Chinese Labour Camps in gold farming racket of World of Warcraft , says Detainee
The black market in World of Warcraft credits is a full-blown industry in China. Picture: Blizzard Entertainment
- Prisoners forced to break rocks, game
- Physical punishments if quotas not met
- Huge blackmarket in gaming credits
A former prisoner of a Chinese labour camp claims guards are forcing detainees to play online games as part of a huge money-making scam.
Liu Dali told The Guardian website that guards traded the credits inmates built up playing games such as World of Warcraft for money.
"The computers were never turned off."
"Prison bosses made more money forcing inmates to play games than they do forcing people to do manual labour," he said.
"There were 300 prisoners forced to play games. We worked 12-hour shifts in the camp. I heard them say they could earn 5000-6000rmb a day.
"We didn't see any of the money. The computers were never turned off."
Dali — not his real name — is aged 54 and was sent to Jixi re-education camp in Heilongjiang province, in north east China, in 2004.
He said he would spend his days either breaking rocks or assembling car seat covers and his nights playing computer games.
Dali said that if he didn't complete his credit quota, the guards would punish him: "They would beat me with plastic pipes. We kept playing until we could barely see things."
The building up and trading of game credits is known as gold farming.
Millions of gamers around the world pay real money for the credits in order to save hours of playing time.
Gold farming is rampant in China and other developing nations. Many Chinese gamers have full-time jobs as gold farmers but The Guardian story highlights the first time it has been practiced in labour camps.
Quoting figures from the China Internet Centre, the paper says almost £1.2 billion ($1.85 billion) worth of virtual currencies was traded in China in 2008.
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