In June 2018, HBO's late-night talk show
Last Week Tonight with John Oliver was blocked in China after it spoke about Xi Jinping and
censorship of the media in China, including comparisons between Xi and Pooh. On October 7, 2019, Pooh was featured in the
South Park episode "
Band in China" as a prisoner in China because of his alleged resemblance to Xi. In the episode, Pooh is brutally killed by
Randy Marsh.
South Park was banned in China as a result of the episode. On October 10, 2019,
Omegle added an image of the American flag on its front page with the words "Xi Jinping sure looks like Winnie-the-Pooh" over it. On October 16, 2019, YouTuber
PewDiePie uploaded an episode of his Meme Review series, in which he reacted to memes about the Internet Memes Between Pooh and Xi. Shortly after, PewDiePie reported his content had been banned in China. On October 15, 2021, the song "
Fragile" by
Namewee and
Kimberley Chen was released. The song was intended to mock the Chinese Government and Chinese censorship, and included a comparison between Xi Jinping and Winnie-the-Pooh. As a result, both artists were banned from Weibo in China. On October 24, 2021, the NBA player
Enes Kanter wore a pair of shoes emblazoned with the words "Free China" and featuring Winnie-the-Pooh. The shoes had been designed together with the Shanghai-born, Australia-based dissident cartoonist Badiucao. Earlier during the week, Kanter had worn other shoes with the messages "Free Tibet" and "Free Uyghur". In March 2023, Movie distributor VII Pillars Entertainment announced on
Facebook that
Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey, originally scheduled for release on March 23, would be cancelled for release in the Hong Kong and Macau regions. However, VII Pillars Entertainment did not provide any explanation for the decision. In April 2023, the
Taiwanese Air Force released an image of a Taiwanese pilot. The pilot was wearing a shoulder patch depicting a
Formosan black bear punching Winnie-the-Pooh. The badge was designed by Alec Hsu in 2022. After the photo went viral, Hsu ordered more patches due to its popularity with civilians and the military alike. "I wanted to boost the morale of our troops through designing this patch," he told the media. The patch is not an official part of the Taiwanese Air Force's uniform, although the military "will maintain an open attitude" to things that raise morale. On January 28, 2025, the
National Post reported that
DeepSeek apps censored topics controversial to the Chinese government, including Winnie-the-Pooh. When asked about Pooh's significance in China, the app simply described the children's cartoon character, omitting information about its usage as a controversial symbol in China.
Video games In November 2018, the character was initially blurred out of the Chinese version of a trailer for
Kingdom Hearts III. However, the same site that the trailer was posted on later uploaded a screenshot of the same trailer unedited. In February 2019, the Taiwanese video game
Devotion was found to have contained an
Easter egg comparing Xi Jinping to Pooh two days after the game's release. As a result,
Devotion was heavily
review bombed by Chinese gamers on Steam, and the game went from having "Overwhelmingly Positive" reviews overall to being "Mostly Negative". The game was removed from
Steam in China on February 23. In July 2019, the Chinese government revoked the business license of Indievent, the original publisher of the game in China. The government's official statement was that the revocation was due to violations of relevant laws. As of March 2019, Pooh's Chinese name (
Chinese: 小熊维尼; lit. 'little bear Winnie') was censored in
World of Warcraft,
PUBG: Battlegrounds and
Arena of Valor. In June 2021, it was reported that the developers of
Cyberpunk 2077 had utilized the tag "Winnie the Pooh" for media and content within the game's source code intended to be censored according to guidelines in China. In 2022,
Diablo Immortal was delayed with publications speculating that this was due to an alleged, since-deleted post from the account making reference to "Winnie the Pooh" after China banned Immortal's Official
Weibo account due to "violating related laws and regulations".
NetEase delayed the launch from June 23 to July 25 in China. On January 5, 2025,
CBR reported the Marvel-based video game
Marvel Rivals had banned the phrase "Winnie the Pooh" from chat and showed the message "Text contains inappropriate content" if a player attempts to do so. The game's developer,
NetEase, is a Chinese company in partnership with
Marvel. == See also ==