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Thread: Chinese Counterfeits, Fakes & Knock-Offs

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  1. #1
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    Fake Chinese Lesbian Billionaires

    The Story About A Chinese Lesbian Billionaire Couple Is Very, Very Fake
    "That WJSN lesbian billionaires fake news tweet saved 2017."
    Posted on April 29, 2017, at 3:26 a.m.
    Kassy Cho
    BuzzFeed News Reporter
    Ikran Dahir
    BuzzFeed News Reporter

    A tweet about two lesbian Chinese billionaires who got married and became the world's richest couple alive has gone viral.

    [BREAKING] Lesbian Chinese Billionaires, Meng Mei Qi and Wu Xuan Yi, marry. Making them the richest couple alive.
    4:00 PM - 26 Apr 2017
    23,281 23,281 Retweets 39,148 39,148 likes
    The news that Meng Mei Qi and Wu Xuan Yi were married was shared by thousands of people, including former Disney Channel star Debby Ryan.


    Twitter: @DebbyRyan
    People were shook.


    Twitter: @alocalteen


    Twitter: @SpellmanNaomi


    Twitter: @chel_c_cam

    Just one problem, Meng and Wu are not a couple, and nor are they billionaires. They are, however, members of the South Korean-Chinese band Cosmic Girls, also known as WJSN.

    instagram.com

    The photo of Meng and Wu was taken earlier this week at the Beijing International Film Festival, and uploaded by fellow WJSN member Xuan Yi on to her Weibo page.


    weibo.com

    And the story was put together by K-pop fans, who, as it appears, were just trying to promote their faves.


    Twitter: @misswujuniverse

    The teenager behind the original tweet, Abby Fry, told BuzzFeed News that she came up with the joke because she thought it would amuse ujungs, WJSN's fan group, and never expected it to go so big.
    'I thought they looked like they were at a wedding with the dresses they were wearing and the dresses sure looked expensive,' Fry said.She said that she thought people would fact-check first, but added that it 'just shows the power of what we want to happen.'
    Twitter: @merrymeiqi
    "I thought they looked like they were at a wedding with the dresses they were wearing and the dresses sure looked expensive," Fry said.
    She said that she thought people would fact-check first, but added that it "just shows the power of what we want to happen."
    Stans obviously found it hilarious.


    Twitter: @misswujuniverse

    And continued with their top-notch trolling.




    Twitter: @floweryflesh


    Twitter: @rapkays
    continued next post
    Gene Ching
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    Continued from previous post

    They even shared pictures of the "happy couple".


    Twitter: @floweryflesh
    Follow
    av �� @greyjinsook
    good night i love the richest couple alive ����
    9:20 PM - 27 Apr 2017
    22 22 Retweets 24 24 likes
    The plot escalated with an equally fake murder.
    View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
    Follow
    宇宙少女48�� @uzzucam
    mei qi murdered her husband, married a girl,and became the richest gay couple alive she really did that
    2:52 PM - 27 Apr 2017
    29,714 29,714 Retweets 40,761 40,761 likes
    And that they had ~history~.


    Twitter: @greyjinsook

    They also didn't forget to promote their album.


    Twitter: @rootsmihyun

    People are praising the stans for pulling off the ultimate scam.


    Twitter: @nyakutagawa

    But it wasn't long before people caught onto the joke.


    Twitter: @ohmomona

    And are now spreading the word.


    Twitter: @prismwaves

    Which left some very disappointed.


    Twitter: @currypuffs

    Ujungs, however, feel that the joke has saved 2017.


    Twitter: @Suendenfall

    Kassy Cho is a reporter with BuzzFeed New
    I know, I know, really random news post. I just wanted to make a post with the heading 'Fake Chinese Lesbian Billionaires'[/QUOTE]
    Gene Ching
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  3. #3
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    Fake Wedding Guests

    Freakin Commies. Why, in America, we wouldn't oppress weddings for fakery. No, not for fakery.

