Amusing applications
Wang Lirong, a Beijing mother who has a 5-year-old daughter, said: "I did not show my daughter any Apple product but one day, after watching some cartoons, she asked me to buy her an iPad, saying 'It looks fun'."
There are numerous interesting mobile applications showcased on electronic devices such as iPads and iPhones. "Applications are the core content and play a vital role in attracting children's attention," said Xiang Ligang, a Beijing-based industry insider.
"If there is no application, electronic products are like empty boxes," he added. Application developers for Apple's iOS platform have designed diversified software to entertain children and enable them to play and learn.
"Poetry apps teach children to read and recite poems written during the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907). Music apps amuse children by singing songs. Game apps create scenarios for play and to encourage competition with each other," Xiang said.
A mobile device such as an iPad provides multiple functions in children's lives - it's a teacher, a playmate and, sometimes, a close relative, he added.
Data from Fujian-based game application developer platform showed that the download number of apps developed for children on Apple Inc's iOS platform was hitting 40 million a month in late 2012.
The download number was fewer than 20 million times a month in May 2012.
Chinese developers are making all kinds of apps to feed the increasing demand.
In November, Yashili Group Co, China's top dairy product manufacturer, released a free game app on iOS and Android platforms, making the company one of the first milk powder makers in the country to launch game software.
The Guangdong-based company believes the initiative will win the hearts of children, resulting in their parents spending more on Yashili's products.
Gaming online
Every day when primary school student Tian Xiaolei finishes his homework, his parents allow him to spend 45 minutes online playing video games as a reward for his straight As at school. It is "the only moment in a day" that the 11-year-old can sit back and not worry about school work.
Studying at Zhongguancun No 3 primary school, the most renowned elementary education institution in Beijing, Tian is a diehard fan of Mole Manor, an online game especially developed for Tian and his peers. "Almost everyone in my class is talking about Mole Manor," said the boy.
Tian and his ilks' online playtime has become a huge business for game developers.
TaoMee Inc, the developer of Mole Manor and one of the nation's top gaming companies, said it had approximately 57.7 million active accounts on the Chinese mainland as of the third quarter of 2012.
Most of the players are Chinese teenagers.
"Our strategy of increasing active user growth and engagement is proving effective as evidenced by the 32 percent increase in sequential user growth and stable average revenue per user during the third quarter of 2012," said Benson Wang, TaoMee's co-founder and chief executive officer.
The gaming industry for children is becoming a main driver for the Internet-based entertainment industry in China.
Teenagers are also the major component of the country's Internet industry.
Nearly a quarter of China's Internet users were aged between 10 and 19 by the end of 2012, data from China Internet Network Information Center showed.
Challenges ahead
The changing landscape of the children's toy market has prompted a booming business for electronic product manufacturers such as Apple and Samsung. However, it is hurting traditional toy makers.
The world's top toy vendors Mattel and Hasbro are said to be "terrified" at the thought that children no longer plump for traditional presents such as dolls and toy cars, preferring the latest technological gadgets, including iPads and Kindles, the UK's Financial Times reported.
Analysts have lowered predictions for full-year toy sales, estimated at $1.41 billion for Hasbro and $3.29 billion for Mattel, after sales to date for the year 2012 were down on the previous year.
China is the world's biggest toy manufacturing base by production. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, China exported $11 billion toy products in 2010, almost double the $5.87 billion a decade ago.
"There are challenges but, in the meantime, we see opportunities," an official surnamed Zhao with a Dongguan-based toy company, said. "When children play online games, they may want to buy gaming figure models in stores," he added.
"In addition, parents usually set limits for children playing electronic devices, over concerns for their eyesight etc. So there is still room for traditional toys," Zhao said.
But most Chinese toymakers are not well prepared for the current changes. "A large number of toy manufacturers may suffer. Only a few of them can survive," said Xiong at CIConsulting.
Social concerns over children's obsession with electronic toys have arisen. Wu Jia in Guangdong said students at his school are not allowed to bring the devices into classrooms because teachers worry they might distract them from their studies.
"Children are too young to avoid obsession with high-tech gadgets. If they indulge in these devices, it may be harmful to their healthy growth," said Wang, the Beijing mother.
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