Letters to the Editor

This letter is associated with the following article:
Where Chinese gamers go, the world may follow.
  • Fate

    I think you may be my long lost brother. Or my adversary from an alternate universe.

    I went to Xiamen in 1995 and lived there for 5 months. Gulangyu is great! No cars, old French buildings with peasants living in them, good food (not on the island though), quite walks along the sea…

    I am also a WOW player. In China, on Chinese servers. I’ll admit it…knowing that my friends and family are not going to read this. I’m actually in a guild (but that was because they sent me a random guild invite and at the time my reading comprehension was even worse than it is today). My guildmates think I am a large breast, blond American girl who likes to use her credit card at Starbucks, have lots of casual sex, and kill Iraqis.

    And…I used to dream of being a video game producer or own a video game company. Sadly it will never will happen because I’m not a programmer and have no “in” in that industry besides my efforts. But I used to read Gamasutra so that I can talk the talk.

    Question/Comment #1 Why do you read Gamasutra? Lets hear it!

    Question / Comment #2 Although Salon readership may be somewhat more enlightened, most probably will not know what WOW is. The PC game community in the US maybe has a 6 million player base. The intersection with Salon’s readership is not guaranteed. And they may not know about its popularity in China.

    Question / Comment #3 Someone is going to ask what this has to do with globalization. Not me. But someone will ask it.

    Question / Comment #4 I’m pretty sure Shanda is publicly traded on a market somewhere. And I’m pretty sure that even several years ago some analyst were pointing out that this company is all hype.

    Question / Comment #5 The too biggest games in China (Lineage 2 and WOW) were only localized in China. Not only the design and artwork, but importantly, the server-side implementation, were developed and fire-tested in Korea and the US. The infrastructure that The9City (Blizzard’s Chinese localization partner for WOW) uses is not as good as what Blizzard manages in the US. At least that’s what Chinese players say anyway.

    Question / Comment # 6 That being said, I think China is probably a good place to develop MMOs because they are popular and explicit development costs are less than in the US. Investing in cell-phone manufacturers here is stupid and everyone knows that now…there has to be consolidation there.

    Question / Comment #7 And finally…there was this plan to place restrictions on MMOs so that after playing for 2 hours straight, people would have to log off or else they would get only ½ experience. This has not been implemented yet. It was funny how all the game companies said publicly this would be a good idea, even though they and everyone else thinks it’s a horrible idea. Actually, I think it would be good to implement. Gamers of the World Unite!