Gaming giant Tencent on Thursday announced a new โ€œlivestreamer verification programโ€ that gives selected livestreamers privileges such as more exposure and early access to new game content.

Why it matters: Tencent has been pushing to secure its interests in the game live-streaming market as Bytedance apps become increasingly popular among new and aspiring livestreamers. The incentive program could help Tencent attract more livestreamers and retain more live-streaming celebrities within its content ecosystem.

Details: The livestreamer verification program promises four types of privileges: prioritized exposure in Tencent games and their communities, early access and livestreaming right to game updates, invitations to Tencent game events, and higher recommendation priority in Tencentโ€™s content ecosystem.

  • Livestreamers need to consistently stream a Tencent game for more than three months and spend more than 70% of their streaming time on a single title to qualify for the program.
  • Tencent also said livestreamers need to have a โ€œcertain number of followers and level of influence in the livestreaming segmentโ€ to be eligible, though it didnโ€™t specify the exact standards.
  • The first batch of 251 verified livestreamers are all from Tencentโ€™s own live-streaming platform Egame or Tencent-backed live-streaming platforms, Douyu and Huya.
  • Games currently covered by the incentive program include โ€œLeague of Legends,โ€ โ€œHonour of Kings,โ€ โ€œPeacekeeper Elite,โ€ and โ€œQQ Speed.โ€ Tencent said it would expand the roster to include other popular games in October.

Context: Tencent has made a number of moves to drive livestreamers away from non-Tencent content platforms. The Shenzhen-based company sued Bytedance eight times since November 2018 over game copyright, seeking to remove Tencent game-related content and livestreamers who depend on them from Bytedance apps.

  • Tencent has successfully barred Bytedanceโ€™s Xigua Video, Huoshan Video, and Jinri Toutiao from livestreaming some of its most popular games with temporary injunctions.

Tony Xu is Shanghai-based tech reporter. Connect with him via e-mail: tony.xu@ovau.ip-ddns.com

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