KEY POINTS
  • Feng Shixin from the ruling Communist Party's Propaganda department said in a speech on Friday that a first batch of approvals for games had been completed.
  • China, the world's biggest gaming market, stopped approving new titles from March amid a regulatory overhaul triggered by growing criticism of video games for being violent and leading to myopia as well as addiction among young users.
  • The freeze in new video game approvals weighed on industry-related stocks such as Tencent.

Tencent Holdings shares jumped by as much as 4.2 percent on Friday after a regulatory official said that some new games have been cleared for sale after a lengthy freeze in approvals.

Feng Shixin, a senior official of the ruling Communist Party's Propaganda department, said in a speech at a gaming conference in Haikou on Friday that a first batch of approvals for games had been completed, according a transcript of the speech and the organizers of the event.