 players last year, PUBG has now developed tools and technologies to identify users engaging in unfair practices.
Tencent Replaces 'PUBG' in China With More Patriotic 'Game for Peace'
'Game for Peace' is reportedly very similar to 'PUBG' and 'pays tribute to the blue sky warriors that guard our country’s airspace.'
"Game of Thrones" fans in China missed out on 6 minutes of sex and gore
But — spoiler alert! — they saw the ending before U.S. fans did
How China’s Food Industry Became a Tech Battleground
Search engine operator Baidu and Tencent, the company behind WeChat, already dominate China’s tech world. Now, they have their sights set on robot restaurants and food delivery.
Tencent Will Require Players’ Real Names to Limit Play Time
China’s largest video game company will restrict the play time of underage players by checking their names against a Beijing database.
China turned clapping for its president into a virtual game
The Chinese government won’t let its citizens Google search, like a Facebook post, or watch a YouTube video — but if people want to virtually clap for their president’s speech, a new game them covered.