After Blizzard made its controversial decision to ban Ng Wai Chung, better known by his 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Hearthstone esports handle as Blitzchung, the internet rose up in protest, and now one of the developer’s own characters is being used against it. Mei-Ling Zhou, a fictional Chinese character from Blizzard’s 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Overwatch, is being reimagined as a pro-Hong-Kong supporter, and Blizzar💎d may now be in over its head.

After Blitzchung made his brief statement in support of the liberation of Hong Kong, Blizzard moved to ban the player for a year, confiscated his tournament winnings from the past seven weeks of competition, and fired the two commentators tasked with interviewing him remotely. Since then, the outpour of support for his st🍌atement and condemnation of Blizzard has been non-stop, and Mei is appearing in forums and tweets through several drawings or photoshopped edits, showing that she also supports the Hong Kong movements.

RELATED: #BoycottBlizzard Trends And Reddit𒀰 Unanimo💛usly Quits Hearthstone Amidst Blitzchung Controversy

The image is troublesome for Blizzard in several ways. If Mei becomes synonymous with the Hong Kong resistance, there is a chance that Overwatch will be banne💜d inside China and Blizzard certainly wants tღhat market share.

Will Blizzard double down on its censorship and do everything it can to disassociate itself from this reimagining of Mei? Doing so may salvage its🐷 commercial opportunities in China, and at the same time, bury it in the West and elsewhere.

Via: reddit.com (u/lechuga_lover)

Either way, Blizzard will need to address this issue soon. Reactions online appear unanimous to boycott all Blizzar🌠d games, both in the future and presently. However, Blizzard may already be too entrenched with Chinese partners to do anything but bow to the demands of their government.

168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Diablo Immortal is Blizzard’s next big title that it hopes to cash in on, despite being a mobile-only release, much to the irritation of its long-time player base. The game is being developed almost entirely by NetEase, a Chinese technology company, and is surely part of a larger plan to capture sales in the Chinese market. If Blizzard cannot contain this issue with Mei and Overwatch, is there a possibility that its other games might be banned, such as the Diablo series?

It is too early to k꧂now for sure, but there is no doubt that Blizzard’s moves over the coming weeks will be closely scr𒅌utinized, and unfortunately for it, this has also occurred less than a month before BlizzCon 2019.

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