    Chinese groom arrested for inviting 200 fake guests to wedding
    David Curran Updated 3:45 pm, Tuesday, May 2, 2017


    Weddings are a tradition that dates too far back to really know and every culture around the world has a different way to do their own version of the ceremony.Continue clicking to learn about wedding traditions from around the world. Photo: Europa Press/Europa Press Via Getty

    In an ominous sign for the marriage ahead, a man in China was arrested for hiring 200 people to come to his wedding and pretend they were his friends and family. The people who called the authorities on him were his new in-laws.
    Why would someone hire "actors" to come to his wedding in the first place? According to the BBC, his new wife's family objected to the marriage because he was from a poor family. So, in order to save his family from being shamed, he just didn't invite them.
    The ruse does not seem to have lasted very long. It wasn't just that the people paid to show up all said they were "just friends" with the groom, but also once the ceremony started, the groom's parents were nowhere to be found.
    Soon after, the police were apparently called and the groom arrested. But what crime was actually committed by his fakery is unclear.
    In interviews with a regional news station, most of the phony guests said they were either taxi drivers or students. Others met the groom on a Chinese social media platform and negotiated a price to show up.
    While all of this was going on, the bride did not seem fazed that she had no idea who these guests were, pointing out that she and her husband had completely different sets of friends.

    Gene Ching
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    Fake Great Wall

    There's video behind the link.

    China Unveils Replica Of Great Wall
    World News - 05/19/2017 016



    Would YOU Believe This Is The Great Wall Of China? Replica Of The Famous Fortress Is So Realistic ‘Some Tourists Think They’re Climbing The Original Site’

    Video footage uploaded on May 15 shows a replica of the Great Wall of China located in Nanchang
    The ‘copycat Great Wall’ in Nanchang is some 1,500 kilometres away from the real wall in Badaling
    Spanning four kilometres long, the replica is 13,000 shorter than the real wonder of the world
    Some say once you climb the Great Wall of China, you are truly great.

    But it remains unclear what happens when you climb this version of the Great Wall some 1,500 kilometres away from the ‘original’.

    This attraction in Nanchang, China may look close to the wall but it only measures 4 kilometres, 13,000 shorter than the real wonder of the world but some tourists believe it to be real.
    Great Wall + Chinese Counterfeits, Fakes & Knock-Offs
    Gene Ching
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    Fake bud

    Underground factory producing fake cans of Budweiser gets busted in Dongguan
    BY ALEX LINDER IN NEWS ON MAY 30, 2017 8:50 AM



    Sometimes in China alcohol can be so insanely cheap that it's hard not to wonder where it all comes from.
    Well, recently three video clips making the rounds on WeChat have helped to shine light on one source, showing an underground factory in Dongguan which produced thousands upon thousands of fake cans of Budweiser each day before being busted by city authorities on May 5th.
    In the first clip, female workers can be seen handling the recycled cans which are then canned by a machine on a conveyor belt in the next clip. Then, the third clip shows a Trade and Industry Bureau task force arriving at the factory to check out its stockpile.
    According to city authorities, the underground factory was able to churn out 600,000 boxes of fake Budweiser a month, which were then distributed to bars and nightclubs.
    Watch below:
    https://www.facebook.com/shanghaiist...5802454956030/

    For more than a decade, Budweiser has been working hard to establish itself as the "King of Beers" in the world's largest beer market. By 2012, Anheuser-Busch had 15 breweries outside of the US, 14 of them in China, helping Budweiser become the country's 3rd biggest beer brand by 2014, and a prime target for counterfeit breweries.
    could you really tell the difference?
    Gene Ching
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    86%

    This is the whole point of this thread...this and the amusing knock-off fails.

    Hong Kong and China account for 86% of fake goods globally, says Europol
    23 June 2017 00:01 AFP 3 min read

    China and Hong Kong are overwhelmingly the largest shipment centres for fake goods sold around the world, in a growing, complex battle against sophisticated counterfeiters, Europe’s police agency said Thursday.

    In 2015, the two territories “were the provenance of 86% of global counterfeiting and US$396.5 billion worth of counterfeit goods,” Europol said in a detailed 74-page report, adding intellectual property theft was “one of the most lucrative criminal enterprises”.


