By Brenda Goh and Samuel Shen
SHANGHAI (Reuters) -Tencent Holdings Ltd shares were on track to fall by their most in a decade on Tuesday after a Chinese state media outlet branded online video games “spiritual opium”, stoking concern that the sector may be next in regulators‘ crosshairs.
China’s biggest social media and video game firm saw its stock tumble more than 10% in morning trade, wiping almost $60 billion from its market capitalisation.
Shares of rival NetEase Inc slumped as much as 15.7%, while those of game developer XD Inc and mobile gaming company GMGE Technology Group Ltd also plunged.
State-run Economic Information Daily in an article on Tuesday said many teenagers were addicted to online video games and called for more curbs on the industry. The outlet is affiliated with China’s biggest state-run news agency, Xinhua.
The newspaper repeatedly cited Tencent’s flagship game, “Honor of Kings”, which it said was the most popular online game among students who sometimes played for up to eight hours a day.
“No industry, no sport, can be allowed to develop in a way that will destroy a generation,” the newspaper said, likening online video games to “electronic drugs”.
Tencent did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.
The government has vowed to strengthen rules around online gaming and education to protect child wellbeing. Last month, it banned for-profit tutoring in core school subjects, a move that threatens to decimate China’s $120 billion private tutoring sector.
In online video games, authorities have sought to limit hours that teenagers can play, and companies including Tencent have implemented anti-addiction systems that they say cap young users’ game time.
The Economic Information Daily, citing legal experts and professors, said current curbs were not able to keep up with the sector’s development to prevent youth addiction, and that there should be more “mandatory means” to increase the social responsibility of video game companies.
Tencent has already been under pressure alongside major technology peers by increased regulatory action on online platforms. Last month, it was barred from exclusive music copyright agreements and fined for unfair market practices.
(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Brenda Goh; Additonal reporting by Yingzhi Yang in Beijing; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Christopher Cushing)