Join Our Newsletter
  • Visit Our Store
  • Come Write for J-List!
J-List Blog
[adrotate group="1"]
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan
No Result
View All Result
J-List Blog
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan
No Result
View All Result
J-List Blog
No Result
View All Result

Chinese Tencent Gains a 7% Stake in Publisher Kadokawa

MsqD by MsqD
5 years ago
in News

In a surprising turn of events, or perhaps an unsurprising one, Chinese conglomerate Tencent Holdings looks set to gain a stake in another foreign enterprise. Only this time, it’s publishing giant Kadokawa, as revealed by the Japanese firm itself in a recent stock exchange filing. According to a Nikkei Asia report on October 29th, 2021, the company “has decided to enter into a business alliance agreement with Tencent Group for the anime business to further promote the company’s IP-based Global Media Mix.” It was announced that this will be through Hong Kong-based Tencent subsidiary Sixjoy buying 4.86 million shares for 6,170 yen per share, or around 30 billion yen ($264 million), which would take place sometime between November 15th and 26th. This was also confirmed by Dr. Serkan Toto of Kantan Games that same day.

Today, Japanese mega publishing house Kadokawa said Tencent acquired a 6.86% stake for US$264 million.

Kadokawa is From Software's parent company and said the capital will be used for producing games (among other things) going forward.

Tencent's biggest bounty in Japan so far. pic.twitter.com/aYnDulADzV

— Dr. Serkan Toto / Kantan Games Inc. (@serkantoto) October 29, 2021

 

KADOKAWA News Tencent Partnership
While presented by Kadokawa as a beneficial development for itself and the anime industry, Tencent’s newfound stake in the company is not without some risks. (Source: Twitter)

As stated above, this translates into Tencent acquiring about 7% of the Japanese publisher, which would make it the firm’s third-largest stakeholder. Meanwhile, in an Abema Prime interview, Kadokawa President and CEO Takeshi Natsuno explained why this “alliance” was made:

“In particular, Tencent is very interested in adapting anime works into games. Tencent wanted to be a part of the anime production committee, and we agreed to a partnership that would give us the right to develop the game in China, depending on the percentage of investment, which led to this partnership. China is also a difficult market for us, and we needed a partner.”

While Natsuno expressed doubts that anime and game production will shift to China, as it’s no longer conducive to cheap outsourcing due to rising labor costs there, he highlighted how this can potentially open the company’s works to the mainland Chinese market, which would otherwise be near-impossible without local support. As he put it, “we decided that we had more to gain than to lose from the partnership with Tencent.”

KADOKAWA News Screenshot 2
The recent news also goes in line with Kadokawa’s “overseas first” push to compete internationally, without having to rely on the likes of Netflix. (Source: Anime News Network)

You’d think that this would be a windfall for Kadokawa, as it can mean being able to invest the proceeds to secure editors and producers for more projects. Reception to this development, however, has been far from glowing. As Cartoon Brew‘s Alex Dudok de Wit highlighted, Tencent has been trying to extend its reach with various gaming and animation companies across the world, even as it faces a growing regulatory crackdown in China. Given the long-standing concerns about the conglomerate, whether it’s the wildly inconsistent quality in its games or a shady relationship with data security, these have already started raising eyebrows.

https://twitter.com/CLOE42009936/status/1454442944765718534

Some raised concerns that, while a relatively small acquisition in the bigger picture, Tencent’s presence in one of Japan’s largest publishers, and by extension the anime industry, may risk “selling out” to Chinese-style regulation, or worse. On top of being more than a little reminiscent of Takeshi Natsuno’s infamous remarks on endorsing manga censorship just a few months ago, this has once again revived fears of freedom of expression being challenged. This may potentially set a negative precedent for anime as you know it:

https://twitter.com/SniperKnighter/status/1454566980795633669

In addition to such issues, some have expressed fears that the Chinese conglomerate’s investment will only encourage excesses in the industry, at the risk of fostering even more appalling MAPPA-style work conditions that would prove taxing for animators:

This is alarming as while I'm scared about censorship being imposed on all media, Kadokawa will use Tencent's money to make 40 or more shows per year which is quite taxing for anime studios. https://t.co/vdH9OOuhtW

— ベニグマティッカ (@Benigmatica) October 29, 2021

While there are those who were neither surprised nor all that shocked at this news, the deal hasn’t exactly painted either party in a good light in their eyes:

https://twitter.com/frog_kun/status/1454233154479276035

Overall, these could put Kadokawa’s ambitious “overseas first” campaign to be internationally competitive, especially against the likes of Netflix, into jeopardy by poisoning the well. At this stage, however, it’s still up in the air how things will play out. While the full ramifications may be out of my paygrade to even imagine, it’s definitely something to keep a tab on. But what are your thoughts?

 

Tags: AnimeChinaKadokawaTencentVideo Games

More Posts Like This

Magical Explorer PV1 8
News

The Side Character Ascends in Magical Explorer

by Kasaix
21 hours ago

Not all isekai protagonists are equal. Some have it worse than others; it’s true. Kosuke falls in the middle: not...

The Salty Koharu Has A Soft Spot For Me PV1 6
News

A Change of Heart, The Salty Koharu Has a Soft Spot for Me

by Kasaix
4 days ago

It’s cute when people mistake shyness for coldness. Koharu Sato is famous for being cold and abrupt with people who...

Jyu Oh Mujin Dandivine PV1 3

Jyu-Oh Mujin Dandivine Returns to Save the World

1 week ago
Soara And The House Of Monsters PV1 6

Soara and the House of Monsters Builds a Peaceful Future

1 week ago
Cyberpunk Edgerunners 2 PV1 9

Cyberpunk: Edgerunners II Returns to Night City

1 week ago
Sekiro No Defeat PV1 10b

Sekiro: No Defeat Attains Immortality and Confronts Samurai

1 week ago
Next Post
HaremMarriage Manga Cover

Polygamy Manga Harem Marriage Gets Live-Action Series

Trending Today

The J List Jav Actress Ranking 2025
Your Friend in Japan

JAV Actress Ranking: Who Are The Top Stars on J-List in 2025?

11 months ago
Chainsmoker Cat PV1 1
News

The Chainsmoker Cat Ignores Her Troubles With a New Pack

1 month ago
The Top Rising Jav Stars In2026
Your Friend in Japan

Rising JAV Stars to Watch in 2026: New Debuts and Breakout Performers

3 weeks ago
The Top 10 Jav Actresses Article
Your Friend in Japan

The Top 10 JAV Actresses to Browse During J-List’s Sale!

1 year ago
The 10 Best Anime Characters Who Have Sex
Your Friend in Japan

The 10 Best Anime Main Characters (Who Actually Have Sex)

1 year ago
The Top Fakku Manga Of 2026
Adult Manga Reviews [NSFW]

The 11 Top FAKKU Manga on J-List You Need in Your Collection [2026 Edition]

by Peter Payne
July 8, 2026

J18 Doujinshi Review: My Neighbor Ayane

Let’s Review Ecchi Manga: Become the Gyaru With Danshi Koukousei dakedo Gal ni TS Shimashita!

School Days Remastered Is Getting an English Dub?!

The 11 Top FAKKU Manga on J-List You Need in Your Collection [2026 Edition]

Yowayowa Sensei, Episode 4 — Busted Best-Laid Plans!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Discord
  • YouTube

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.

No Result
View All Result
  • Featured
  • News
  • Gallery
  • Product Reports
  • Your Friend in Japan

© J-LIST. All trademarks, characters and images are property of their respective owners.