    Counterfeit bags seized in Hong Kong. Photo: GovHK.

    With the rising use of cargo rail links between China and Europe, there are also concerns that criminal networks may begin to seize on what can be a cheaper or faster alternative for transporting goods than container shipping or air links.

    Turkey is another important hub for the entry of fake goods into the European Union, along with Thailand and Singapore, said the joint report produced with the Madrid-based EU Intellectual Property Office.

    Everything from shampoos, to batteries, electronics and brand-name clothing, toys, medicine and food has been counterfeited and sold, often to unsuspecting customers. There is also a rising trade in fake labels for Europe-based networks producing such goods inside the zone.


    Counterfeit clothing seized in Hong Kong. Photo: GovHK.

    But the top category of fake goods seized at the EU’s borders in 2015 was cigarettes — accounting for some 27 percent of some 88,000 cases investigated by customs officials.

    As gangs seek to bypass checks and reach consumers quickly and cheaply, rail connections out of China could offer “concrete advantages,” the report warned.

    “Intellectual property crime is extensive in the EU and carries very many adverse effects,” warned Europol head Rob Wainwright.

    “It harms our economies, generates enormous illicit profits for organised crime groups, and often causes direct physical harm to citizens in the form of the growing supply of fake health and safety goods.”


    Photo: GovHK.

    Sales of fake clothing and shoes amounted to more than 26 billion euros in lost sales of legitimate goods in Europe, or 9.7 percent of total revenues, causing an estimated 363,000 job losses in this “mirror economy”, the report said.

    Many items are now being sold online directly to consumers, allowing counterfeiters to send their goods in small packets which may pass more easily through border checks.

    “Counterfeiters often need to produce and ship products quickly, usually in reaction to emerging product trends and demands,” the report said.


    Fake phone chargers. Photo: GovHK.

    While the goods may be produced cheaply, “air freight, despite being fast, is often too expensive” while a shipping container can take up to six weeks to reach its destination.

    China is developing both its rail and road infrastructure to reach the eastern EU external borders.


    Suspected counterfeit goods. Photo: GovHK.

    And “cargo trains offering logistics solutions between China and the EU for nearly half the price of air freight, which take approximately half the time of traditional container shipping, would appear a logical choice,” the report said.
    Gene Ching
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    iPhone 8 Clone Unboxing!

    Gene Ching
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    Disney Theme Park rip offs

    Chinese Theme Parks meets Chinese Counterfeits, Fakes & Knock-Offs (and other countries)

    5 Infamous Theme Parks That TOTALLY Ripped Off Disney
    By Brian Krosnick, Tuesday, June 24, 2014 09:20


    Two characters at Shijingshan

    With Shanghai Disneyland in the works, it’s high time to size up the competition. Asia is full of parks that border on (and sometimes surpass) copyright infringement on Disneyland's characters, universally-known buildings, and outstanding attractions.

    In fact, so many have tried to duplicate Disneyland’s success and beauty, Asia has more fairytale castles than the United States (though not all are still inhabited). So take a look at the parks below and draw your own conclusions – can Shanghai Disneyland compete with Asia’s other “Disney” parks? And can any of the alleged copycats withstand the "real thing" moving into town?

    5. Wonderland (Beijing, China)


    A fairytale castle stands as a beacon of what might have been for farmers working the fields that used to be earmarked for Beijing's Wonderland. Image: Stuck in Customs

    A bid to construct Asia’s largest theme park fell through amid troubling economic times in 1998. The land was reclaimed for farm use, with fields of crops overtaking much of the 100 acres designated for the park’s use. As such, farmers found their 100-acre field protected by a twenty-five foot castle wall boundary intended as the park’s gates. Passing through the steel framework of a never-completed main street, crops were tended around the base of a unfinished concrete castle. The images are intriguing and eerie at the least.

