NetEase, Blizzard to End Deal That Brought Warcraft to China

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NetEase, Blizzard to End Deal That Brought Warcraft to China​

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NetEase Inc. and Blizzard Entertainment Inc. plan to end their 14-year partnership after January, depriving the Chinese firm of a major revenue source and suspending service for some of the country’s most popular games.

The Hangzhou-based publishing giant and Activision Blizzard Inc. subsidiary failed to agree on an extension to their long-running collaboration, which had brought famed franchises like StarCraft, Diablo, Overwatch and World of Warcraft to Chinese players. Blizzard will suspend most online game services in mainland China from Jan. 23, the US company said on Wednesday. Game sales will also halt in the coming days.

Beyond financial terms, key sticking points to the NetEase extension were ownership of intellectual property and control of the data of millions of players across China, people familiar with the discussions said. The people spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks weren’t public.

Growing political tensions between the US and China have made user data a thorny issue. Short-video platform TikTok, run by China’s ByteDance Ltd., has been criticized by American politicians as a national security threat and is having to show a firewall between its US users and any China-based operations.

Originally signed in 2008 and last renewed in 2019, the distribution accord has been fruitful for both companies, feeding NetEase with globally recognized hits and giving Activision a gateway into the world’s biggest PC and mobile gaming arena. China contributed at least 3% of Activision’s net revenue in 2021 and is a significant driver of future growth. It accounted for over $400 million in esports revenue last year and more than 400 million fans. Blizzard has several competitive gaming organizations, such as the Overwatch League, that include Chinese teams.

Signs of a rift between the two sides emerged in the summer when they scrapped plans for a World of Warcraft smartphone game that had been in development for three years. NetEase disbanded a team of more than 100 developers tasked with creating content for the title. Activision warned in its earnings release this month that “a mutually-satisfactory deal may not be reached” for extending its licensing agreements in China.

Without finding an alternative partner, Activision is unlikely to be able to continue its China business. It’s unclear if the company has engaged in negotiations with domestic leader Tencent Holdings Ltd. or another local distributor.

China’s internet sector has been radically reconfigured in recent years by a broad government crackdown that put stricter limits on gaming time for youths and halted licensing of new games for months. Still, NetEase was this summer able to successfully release Diablo Immortal, a mobile role-playing game tapping one of Blizzard’s prized assets. Players will still be able to play Immortal in China after January because that game is subject to a separate long-term deal.

Collaboration with China’s big two of game publishing, NetEase and Tencent, has been the most reliable way for foreign companies to enter and stay in the Chinese market. Nintendo Co., for instance, uses Tencent as its local distributor for the Switch console and software. Even with Tencent’s help, however, Epic Games Inc. last year gave up on its multiyear effort to bring its best-known game, online shooter Fortnite, to the market after failing to get regulator approval.
 
Trump was right about banning Tiktok and basically Tencent in general. One of the major things I wish he had done. This should be considered how it would look for a western nation/company to work with the USSR in the 60s. Same communist shit.
When the list of people going to E3 2019 was leaked, there were a bunch of Tencent employees on the list. A good chunk were in California.
 
Means jack shit since Microsoft is going to take over next year
The deal hasn't gone through mainly cause the Chinese involvement with Activision blizzard didn't want them to sell. Mark my words the deal will be done by June of next year
 
What I wonder is what will the result of this be with investors. Blizzard has used the chinese subscriber numbers to make it look like WOW hasn't been dying for years.
 
Is kinda hilarious all the pandering they did to the chinese going down in flames, Diablo inmortal exist exclusively for them and now they get nothing
 
This is actually terrible, without their own servers they will be playing on our servers instead. Nothing worse than playing with the Chinese.
 
man too little too late for bliz on my end. I was hardcore into pretty much every game they released fom the early days of warcraft 1/diablo 1, all the way through all the starcraft 2 expansions. I played wow from the beta into cataclysm without missing a monthly payment, and even after that was still around for at least 6 months or so for each expansion untill draenor which I missed, but played a bit durring legion. I was becoming a bit more jaded with how the company was behaving. Then I completely deleted my battlenet account durring the blitzchung incident back in 2019, losing access to a number of the games I purchased digitally, but I never even wanted the temptation to give that company money ever again. I'm sure I am not the only person with a story like mine out there. went from one of their biggest fans to despising them because they just had to gargle the ccp's balls. now if they lose out of china, it'll be interesting to see just how much they've shrunk
 
All of that suck-up to China was for nothing in the end. LOL
Not even Daddy China wanted Blizzard anymore.
I think they had more players than in the US, a Blizzard employee in 2019 said they made up like 70% of the playerbase.

But then they also did stuff like having people pay by the hour since a lot of people would game at internet cafes or whatever, which makes me think they couldn't sell expansions. Then you also have China wanting to limit the number of hours kids can play video games, which means a cap on how much all game companies could earn there. May just seem nuts to bother with all the bullshit seeing as it only helped with 3% of their profits.
 
China won't let them show skeletons. Some weird Asian superstition about corpses
I tried looking this up and I could never get a clear answer. It's either a superstition or they're altered so they look less spooky (not memeing, that is apparently a reason).
 
Like TikTok isn't gathering info where whoever the Chinese has, can just compile it into a nice file and email it to their people in China. The USA had the perfect opportunity to get rid of it by citing National Defense with all the retarded military kids on it; but okay, just present proof of a firewall and it's fine. And we already know that Chinese companies (or at least one with sizable Chinese influence) send the data back home already; so no one should be able to play dumb about this.
Too bad, if a retard wants to sign his data away to a Chinese company there's no reason that should be illegal. The reverse is also true for other countries.
 
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