China's GAPP halts WoW review, calls collecting subscriptions "illegal behavior"

We're not sure what happens from here -- an official from the country's Ministry of Culture has also said that the suspension of the review is "not appropriate," especially since the content under review had already been approved while the game was being run by The9, which may mean that it will be overturned just as quickly as it went down (and the game will be back in business before long). On the other hand, Netease may have jumped the gun -- they've been collecting subscriptions for a while, which they apparently weren't supposed to do without official GAPP approval (and we've heard before that GAPP might just want to delay the release of foreign games as long as possible). We'll keep an eye on the issue -- most analysts are saying that despite the threats, this is just another roadbump for NetEase, and they should still be back to collecting payments for the game soon.
Update: Stranger and stranger -- NetEase has released a statement saying they've gotten no official word from GAPP outside of the official press release. When you consider that along with the Ministry of Culture's comments, it seems that the government isn't quite sure whether they're approving the content or not.
Filed under: Realm News, Patches, News items, Expansions, The Burning Crusade
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
Mister EDgAr Nov 2nd 2009 3:28PM
I'll bet my North american standard of living that that is the exact reason!
userpjx Nov 2nd 2009 3:09PM
I know the country I live in isn't perfect, but I'm glad I don't have to live with this. Just let people live their lives and play some WoW.
Leviathon Nov 2nd 2009 3:09PM
You can tell the issue the goverment has with WoW is since it's a Western made game which is something that can never change.
Let's take the changes made to the Forsaken in WoW for example. Aion which has been in China for almost a year now has MUCH more detailed undead showing all sorts of things but it has never been edited in China probably since it was created by a South Korean company.
Jack Miles Nov 2nd 2009 4:24PM
Hang on... China... South Korea... Something wrong with your reasoning there.
Raynier Nov 2nd 2009 4:34PM
I'd wager it has something more to do with the size of the bribe that Aion's operators offered the Chinese censors than the fact that the game is from South Korea.
Leviathon Nov 2nd 2009 5:00PM
Chinese officials have said in interviews they want to prevent Western thinkiung in their country so a Western game poses a much greater 'threat; to them than a game made in the East.
hoss Nov 2nd 2009 3:16PM
Crap should have purchased stock Tomorrow!
Dude Nov 2nd 2009 3:19PM
The officials way of saying 'we havent been bribed enough yet.'
RogueJedi86 Nov 2nd 2009 3:34PM
This has really gotta be hurting the WoW subscription numbers. The longer it takes for the Chinese servers to come back up, the more likely it is for the Chinese WoW players to seek out other MMOs to play since they can't play WoW easily. This has to have put a sizable dent in WoW's subscriber/population numbers. Hell, we'll probably get Cataclysm here before they get WotLK.
Leviathon Nov 2nd 2009 3:37PM
Aion is already immensely popular there.
Sammalamma Nov 2nd 2009 3:41PM
Oh Chinese government, why so fail?
Seaborn Nov 3rd 2009 11:52AM
Great article. If I had a dime for all the "Communism isn't THAT bad" comments from wow players, I would be retired already.
thebl4ckd0g Nov 2nd 2009 3:50PM
China's government sucks. I wonder why. Oh wait. Communism.
Carnagefiend Nov 2nd 2009 4:20PM
Communism? While they're being rampant Capitalists?
Oh, no sir, they're being FASCISTS. They need to maintain strict control over everything in their own country, not to mention what comes in.
Milo Nov 2nd 2009 4:59PM
More like authoritarianism. The Chinese Communist Party is Communist in name only. They are one of the most pro-business regimes around the world (assuming you have the right connections).
MightyBurebista Nov 2nd 2009 5:57PM
Were they "true" fascists, they would applaud a game like WoW, as it promotes the soldier way of life. :)
RetPallyJil Nov 2nd 2009 3:51PM
Looks like Blizzard forgot to pay some officials off.
Screw China; they're never going to get with the program.
Milo Nov 2nd 2009 5:03PM
Yeah, seriously. I would have thought that Blizzard already has cash stashed aside to get the Chinese bureaucracy moving.
Sisco Nov 2nd 2009 4:03PM
I hate to be "that guy" but ministry of culture and what not sounds an awful lot like the govt. in 1984....dun dun dun
Yeah and im as liberal as the next guy but at this moment I am proud to be an american lol
Neirin Nov 2nd 2009 4:18PM
Most countries have some sort of government organization for culture. Porky the Pig was banned by some European country (I think Sweden, but I can't remember) because he didn't wear pants. Now, China is definitely censoring their internet on an official level, but I'd still say they're closer to the EU or US than they are to, say, North Korea.