    4. Dream World (Bangkok, Thailand)



    Dream World in Thailand’s Pathum Thani province is a truly quaint, entertaining family park with quite a few interesting gardens, family attractions, and some uniquely done rides. But in name, the park borrows quite a few Disney themes. First of all, the Fantasy Land area features “Sleeping Beauty’s Castle.” In Adventure Land, you’ll find an amalgamation of jungle and future themed rides, and a select few attractions that harken to Disneyland favorites: “Haunted Mansion,” “Monorail Tour,” “Space Mountains” and the unfortunately named “Red Indian’s Boats.” And guests entering park pass under a façade that unmistakably resembles Disneyland’s “it’s a small world.”

    3. Shijingshan Amusement Park (Beijing, China)



    Where can you find Mickey Mouse, Shrek, Bugs Bunny, and Hello Kitty residing together in a fairytale castle next to a replica of Epcot’s Spaceship Earth? Well, nowhere. But you can find their unauthorized counterparts at Shijingshan. There, in the shadow of Cinderella Castle’s evil-twin of sorts (trading in white and blue spires for tan and red ones) you’ll find familiar characters who the park officially defends are based on Grimm’s Fairy Tales. You can decide for yourself, of course, but the park’s official slogan translated to English reads: “Disney is too far to go, please come to Shijianshan!“'

    2. Nara Dreamland (Nara, Japan)



    From the train station and Mainstreet, to the Castle and Matterhorn, Nara Dreamland was a unique blend of Disneyland and big wooden coaster.

    This now-closed theme park – made famous in the theme park community by a photo trip report on Theme Park Review – resembles Disneyland in a way few others can rival. From Main Street to the pink and blue fairy tale castle, the Matterhorn, the monorail, the Jungle Cruise, and a sparsely decorated Tomorrowland were all represented. But something was decidedly amiss – pickup trucks parked on midways, portable carnival rides in “Fantasyland,” and dilapidated, crumbling facades. Add in the aptly named Screw Coaster, a wooden playground, and the actually-decent Aska wooden coaster and you’ve got one strange grab-bag of amusement.

    1. Lotte World (Seoul, South Korea)



    While it does borrow elements from Disneyland, Lotte World is a successful resort of its own doing. It imitates (and sometimes surpasses) Disney Parks in innovation and beauty.

    It may be unfair to call Lotte World in Seoul, South Korea a “copyright infringing” park. In fact, Lotte World is a wildly successful and innovative resort all on its own that, like so many others, borrows from the successes of Disneyland here and there. Sometimes, the park’s rides come across as an imitation. Other times, they seem to surpass any potential “sisters” that Disney has devised. Comprised of the world’s largest indoor theme park and an outdoor amusement park built around a white and blue castle, some offerings may sound familiar.

    A water, fire, light, projection, and music show called Fantastic Odyssey (perhaps a take on Disney’s Fantasmic!) resides near Jungle Adventure, an indoor river rapids ride past animatronics jungle scenes. One of the park’s most incredible attractions is Pharaoh’s Fury, an EMV ride that resembles and rivals Disneyland’s Indiana Jones Adventure with impressive effects, incredible scenery, and out-of-control motion-base technology. And like any good Disney-esque park, you can always meet Lotty and Lorry, two anthropomorphic raccoons that wear a blue suit and a red skirt & hair bow, respectively. Whatever you call it, it is truly among the “best” borrowers of Disneyland’s ideas in that it succeeds in implementing them in new and inventive ways.
    Gene Ching
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    Who are they kidding?

    They are kidding people who don't normally read the alphabet. Just imagine the reverse using Chinese characters.

    Who are they kidding? Hilarious pictures of made-in-China knockoffs show 'Nibe' sneakers, 'Paradi' handbags and 'Owega' watch shops
    Counterfeit goods that are made in China took designs and names of the original
    They usually sell at a much cheaper price, or being exported to other countries
    Pictures emerged showing a collection of different 'Made-in-China' knockoffs
    By Tiffany Lo For Mailonline
    PUBLISHED: 11:22 EDT, 19 October 2017 | UPDATED: 11:21 EDT, 20 October 2017

    Over the years, the Chinese commercial market has been expanding and the nation has been exporting goods to other countries.

