Recently, there have been more and more interesting online games coming out in China. With Monster Hunter Online and Call of Duty Online, there will be two top tier free-to-play games in the middle kingdom. While these games are only available in China, that doesn’t mean enterprising players abroad can’t play them.
Playing Chinese games abroad is indeed possible. These games at the moment do not check for IP addresses, so you can actually play them on any IP address. The actual problem is with the registration process. Before we begin, here’s a disclaimer:
*You cannot play Chinese online games without a valid Chinese ID number.*
With that said, let us begin. Forgoing the need for a Chinese ID, it’s actually not hard to play these games. Sure, you probably won’t understand the language and it might be hard to pick up the game that way, but therein lies the extra challenge. Truth be told, not being able to read Chinese in a massively online multiplayer game will probably make menu navigation near impossible, but that doesn’t make the game unplayable. On top of that, many Chinese players will be able to write and understand English.
So with all that said and done, let’s get started on how to sign up for and start a Chinese game. For this tutorial, let’s go with the super cutesy MMO, Tao Yuan Online.
The first step is to download the client. Normally the text would read like so: “下载客户端”. In this case it reads “下载游戏.” “下载” means “download”.
After downloading the client, the next part is giving up your personal information! Yay! To do so, we have to hit a button that says “帐号注册.” This means “to register an account”. Here is what the account registration form looks like.
Once this is all filled out and done, it’s as easy as opening up the client, hitting the login button and starting the game. I have been told by some game companies that they do accept foreign passports. However, being the paranoid person that I am, I am unwilling to give anyone aside the United States Government my US issued passport number.
Some Chinese games require a bit more finesse to sign up for, but for the most part, signing up is just this easy. For Tencent-made games, for example, you can use an even easier method — just sign up for a Chinese QQ chat account. Signing up for a QQ requires little to no personal information, but when signing up for a game, there will be a prompt asking for a real-world Chinese ID. Other companies, like Perfect World, require the use of a bank card because their games are pay to play. This is now changing as more and more of these games are going for the freemium model.
Hopefully, this guide will help some of you get to know the wonderfully weird world of Chinese online games.
Top picture: Call of Duty Online’s “Hero” trailer
Comments
2 responses to “How To Sign Up For Chinese Online Games”
Didn’t we already play the games back when they were the original non-copyright-infringing originals?
For those wanting to read most Chinese websites (obviously ones that use images instead of text, it’s not going to work) you can get a variety of Firefox and Chrome (not sure about IE since I don’t use it) plugins, for example Perapera Chinese Popup Dictionary for Firefox (and I believe Chrome has the same plugin) is one that is very popular, that allow you to hover over or select text to see what it says in English.
In the article you don’t give examples of Chinese ID numbers..? What if the game requires that? What should we put in there? I know it’s just a big long number where there is your date of birth in the middle of it somewhere… from what I understand, they are a 17 digit number plus a validation digit (so 18 in total) with a bunch of information reading from right to left.. stuff like the region/location code, the date of birth, and some kind of unique identifier for those with the same date of birth and location… and then the validation digit….
So I wonder if someone could just type a random 18 digit number in there? Do they actually validate the number?