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Apple Removes 39,000 Game Apps from China Store

Apple removed 39,000 game apps on its China store Thursday, the biggest removal ever in a single day, as it set year-end as deadline for all game publishers to obtain a licence. 

The takedowns come amid a crackdown on unlicensed games by Chinese authorities. 

Including the 39,000 games, Apple removed more than 46,000 apps in total from its store on Thursday. Games affected by the sweep included Ubisoft title Assassin’s Creed Identity and NBA 2K20, according to research firm Qimai. 

Qimai also said only 74 of the top 1,500 paid games on Apple store survived the purge. 

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Apple initially gave game publishers an end-of-June deadline to submit a government-issued licence number enabling users to make in-app purchases in the world’s biggest games market. 

Apple later extended the deadline to Dec. 31. 

China’s Android app stores have long complied with regulations on licences. It is not clear why Apple is enforcing them more strictly this year. 

Analysts said the move was no surprise as Apple continues to close loopholes to fall in line with China’s content regulators, and would not directly affect Apple’s bottom line as much as previous removals. 

“However, this major pivot to only accepting paid games that have a game licence, coupled with China’s extremely low number of foreign game licences approved this year, will probably lead more game developers to switch to an ad-supported model for their Chinese versions,” said Todd Kuhns, marketing manager for AppInChina, a firm that helps overseas companies distribute their apps. 

Apple Removes 39,000 Game Apps from China Store

The takedowns come amid a crackdown on unlicensed games by Chinese authorities. 

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Apple removed 39,000 game apps on its China store Thursday, the biggest removal ever in a single day, as it set year-end as deadline for all game publishers to obtain a licence. 

The takedowns come amid a crackdown on unlicensed games by Chinese authorities. 

Including the 39,000 games, Apple removed more than 46,000 apps in total from its store on Thursday. Games affected by the sweep included Ubisoft title Assassin’s Creed Identity and NBA 2K20, according to research firm Qimai. 

Qimai also said only 74 of the top 1,500 paid games on Apple store survived the purge. 

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

Apple initially gave game publishers an end-of-June deadline to submit a government-issued licence number enabling users to make in-app purchases in the world’s biggest games market. 

Apple later extended the deadline to Dec. 31. 

China’s Android app stores have long complied with regulations on licences. It is not clear why Apple is enforcing them more strictly this year. 

Analysts said the move was no surprise as Apple continues to close loopholes to fall in line with China’s content regulators, and would not directly affect Apple’s bottom line as much as previous removals. 

“However, this major pivot to only accepting paid games that have a game licence, coupled with China’s extremely low number of foreign game licences approved this year, will probably lead more game developers to switch to an ad-supported model for their Chinese versions,” said Todd Kuhns, marketing manager for AppInChina, a firm that helps overseas companies distribute their apps. 

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