    It's not surprising to see Chinese companies producing counterfeits after some of the world's most famous brands.

    Whilst some of these knockoffs might have good quality, others could get so wrong that they appear to be hilarious.

    Such fake products range from an Owega (Omega) watch, a pair of Nibe (Nike) shoes to a Pearlboy (Playboy) shop.

    According to United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, counterfeit goods that trade from southeast Asia to other countries are worth about 24.4 billion USD ( £18.51 bn) in a year.

    Read on below to find out more 'Made in China' knockoffs.


    Chinese company Chongqing Lifan made a car model copying BMW's MINI Cooper


    A Playboy-like clothing brand called Pearlboy that sells down jackets in China


    The headphone set is printed with a trademark which was supposed to say 'Sony'


    Because everything looks better when it's complete: The AEIPPIE logo is not bitten off


    Corcs clogs! These popular shoes looks as real as the official brand, but not the spelling


    Will young people have more fun playing Grand Theft Auto on their POP Station Portable?


    The fake Heineken, called Heimekem (left), guarantees that customers would enjoy premium quality. Mr Jack Daniel would not approve for this knock-off version whiskey (right)
    continued next post
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    continued from previous post


    When Panasonic battery marks to perform 'super heavy duty', a PenesamiG battery can only be used for 'general purpose'


    Devils wear Paradi? Copying a similar font as the luxurious Prada, Paradi offers casual wear


    Two horses, one message: This jeans brand gives a cartoon-like imitation of the Levi Strauss & Co classic trademark


    Impossible is nothing: Chinese workers have redesigned the logo of German sports brand Adidas in many amusing way (left and right)


    Just do it! The signature swoosh of Nike is being used as the Chinese knock-off 'Nire'


    Don't mind the swoosh! This shop, Nibe, changes the name and design of popular brand Nike


    Because one swoosh is not enough, you need two to swirl around a basketball
    continued next post
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    continued from previous post



    Nobody's Lovin' It! A jewellery and jade shop used the iconic McDonald's yellow arches


    When Burger King said you can 'have it your way', King Burger surely takes the word in account (left). If you can't afford an Omega, try this Owega store (right)


    A value pack of fake Gillette', called GilnGhey, that comes with a razor, blades and shaving cream (left); China's clothing brand 'HengHee' took the inspiration from Lacoste (right)
    Knock Offs - Made in China of course.[
    Gene Ching
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  12. #12
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    Slightly OT

    Kids’ craze for ‘counterfeit’ currency bookmarks could be illegal, China’s central bank says
    Authorities may take action as retailer in central Chinese province admits to selling almost US$1,000 worth of ‘fake notes’ annually
    PUBLISHED : Tuesday, 31 October, 2017, 10:01am
    UPDATED : Tuesday, 31 October, 2017, 10:00am
    Alice Shen



    A craze among schoolchildren in central China for collecting bookmarks printed to look like Chinese and US banknotes could be against the law, according to local media.
    In a report by Changsha Evening Daily on Monday, the mother of a fourth-grader in Changsha, capital of Hunan province, said she spotted one of the “billionaire bookmarks” when she was checking her son’s homework.
    The boy said that he and his classmates bought the notes from local shops and traded and collected them with friends. It was the hottest craze in school, he said.
    While the printing on the notes closely replicates the look of genuine yuan and US dollar notes, their size and form – some come in the classic cartoon shape of a dog’s bone – clearly suggest they are intended for nothing other than fun.
    “They look exactly like real paper money,” the mother, surnamed Zuo, was quoted as saying, “only in different shapes”.
    However, that does not appear to be sufficient for the local branch of the People’s Bank of China, an official from which was quoted as saying that it was illegal to reproduce Chinese banknotes and that it reserved the right to take legal action.
    The owner of a shop near a school in Changsha said he sold about a dozen packs of the banknotes a week, with each pack of 24 retailing for 10 yuan (US$1.50). Based on the South China Morning Post’s calculations, his share of the “counterfeiting” business would therefore be more than 6,200 yuan a year.
    The report did not say if he would face any criminal charges.
    Most people on social media found the claims of counterfeiting baffling.
    “The regulation is too strict,” one person wrote.
    “Schools use them as teaching aids in maths class. That can’t be illegal,” said another.
    So would this be fake counterfeits?
    Gene Ching
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    $10K for a blend!

