[UPDATE] Chinese government revokes Indievent’s business license, shuts down company - 2 minutes read
[UPDATE] Chinese government revokes Indievent's business license, shuts down company
UPDATE 10th of July 2019: Khee Hoon, a Chinese journalist, has tweeted that the Chinese government was actually “Very Specific” about why they revoked Indievent’s business license.
Khee Hoon says that the reason for Indievent’s shutdown was “definitely, 100% because of Devotion.”
They also say that Indievent apparently chose not to contest the shutdown, essentially accepting its fate.
Devotion, a Taiwanese first-person horror game, was pulled from Steam in February this year. The removal came after art was found in-game that mocked Chinese president Xi Jinping by depicting him as Winnie the Pooh.
Despite an apology from the game’s developer, Red Candle Games, Devotion never returned for sale. It now turns out that, according to an article from PCGamesN and a tweet from Iain Garner, the company who published Devotion, Indievent, has been shut down by the Chinese government.
Iain Garner, co-founder of publisher Another Indie, tweeted the following:
Garner told PCGamesN that he was ‘briefed on the news’ by his Chinese colleagues. He also said that the announcement makes no reference to what happened with Devotion and that Indievent broke ‘relevant’ laws.
It’s unlikely that Devotion will return to Steam, especially after both Indievent and Winking Entertainment (the game’s other major partner) cut ties with Red Candle Games in wake of the Steam incident.
However,as Garner also tweeted, if you want to support Red Candle Games, you can pick up their other horror title Detention on Steam for half price right now.
China are notorious for censorship of games, including the bizarre censorship of Winnie the Pooh in Kingdom Hearts 3 by simply covering him with a white light, burning every copy of The Sassoon Files RPG, and banning blood, imperial history, and Mahjong from videogames.
Source: Mspoweruser.com
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Keywords:
History of China • Xi Jinping • Winnie-the-Pooh • PCGamesN • Twitter • PCGamesN • Entertainment • Game • Candle • Candle • China • Censorship • Censorship • Winnie-the-Pooh • Kingdom Hearts III • Role-playing video game • Mahjong •
UPDATE 10th of July 2019: Khee Hoon, a Chinese journalist, has tweeted that the Chinese government was actually “Very Specific” about why they revoked Indievent’s business license.
Khee Hoon says that the reason for Indievent’s shutdown was “definitely, 100% because of Devotion.”
They also say that Indievent apparently chose not to contest the shutdown, essentially accepting its fate.
Devotion, a Taiwanese first-person horror game, was pulled from Steam in February this year. The removal came after art was found in-game that mocked Chinese president Xi Jinping by depicting him as Winnie the Pooh.
Despite an apology from the game’s developer, Red Candle Games, Devotion never returned for sale. It now turns out that, according to an article from PCGamesN and a tweet from Iain Garner, the company who published Devotion, Indievent, has been shut down by the Chinese government.
Iain Garner, co-founder of publisher Another Indie, tweeted the following:
Garner told PCGamesN that he was ‘briefed on the news’ by his Chinese colleagues. He also said that the announcement makes no reference to what happened with Devotion and that Indievent broke ‘relevant’ laws.
It’s unlikely that Devotion will return to Steam, especially after both Indievent and Winking Entertainment (the game’s other major partner) cut ties with Red Candle Games in wake of the Steam incident.
However,as Garner also tweeted, if you want to support Red Candle Games, you can pick up their other horror title Detention on Steam for half price right now.
China are notorious for censorship of games, including the bizarre censorship of Winnie the Pooh in Kingdom Hearts 3 by simply covering him with a white light, burning every copy of The Sassoon Files RPG, and banning blood, imperial history, and Mahjong from videogames.
Source: Mspoweruser.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
History of China • Xi Jinping • Winnie-the-Pooh • PCGamesN • Twitter • PCGamesN • Entertainment • Game • Candle • Candle • China • Censorship • Censorship • Winnie-the-Pooh • Kingdom Hearts III • Role-playing video game • Mahjong •