China remains the world’s largest e-sports market despite gaming crackdown

China remains the world’s largest e-sports market despite gaming crackdown


Revenue for China’s e-sports market grew 14% year-on-year in 2021 despite a tough regulatory environment for gaming in the world’s second-largest economy, according to a new report from intelligence firm Niko Partners.

E-sports refers to professional gaming where gamers often play each other in big tournaments and fans watch via live streams.

China remains the largest single-country market in the world with $403.1 million in e-sports revenue in 2021, Niko Partners said in a report published Thursday.

“What China has is [a] sort of advantage in the e-sports space, is a really phenomenally large market with a really huge population of gamers that are interested in e-sports content … in becoming e-sports professionals themselves,” Alexander Champlin, head e-sports at Niko Partners, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Thursday.

China continues to grow despite a tougher line on gaming from the regulators. Last year, Beijing introduced rules that limits the amount of time under 18s can play online video games — to up to three hours per week.

Chinese regulators also froze the approvals of new games for distribution and monetization between July 2021 and April this year.

The impact has been felt by China’s biggest gaming companies NetEase and Tencent.

While the e-sports market has held up well, Champlin cautioned there could be some impact on the future of professional gaming in China.

“What these regulations do particularly around youth gaming is really kind of clamp down on e-sports player pipelines. So while there is still a lot of excitement around e-sports titles, e-sports celebrities, we’re a little concerned about what this will do for future generations of e-sports fans and e-sports professionals … and what this might do for China’s historical dominance in the space,” Champlin told CNBC.

Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

Despite the broader crackdown on young people playing games, there appears to be government support for e-sports. Last year, the major city of Shanghai broke ground on a 500,000 square meters e-sports arena.

Japan and South Korea are the two other large markets in Asia for e-sports revenue.

While China continues to dominate, there are other regions and countries that are growing faster.

E-sports revenue in greater southeast Asia totaled $80.1 million in 2021, up 27.3% year-on-year. India saw e-sports revenue grow $20.3 million last year, a 26% rise over 2020.

“It’s [India] a huge market and it’s historically been undervalued as a sort of dollar-to-participant ratio,” Champlin said.

“What that means is as the purchasing power of Indians goes up, as the market is more heavily saturated by smartphones, the potential player base and audience base expands dramatically. What we are also seeing is a lot of investment from the key players in the Indian games market,” he added.



Source

Behind Anthropic’s stunning growth is a sibling team that may hold the key to generative AI
Technology

Behind Anthropic’s stunning growth is a sibling team that may hold the key to generative AI

SAN FRANCISCO — Daniela Amodei has an energy that’s hard to place — warm, unhurried, immediately present. She swept into a sunlit room on the ground floor of Anthropic’s headquarters in December, sat down, and immediately apologized for her mug. “Is my, like, gigantic novelty mug going to be distracting if I have it?” she […]

Read More
Are we in an AI bubble? What 40 tech leaders and analysts are saying, in one chart
Technology

Are we in an AI bubble? What 40 tech leaders and analysts are saying, in one chart

Are we in an artificial intelligence bubble? It’s the debate that dominated the tech industry in 2025, and it’s not going away anytime soon. Record valuations and deals driven by major investments in artificial intelligence have fueled the AI boom, leaving some to brace for the potential burst. AI leaders like OpenAI and Nvidia have […]

Read More
Oracle announces departure of two oldest directors, narrowing board to 12
Technology

Oracle announces departure of two oldest directors, narrowing board to 12

George Conrades, then chairman and CEO of Akamai Technologies, listens during a meeting of the National Infrastructure Advisory Council in Washington on April 13, 2004. Jay Mallin | Bloomberg | Getty Images Oracle said Friday that two longtime directors, both octogenarians, have resigned from the board. George Conrades, former CEO of content network distribution company […]

Read More