http://www.blogcdn.com/es.engadget.com/media/2012/11/consolasps3china.jpg Ever since 2000, game consoles have effectively (if not very assertively) been banned in China. There’s already been signs of a warming attitude with official plans for the Nintendo 3DS XL coming this December, but Sony may have slipped out hints of a fuller thaw without anyone noticing until now. A Sina Weibo user just discovered that the 160GB and 320GB versions of the previous-generation PlayStation 3, the CECH-3012, passed through China Compulsory Certificate approval in July – an odd move when the console couldn’t actually go on sale in an official capacity in current conditions. Certification is still far from a guarantee that Sony will actually sell the PS3 in the country, most of all when it’s a slightly outdated model of a console line that’s edging ever nearer to a replacement. The government certainly hasn’t commented on what the regulatory clearance means. If it ultimately leads to more gamers in Chengdu or Shanghai, however, we’re all for it.
Filed under: Gaming, Sony
Sony quietly gets PlayStation 3 certification in China, we hope for a few more Dynasty Warriors players originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 04 Nov 2012 10:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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