Tencent’s PUBG Mobile replacement has already earned a killing in China.
Game for Peace, which was released in order to make the PUBG formula monetisable and government-approvable in China, earned over $14 million within 72 hours of launch last week, according to Sensor Tower.
That's roughly $4.7 million per day for a game that is essentially PUBG Mobile with excessive violence filed away.
Despite a year on China's App Store, PUBG Mobile was never a money-maker in the region for Tencent. The game was caught in a testing period during China's approval freeze and was never given the go-ahead by authorities to actually monetise.
World Peace
Outside of China, Game for Peace still managed to outearn PUBG Mobile. The latter reportedly grossed $2.2 million over the same period.
Sensor Tower also notes that Game for Peace outearned battle royale rival Fortnite, grossing 3.5-times that title's three-day income of roughly $4 million.
China isn't the only country to make life hard for PUBG Mobile. The handheld battleground has been temporarily suspended in a number of Indian cities, while Nepal narrowly avoided banning the title outright.