Douyu

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Douyu
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"Douyu" [url text]
Type type
Launch Date 2016; 7 years ago
Status Active
Product Line product
Platform Online streaming service provider
Website www.douyu.com

Douyu(斗鱼) (Nasdaq: DOYU) is a Chinese website services which provides gaming, e-sports, and outdoor streaming contents[1]. Reported in March 31, 2019, there are 6.5 million registered streamers, 280.9 million registered users, 159.2 million monthly active users[2]. Douyu is the first Chinese streaming website which enters Series D funding[3](the fourth round the fundraising). In July 17, 2019, it announced its initial public offering of 67,287,110 American Depositary Shares (ADS) at US$11.5 per ADS. The ADSs begun trading Nasdaq Global Select Market with Nasdaq symbol "DOYU". Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC, J.P. Morgan Securities LLC, BofA Securities, Inc, and CMB International Capital Limited were the book runners of this public offering[4].

The Gift System

Douyu offers a gift system to let users donate money to streamers.

"The Fish Bowl"

"The Fish Bowl" (斗鱼鱼丸) is typically offered daily to users for free when users start to watch subscripted streamers.

"The Shark Fins"

"The shark fins" (斗鱼鱼翅) require users to top up real world money in exchange for the virtual token. Users can purchase various gifts using "the shark fins". As users purchase more gifts for a streamer using "the shark fins", they gain a higher level in that streamer's streaming room and unlock various benefits such as special chat fonts.

Ethic Concerns And Disputes

Potential Gambling Concerns

In Jan 18, 2021, a report by fund manager and investment research firm Grizzly raised the warning that Douyu has benefitted by allowing and encouraging users to engage in online lottery operations, which is illegal under the regulation of mainland China. According to Grizzly, Douyu is involved with illegal online gambling on its platform, and it has been one of their sources of revenues[5].

One typical lottery activity is called "lucky treasure", in which users are encouraged to top up money in exchange for awards. The highest award can be over 50,000 "Shark fins"(鱼翅)(a kind of virtual token of the platform). The tokens are mutually interchangeable to fiat currency.[6]

In addition to the platform-hosted lottery activities, some registered streamers are also reported to involve in illegal gambling activities. <p>There were users who spent millions of RMB on the lottery activities of the streamers. Grizzly reported one such case: a user spent 1.4M RMB on the lotteries activities and those money was intended to purchase a house. The user also revealed that streamers used certain words to avoid gambling-related phrases. After the loss of millions of RMB, the user thought that though streamers should be responsible for his loss, the platform should be the more serious liable party because it did not ban the activities. On contrary, the platform encouraged such lotteries because it induced users to buy virtual token and gifts.[7]

339 Outdoor (彡彡九户外)

On September 12, 2020, a short video published by a Chinese authority organization exposed that a streamer 339 Outdoor (339 thereafter) was involved in lottery activities including "6 RMB for 50,000 RMB", "6 RMB for 40,000RMB", and "10 RMB to win 2 of 10,000 RMB". The lottery activities were 15 to 20 minutes long, in which users spent 6-10 RMB to purchase virtual tokens. After the lottery, 339 would purchase the same amount of virtual token in RMB through third-party from the winners of the lotteries. According to the video, the gift revenue of 339 in August 2020 solely was 10 million RMB (roughly 6,896,551 USD at that time)[7].

