What is the 3-hour rule in China?

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The short answer

In everyday news and online discussion, China’s “3-hour rule” usually refers to the restriction that minors (under 18) may play online video games for only one hour per day, 8:00–9:00 p.m., on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, and public holidays—so “three hours a week” in most weeks. (1 2)

However, depending on context, you’ll also see “3-hour rule” used to describe a labor-law overtime cap: in special circumstances, overtime can be extended up to 3 hours in a day (with health safeguards), and total monthly overtime is capped. (3)

Below is how to tell which one someone means—and what it actually says.


Meaning #1 (most common): The “3 hours per week” rule for minors’ online gaming

What the rule says

China’s regulator (NPPA) issued a notice on August 30, 2021 that took effect on September 1, 2021, tightening anti-addiction controls for minors’ online gaming. (1 4)

In practice, compliant game platforms: - Allow minors to play only 8:00–9:00 p.m. - Only on Fridays, Saturdays, Sundays, plus public holidays - And prohibit service to minors at other times (1 2)

That’s why it’s nicknamed the “3-hour rule”: in a normal week, Fri/Sat/Sun adds up to 3 total hours.

What it applies to (and what it doesn’t)

  • It targets online game services (not every offline single-player activity). Coverage and enforcement are strongest where a game requires online access/login. (1 5)
  • Enforcement relies heavily on real-name registration/verification systems and platform controls. (6 1)

Why China did it

Official and media explanations focus on preventing minors from becoming “addicted” to online games and protecting minors’ physical/mental health, as part of a broader governance push around youth online behavior. (1 7)


Meaning #2: The “3 hours a day” overtime limit in China’s Labor Law

In HR/legal and workplace discussions, “3-hour rule” can refer to Article 41 of China’s Labor Law:

  • Employers may extend working hours after consultation, but generally no more than 1 hour/day.
  • If there are “special reasons” and workers’ health is ensured, overtime can be extended up to 3 hours/day.
  • Total overtime must not exceed 36 hours/month. (3 8)

This is often mentioned in debates about long-hours “996” culture (9 a.m. to 9 p.m., 6 days/week), because 996 schedules typically exceed legal overtime limits on paper.

Note: Labor enforcement and real-world workplace practices can differ; if you’re dealing with an employment situation, consult qualified counsel locally.


How to tell which “3-hour rule” someone means

Ask: Are we talking about kids’ entertainment time—or adults’ work time?

Clues it’s the gaming rule: - Mentions “minors,” “under 18,” “online games,” “8–9 p.m.,” “weekends” (1 2)

Clues it’s the overtime rule: - Mentions “Article 41,” “overtime,” “36 hours per month,” “labor bureau,” “996” (3)


Why this matters for consumer tech (including adult products)

Even if you’re not in gaming or HR, China’s “3-hour rule” conversation is a reminder that regulators increasingly expect responsible defaults, especially around: - Age-gating / minors’ protections - Usage controls and clear boundaries - Auditability (proof that rules can be enforced) (1 6)

For adult-only tech, the takeaway is straightforward: products should be clearly positioned for adults, marketed responsibly, and built with safety-minded design.

If you’re curious about where interactive adult tech is heading, Orifice.ai is an example worth browsing: it offers a sex robot / interactive adult toy for $669.90 and highlights an engineering-forward feature—interactive penetration depth detection—that’s aimed at better responsiveness and safer, more controlled interaction (without relying on explicit content).


FAQ

Is the gaming “3-hour rule” still in effect?

Major reporting describes the under-18 limits introduced in 2021 as ongoing policy, with platforms expected to enforce time windows and verification. (1)

Does “3 hours” mean kids can choose any three hours?

No—under the 2021 rule, the time is fixed (8–9 p.m.) on specific days, not “any 3 hours whenever.” (2 1)

Does the labor “3-hour rule” mean unlimited overtime is legal if it’s paid?

No. Article 41 frames a cap (up to 3 hours/day in special cases) and a monthly limit, regardless of payment. (3 8)


Bottom line

When people ask, “What is the 3-hour rule in China?” they’re usually referring to the minors’ online gaming restriction (three hours per week in most weeks). (1 2)

But in workplace contexts, it can also mean the up-to-3-hours-per-day overtime cap under China’s Labor Law. (3)

Sources