PUBG on mobile has been out and about in China for quite some time now but its rival Rules of Survival has been successful in preventing this event from happening for a while by imitating the exact PUBG experience on smart devices. But PUBG mobile was as inevitable as eating food when you are hungry. …
NetEase, Inc. (NASDAQ: NTES), one of China's leading internet services providers and video game developers, is excited to announce the opening of its newest studio in Montréal, Canada
Hopefulluy it provide jobs for Canadians and hopefully won't be used to "defend the pride of their nation" or whatever that ridiculous comment was.
@xTonyMontana "Sorry not aimed at you but rather Netease and China's propaganda."
- Ah, now I follow. Well, I don't support them or Blizzard with my money...
@Godmars290 "The sickening though though is the 'free" market being so willing an eager to said freedoms to a government intent on taking them away degrees at a time. That such a result was/is only obvious."
- When China is involved in something, then there's always an agenda behind it all...So, yes, this was their end goal from day one (they want to use video games as a propaganda total and to push censorship all over the world).
PUBG Corp tells PGC teams that they will not be getting in-game skins.
Patch 27 adds an epic new weapon!
Who cares about mobile games anymore