Previously: In 2024, China Began Their Domination of the Video Game Industry
Yesterday, I wrote about how China had dominated the video game industry in 2024, and noted that the US would not doubt seek to stop this development. Video games are a 200 billion dollar industry, significantly bigger that films.
Further, if China were to dominate the global industry, this would not only mean massive economic losses for the US and allied homosexual states, but also a mean a loss of the ability to use games to influence culture. For over a decade, video games have been pushing an extremist Jewish agenda, featuring homosexuals, empowered women, and other sexual deviancies. The top video games from China all tap into the historically popular video game tropes, which involved masculinity and adventure. If there are women at all, they are attractive, in keeping with the fact that video games are a fantasy. The loss of the ability to force homosexuals and ugly women on white men is a bigger loss for the American Overlords than a few hundred billion.
While I mused that the Americans would no doubt try to stop Chinese video games, I noted that I didn’t know how they would do it. Shame on me for being so naive. Of course they are able to simply declare Chinese video game companies a military threat and then sanction them, preventing Steam and other Western game stores from distributing these games.
The U.S. Defense Department has added dozens of Chinese companies, including games and technology company Tencent, artificial intelligence firm SenseTime and the world’s biggest battery maker CATL, to a list of companies it says have ties to China’s military.In recent years, Washington has sought to restrict sharing of advanced technology, including semiconductors and AI, deeming it to be a threat to national security.
The U.S. Defense Department updates its list of “Chinese Military Companies,” or CMC list, annually. With the latest revision, it includes 134 companies. The National Defense Authorization Act of 2024 bans the Defense Department from dealing with the designated companies beginning in June 2026.
Tencent’s Hong Kong-traded shares fell 7.3% on Tuesday and the company said it would “initiate a reconsideration process to correct this mistake,” seek talks with the U.S. Defense Department and if need be take legal measures to get it removed from the list. Tencent is the world’s largest video gaming company and operates Chinese messaging platform WeChat.
“As the company is neither a Chinese military company nor a military-civil fusion contributor to the Chinese defense industrial base, it believes that its inclusion in the CMC List is a mistake,” Tencent said in an announcement to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
“Mistake,” haha.
Chinese people are so innocent.
“Unlike other lists maintained by the U.S. Government for sanctions or export control measures, inclusion in the CMC List relates only to U.S. defense procurement, which does not affect the business of the Group,” it said.Battery maker CATL said in a statement posted on its website that the company “has never engaged in any military-related business or activities,” and said that the designation wouldn’t have adverse impact on its operations.
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AI company SenseTime said in a statement that the decision to include it on the list had “no factual basis.”
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During a daily news briefing, Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesperson Guo Jiakun urged the U.S. to “immediately correct its wrong practices, and lift the illegal unilateral sanctions and long-arm jurisdiction on Chinese companies.”
“China consistently and firmly opposes the U.S. overstretching the concept of national security, creating discriminatory lists under various pretexts, and unwarrantedly suppressing Chinese companies, hindering China’s high-quality development,” Guo said.
Obviously, this has nothing to do with the military. With an AI company, or even a battery company, maybe you could argue that you put them on a list so the military doesn’t buy their products. But the Defense Department is not buying video games.
To be fair, China does ban US entertainment media companies from doing business in China if the companies are promoting values opposed to Chinese values, such as homosexuality and feminism. Disney regularly has films banned by China because they promote “gay anal sex” to children. Obviously, China doesn’t claim it’s a military issue, which clearly doesn’t even make sense.
Basically, US authorities just wanted TenCent on some kind of sanctions list, as this will allow them to act in the future to sanction them, which will prevent American companies such as Steam from selling their products.
TenCent owns 100% of both Riot Games, which produces League of Legends, and Grinding Gears, which produces Path of Exile and its recently released sequel.
They also own significant percentages of various Western game companies. As Western companies continue to decline, they will likely do hostile takeovers of some of these companies and start producing better games. For example, in 2022, they acquired 30% of Ubisoft, despite the fact that this company is failing miserably and many or most of their games are too gay to be legal in China (with the exception of the Tom Clancy stuff and maybe FarCry, everything they make now is gayed out). It’s rather obvious that they are setting up for a complete takeover of the company, at which point they will use the companies properties to make popular games again.
Editor’s Note: Personally, I’m stoked about their 30% of Larian, as if they can get control of a bit more of it in the next few years, they can prevent Divinity 3 from going the route of Baldur’s Gate 3 with the gay/sex stuff. Neither Divinity 1 or 2 had gay stuff (or ugly women), so it’s clear that BG3’s gay material was ordered by Wizards of the Coast, and no one wants that in Divinity 3.
Western games are an absolute disaster. Look at this:
America is trying to create a situation where you don’t have any choice. You have to play that or just sit by yourself trying to deal with your own miserable thoughts.
The US will not tolerate freedoms. You have to have trannies. The entire media threw an absolute fit over Black Myth: Wukong in 2024, with game reviewers actually giving it a lower score based on the fact it did not include trannies.
Look at this review from ScreenRant:
With one of the markdowns being “lacking in inclusivity and diversity,” they game it a 3/5! Further, they claimed it has “repetitive gameplay,” which would make one wonder if they’d ever played a soulslike before.
The entire Jew media claimed that the game was “controversial,” even while the only people who found it controversial were the media itself.
The media does this constantly: they refer to their own outrage over a thing as meaning that the thing is “controversial.”
The game was anything but “controversial” among actual players. On Steam, it has a rating of “overwhelmingly positive,” with 96% of players recommending the game.
Although Tencent only holds a 5% share in Wukong developer Game Science, they played a big role in getting it funded.
Will the US Government Really Ban Chinese Video Games Outright?
Clearly, putting Tencent on the DoD list is a setup for a sanctions regime that will ban Chinese video games from being sold to Americans. Whether or not they will actually do it is another question, of course.
The government has struggled to ban TikTok, and it’s not clear if that is going to happen or not. The ban is scheduled to be implemented on January 19, as Joe Biden set it up to be banned the day before Trump takes office. Trump has acted the government to wait, as he now says he doesn’t want it banned. However, you’ll remember that he tried to ban it himself when he was in office the first time, so he clearly doesn’t have any particular opposition to censoring speech because it’s Chinese.
There’s no real way to predict what the US government will do, but there are definitely going to be huge calls for banning these games, and there will no doubt be Congressional hearings about how video games with no trannies are corrupting the youth. I mean that seriously. They will do a full moral panic about “video games teaching kids that diversity is not a core value,” a sort of reverse of the “violent video games” panic of the 1990s. (In the 90s, women were against boys enjoying violence, now women are much more concerned about boys not becoming trannies.)
You never know how these things will shake out, but remember that the US government has already banned Chinese EVs, which are cheaper and superior to Tesla, despite claiming that we need EVs to change the weather, and banned Chinese phones, which are cheaper and superior to the iPhone, despite people complaining that iPhone is too expensive and it sucks.
Trump has talked a lot about protectionism, so it’s possible that a ban on video games would come from that angle.
What I will say is that TikTok is the main priority now, because not only are they Chinese, they are allowing video of Jewish war crimes, which every American company suppresses. If they successfully ban TikTok, I would expect a war on Chinese video games coming soon. However, as long as TikTok is able to stick around, I think you’re going to be able to play these superior Chinese video games, and it’s possible that the US Empire will not last long enough to get around to banning games without trannies.
From my cold, dead hands!