Call of Duty: Mobile has crossed 50 million pre-registrations in China

A year after its global release, the game is finally coming to China.

Image via Activision

Call of Duty: Mobile, developed by Tencent’s Timi Studios in a partnership with Activision, was released worldwide (except in China) on Oct. 1, 2019. A year later, the game is finally making its way to the lucrative Chinese market after it entered a public beta test last week, according to the South China Morning Post.

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Players in China are excited to get their hands on the game, too. CoD: Mobile has already crossed 50 million pre-registrations in the country, according to industry analyst Daniel Ahmad. Tencent has been advertising it heavily, bringing in popular Taiwanese singer Jay Chou to endorse the title.

The Chinese version of Call of Duty: Mobile will likely have some differences from the global version. Popular battle royale game PUBG Mobile also has a completely different game for China called Peacekeeper Elite. It has some key differences from the global version, although the overall mechanics are the same.

Related: Call of Duty: Mobile gets 120 FPS support

Last week, the general manager of Call of Duty: Mobile at Activision revealed that the game surpassed 300 million downloads worldwide. Call of Duty: Mobile has been giving fans monthly new content with new maps, soldiers, weapons, and modes from across the franchise being introduced on mobile. The game has made over $480 million since its release last year, according to an Oct. 1 report by analytics website Sensor Tower.

The number of pre-registrations for the game in China indicates that CoD: Mobile’s popularity could increase even more once it’s released in the country.

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Wasif Ahmed
Covering mobile games and their esports scene.