    NOT 10K after all.

    World's priciest whisky bought by Chinese millionaire revealed to be fake


    Zhang Wei, centre, splashed out £7,600 on the world's most expensive whisky shot in the Waldhaus am See hotel in St Moritz, Switzerland CREDIT: SANDRO BERNASCONI

    Nicola Smith, taipei
    2 NOVEMBER 2017 • 12:48PM

    When Chinese millionaire, Zhang Wei, splashed out £7,600 on the world’s most expensive whisky shot in a Swiss bar, he boasted to his fans that it was the same age as his great, great grandmother would have been – 139 years old.

    Unfortunately for the martial arts fantasy writer, the headlines generated not only admiration, but suspicion by experts who doubted the authenticity of the spirit’s true provenance when they spotted discrepancies in the bottle’s cork and label.

    An analysis from Scottish experts has now confirmed that Mr Zhang was unwittingly duped into buying a fake dram, and the Waldhaus am See hotel in St Moritz has recently flown its manager, Sandro Bernasconi, to China to reimburse him, reported the BBC.


    Analysis has shown the whisky was not as advertised CREDIT: DAVID CHESKIN/PA WIRE

    The whisky had been poured from an unopened bottle labelled as an 1878 Macallan single malt, and Mr Zhang’s shot is believed to have been the largest sum ever paid for a poured dram of Scotch. Had the bottle been genuine, it would have been worth £227,000.

    When doubts emerged about its provenance, the hotel sent the whisky to specialists in Dunfermline who carried out carbon dating tests that showed it was probably made between 1970 and 1972. Further lab tests revealed it was probably a blended a Scotch and not a single malt.

    Mr Bernasconi flew to China to break the bad news to Mr Zhang and to pay him back but he said the author was not angry. “He thanked me very much for the hotel’s honesty,” he told the BBC.

    Wuxia writing + whiskey = fake
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    Copycat videogames with added values

    This is really intriguing. I'm trying to imagine the reverse - like an American copycat of the Three Kingdoms videogame with embedded core capitalist values. What would the core capitalist values be? Are there core capitalist values?

    Chinese copycats of the world’s hottest videogame added “core socialist values”


    “Never forget why you started, and you can accomplish your mission.” (Wildness Action)

    WRITTEN BY Zheping Huang
    November 16, 2017

    You’ve logged onto your favorite game, and you’re ready to shoot and kill your enemies. Before being parachuted into the battleground, you see a banner hanging over your head that reads: “Never forget why you started, and you can accomplish your mission.”
    It’s Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s newest catchphrase, taken from his work report presented at a recently concluded Communist Party congress.
    Survival-shooter game PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG) is the hottest videogame of the year, selling over 13 million copies globally, and Chinese companies are racing against one another to create their own copycats of it. Chief among them is a mobile version titled Wildness Action, which recently took the top spot in China’s iOS store.

    In the latest update of the game, released by gaming company NetEase this week, red banners with slogans reflecting China’s “core socialist values” are emblazoned everywhere from buildings to bridges to containers. Another slogan, “Safeguard national security, safeguard world peace,” can also be seen in the game.

    View image on Twitter
    Lulu Yilun Chen ✔@luluyilun
    Logged on Chinese copycat of #PUBG to shoot some heads, found it festooned with “socialist core value” banners. Ingenuity of Chinese co.s
    8:05 PM - Nov 14, 2017
    7 7 Replies 34 34 Retweets 47 47 likes
    Twitter Ads info and privacy
    It’s a vivid example of the Chinese Communist Party’s attempts to both expand and control the country’s tech sector and internet. As Xi noted in his work report, “East, west, north, or south, the Party leads everything.”

