World of Warcraft in China continues to walk a rocky path.
NetEase, the company currently licensed to operate
WoW's
The Burning Crusade expansion in China,
lost Li Riqiang, a senior director for the
WoW business unit on the 24th of February, 2010. There is no word on why he left, and the company is keeping mum on details about the departure and his replacement.
This comes on the heels of a
62% jump in revenue in the fourth quarter of 2009 generated since NetEase was able to light up the
TBC servers after resolving their disputes with the government, which had prevented them from launching the service in China until September 2009. That revenue increase was accompanied by lower profit margins, however, as NetEase must pay hefty licensing fees to Activision Blizzard.
The fact that there are still Chinese players who are willing to play an
obsolete and no longer maintained version of the game is a little strange to me-- many Chinese players simply
started over on Taiwanese servers. Judging by the amount of red tape that's being wrapped around
anything to do with Blizzard, I suspect we'll see
Cataclysm released before Chinese players can play
Wrath of the Lich King without connecting to a server in Taiwan.Filed under:
Analysis / Opinion,
News items,
The Burning Crusade
NetEase loses WoW director, Li Riqiang originally appeared on
WoW.com on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our
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