长沙敢死队

On Jan 22, 2021, a streamer (Chinese: 长沙乡村敢死队) is reported to encourage users to donate money to him in the form of virtual tokens. If participants donate over a certain number of "Shark fins" over a given period of time, they are eligible to participate in a virtual token lottery worth tens of thousands of Chinese RMB. After the lottery, the streamer will then purchase virtual tokens in equal amount to cash in the winners' prizes through third-party apps such as Alipay. Most of the participants of the gambling are students. In order to avoid regulation, the streamer does not explicitly advertise it. Because the live broadcast usually starts at 10 pm, the public word code of the lottery is "10pm economy class" and the prizes are also calles "sounenirs". It is reported that in 2020, the annual profit of the streamer from donation was over US$25,165,423.[6].</p>

False Number of Viewers

In 2015, a streamer Xiaozhi(小智) disclosed that the platform had been intentionally falsely displaying his "popularity score" (a metric of the platform indicating number of viewers). At the peak time, the website displayed the number of viewers of the streamer as 4.4 million. After discovering this issue, the streamer posted on Weibo and complained about it. He claimed that it was not him who managed to falsely display high number of viewers for better exposure. After the public criticism of the streamer, the platform limited the number of viewers in Xiaozhi's streaming channel while allowing higher number of viewers in other steamers' channel. Also, during this period, there are other streamers who continued to use illegal software or bots to boost up their "popularity score" in order to compete with Xiaozhi[8].

Content Censorship

The Douyu platform imposes restrictions on contents streamed on the platform and banned games considered not appropriate or unlicensed[9].

Ban of Animal Crossing: New Horizons

After its phenomenal global popularity, the video game Animal Crossing: New Horizons is banned by the platform. Users cannot search for videos or streaming contents with the key word "Animal Crossing" on the platform. A platform-signed streamer (传说中的林克) received the warning from Douyu about the complete ban on the game. The streamer also pointed out his disappointment about the regulation, saying that the authorities just cut off the game and did not provide space for public opinions. There were no official reasons for this ban, but it was speculated that it was related to some politically sensitive propaganda posted by pro-independent Hong Kong protestors in the game[10].

Ban of PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds

Due to missing approval by the government, PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds has been banned by the streaming platform. PUBG is always an unlicensed game. But backed by Tencent, the streaming of the game was allowed on Douyu and was one the most popular games to watch on the platform. Now things have changed[11].

As until Feb 10, 2023, the streaming of PUBG is still approved by the platform. However, the game name cannot be explicitly displayed and all streaming of PUBG has been moved to the "popular games" section instead of its own section

==

False Advertising

During the covid time, Douyu opened up its online learning section and provided online learning materials. Douyu was reported to promote online games through the name of "free online courses" to students. The ads were removed and the section was closed after the criticism of the state media of China[12].

Vulgar Contents

In June, 2020, the State Internet Information Office of China in conjunction with the relevant departments of 31 domestic major online streaming service providers, including Douyu, carried out a comprehensive inspection in order to standardize of management of online streaming content to depth. It is reported that some streamers are dressed in too exposed clothes and some are vulgar in word and deed[13].

  1. edit later.https://www.douyu.com/cms/about/about_us.html
  2. https://www.benzinga.com/news/19/07/14062382/douyu-international-ipo-what-you-need-to-know
  3. https://tech.qq.com/a/20180109/016479.htm
  4. https://ir.douyu.com/2019-07-16-DouYu-International-Holdings-Limited-Announces-Pricing-of-Initial-Public-Offering
  5. https://variety.com/2021/biz/asia/illegal-activity-alleged-at-douyu-chinese-live-streamer-1234887338/
  6. 6.0 6.1 https://m.thepaper.cn/baijiahao_10905726
  7. 7.0 7.1 https://grizzlyreports.com/Research/DOYU.pdf
  8. https://web.archive.org/web/20180617015246/http://www.265g.com/hotgame/gl/693577.html?_t=t
  9. https://www.channelnewsasia.com/asia/china-bans-livestreaming-unauthorised-titles-gaming-crackdown-2627646
  10. https://shroffed.com/2020/04/13/animal-crossing-content-banned-on-video-livestreaming-platforms-in-china/
  11. https://esports.gg/news/gaming/pubg-esports-ban-china/
  12. https://www.chinatradingdesk.com/post/huya-douyu-self-censored-ads
  13. http://www.cac.gov.cn/2020-06/23/c_1594459834502044.htm