China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on Fridays, weekends and holidays

Por um escritor misterioso
Last updated 01 junho 2024
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
Those under the age of 18 can only play online games between 8pm and 9pm local time on specified days
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China limits children to 3 hours of online gaming a week
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
Three hours a week: Play time's over for China's young video gamers
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
Chinese government trims kids' online gaming time from 1.5 hours a day to just three hours a week
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
Gaming: China limits video game time for children - BBC Newsround
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
Children in China to be limited to two hours of screen time a day - BBC Newsround
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China Limits Online Videogames to Three Hours a Week for Young People - WSJ
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China limits children to no more than 3 hours of video games a week - National
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China keeping one hour daily limit on kids' online games
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China limiting time children can play games online
China allows children under 18 to play online games for one hour only on  Fridays, weekends and holidays
China's gaming market was built on addictive games. Can Beijing stop kids from playing them?

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