NetEase, China’s second-largest video gaming company, has unveiled updates on more than 10 new titles, including a highly-anticipated “triple-A game” to be released in July, at its annual product launch this week amid heightened competition in the domestic market.
At the online event from its headquarters in Hangzhou, capital of eastern Zhejiang province, NetEase featured new titles covering a range of genres – from first-person shooter games to massively multiplayer online role-playing games (MMORPG) – as part of a series of announcements for more than 40 video game franchises and products.
NetEase highlighted Where Winds Meet, an open-world, action-adventure role-playing game for multiple platforms, including personal computers (PCs) developed by the firm’s in-house studio Everstone. This title will undergo a new round of testing at the end of this month and hit the market on July 26, the company said.
Where Winds Meet, which was first announced by NetEase in August 2022, is touted as a home-grown triple-A game – an informal classification in the industry that refers to video games from a mid-sized or major publisher, which typically have higher development and marketing budgets.
Following its commercial release, Where Winds Meet is expected to go head to head against Black Myth: Wukong in August. Also touted as a Chinese triple-A game, Black Myth: Wukong is an action role-playing game developed by Hangzhou-based studio Game Science.
The latest product announcements by NetEase reflect intense competition in the world’s second-largest video gaming market, where the industry’s global revenue leader Tencent Holdings remains a major force.
In the first quarter this year, China’s video gaming market saw total sales grow 7.6 per cent year on year to 72.6 billion yuan (US$10 billion), compared with a 15 per cent drop in the same period in 2023, according to data from research institute CNG.
China’s video gaming sector last year generated US$44.6 billion in total sales to rank behind that of the United States, with US$46.7 billion in revenue, according to market research firm Newzoo.
NetEase on Monday also announced the long-awaited Naraka: Bladepoint Mobile, the mobile version of the company’s popular PC battle royale game Naraka: Bladepoint. The game is expected to be released within the year, although its developer 24 Entertainment has not yet provided a specific date.
Other NetEase titles that will soon be released on the mainland include shooting game Lost Light and MMORPG Ashfall, both of which have versions for PCs and smartphones.
The companies’ new deal will cover video games under their previous arrangement, including World of Warcraft, Hearthstone, and other titles in the Warcraft, Overwatch, Diablo and StarCraft franchises.
The team for World of Warcraft said it will reveal more information on June 6.
Tencent, meanwhile, released on Tuesday Dungeon & Fighter (DnF) Mobile, which is adapted from the popular PC game DnF developed by Japanese-Korean studio Nexon.
The mobile title was briefly taken down by Tencent for around an hour after its debut on Tuesday morning, owing to an “abnormality in server” – likely caused by a large number of players accessing the game’s server – that the company said it needed to fix, without providing the cause.
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