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A game about sheep is going viral in China even as gaming regulation remains tight

A young Beijing company's game called "Sheep a Sheep" went viral in China in September 2022.
Evelyn Cheng | CNBC

BEIJING — A new game that's gone viral in China hit people's screens with surprising speed at a time when gaming giants such as NetEase have waited months for approval to launch games.

That's because the new game, called Sheep a Sheep, sits inside ByteDance's Douyin and Tencent's messaging app WeChat as a mini-program. Users can play the game within the apps.

"WeChat and ByteDance don't currently require a game license to publish their HTML5 games on their platforms," said Rich Bishop, CEO of AppInChina, which publishes international software in China.

"But this is likely to change over the next few months as enforcement of existing regulations intensifies," he said.

HTML5 games are built with coding tools similar to those used for websites and can be easily distributed across platforms.

WeChat and ByteDance did not respond to a CNBC request for comment.

Sheep a Sheep just went viral these past few days. Very fresh to everyone, especially regulators.
Brian Tycangco
analyst, Stansberry Research

WeChat's mini-program guidelines for online games did not include a specific requirement for a game license. The document did call for qualification certificates required based on game category.

As for ByteDance, it wasn't immediately clear from online developer guidelines, but an administrator';s response to an official online forum query last year stated that a license wasn't mandatory for games that didn't have in-app purchases.

Approvals for gaming software

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Piqued curiosity

Part of Sheep a Sheep's allure is a sense of challenge — a puzzle the developer claims has a 0.1% success rate — and competition.

The game requires players to eliminate tiles of the same category in groups of three. People who succeed win a cartoon sheep that then joins a virtual herd based on the player';s region, thereby boosting the ranking of the player';s province.

"Many people have never [had] such game experience before," Wang said. "From very, very easy to very, very difficult, they heard different people on social media talking about that, that generated a lot of curiosity, 'Why is this so hard?' That's why it's so unique."

Anecdotally, the number of this reporter's WeChat contacts who'd tried the mini-program game roughly tripled over one September weekend to nearly 300. The following weekend, two of six people on a bench in a Beijing subway car were seen playing the game.

"Sheep a Sheep just went viral these past few days. Very fresh to everyone, especially regulators," Brian Tycangco, analyst at Stansberry Research, said in email last week.

"So the impact isn't that clear yet," he said. "People might lose interest in it just as fast as they were attracted."

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/09/28/a-sheep-game-is-going-viral-in-china-despite-tight-gaming-regulation.html


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