    NetEase added the slogans as part of its overhaul of the game’s narrative. Previously the game was about fighting to be the last survivor on a deserted island; now, it is presented as a military drill for soldiers who’ll be recruited for China’s peacekeeping operations. That said, the key elements of the play mode remain the same, and are still uncannily similar to that of PUBG.

    The changes came after China’s media watchdogs took aim at PUBG and similar survival games, saying they are unlikely to get a license to officially launch in China because they contain too much blood and gore. The violent, competitive spirit behind such games is “against our country’s core socialist values… and bad for teenagers’ physical and mental health,” according to a notice from China’s official video copyright association in October.

    In response, NetEase published a notice (link in Chinese) saying that the company would comply with official instructions to modify its own survival games, ensuring that they convey core socialist values.

    Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi—which also operates a PUBG-esque mobile game titled Xiaomi Gunfight—released a statement this week (link in Chinese) saying that it would work with censors to modify the game. “Our main theme is to safeguard world peace and defend the motherland,” the company said.

    Xiaomi Gunfight didn’t include slogans with socialist values in the game, but also changed the story to depict a military drill. In the latest version, players who are shot in head don’t die; they simply get “eliminated” from the training.
    screenshots of PUBG-like games


    From top to bottom: screenshots from PUBG, Wildness Action, and Xiaomi Gunfight.

    NetEase and Xiaomi didn’t immediately reply to requests for comment. In response to the Chinese regulator’s October notice, Chang Han Kim, CEO of PUGB Corp, a subsidiary of PUGB’s South Korean developer, said: “We respect the decisions of all review boards, and we look forward to working with them to bring PUBG to as many fans as possible around the world.”

    Chinese social-media and gaming giant Tencent is also launching its PUBG-like mobile game this month—Glorious Mission: Mission Action has already garnered more than 4 million pre-registrations on its official site.
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Fremont, CA, U.S.A.
    Posts
    48,194

    Fake Parents

    'Fake parents' offer themselves as stand-ins to meet teachers... and lovers


    Chinese students looking to avoid embarrassment on parents' evenings can rent mum or dad for the occasion CREDIT: AFP

    Neil Connor, beijing
    10 DECEMBER 2017 • 1:02PM

    China is well known as the home of the rented boyfriends and rented bridesmaids, but now stand-in parents are offering their services, for when you just can’t abide teachers – or lovers – meeting the real ones.

    Offering stand-in help for anything from a tricky school parents’ evening to that awkward first encounter between the new girlfriend and mum and dad, fake parents believe they can ward off potential social catastrophes – temporarily at least.

    “Do you have a boyfriend or girlfriend who wants to meet your parents but you actually don’t want them to meet?” asks one advert on the Chinese Internet.

    The Global Times newspaper, which said the service is usually charged at 50 yuan (£5.60) an hour - spoke to a rent-a-parent who takes his "profession" very seriously indeed.

    "I study psychology," the fake dad told the newspaper. “No matter how nasty your teacher gets, I won't get angry.”

    Young Chinese who are seeking fake parents are also posting on the Chinese web.

    "A rented parent is needed,” said one comment. “Just need to make a phone call to my teacher."

    Another asked: "Is there anyone in Shanghai who can be rented as parents to have a meal with my girlfriend?"

    China is experiencing massive social changes, but most people are still deeply conservative.

    Many marriages are arranged – even in the modern cities – and parents are often involved in their children’s relationships from an early stage.

    It is unclear how many of the postings relating to ‘rented parents’ are people authentically seeking help, but China has a booming trade in renting people for a range of ‘personal’ services.

    Boyfriends and girlfriends are rented over the New Year holiday period by singletons who want to put a stop to intrusive questions from parents.

    Bridesmaids are also for hire in China, where wedding’s can often get out of hand and bridesmaids can be subjected to sexual harassment and physical abuse.

    Chinese media also reported this week the growing trend of people using ‘rent me’ apps to offer themselves as friends.

    Additional reporting by Christine Wei
    What a funny job...
    Gene Ching
    Publisher www.KungFuMagazine.com
    Author of Shaolin Trips
    Support our forum by getting your gear at MartialArtSmart

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