Getting Your Game Live in Taiwan

We walk through the technical setup and market positioning together—no guesswork involved.

Most teams hit the same roadblocks: platform compliance confusion, server configuration for the region, and figuring out what actually resonates with local players. We've done this dozens of times, so we can show you the practical path forward without the usual trial-and-error phase.

Start Your Setup

How We Actually Do This

Six steps that cover everything from initial assessment to your first week live. Each phase builds on what we learned in the previous one.

1

Technical Assessment

We review your current build and identify what needs adjustment for Taiwan's infrastructure. Server latency, payment gateway compatibility, content delivery—the basics that matter.

Usually takes 3-4 business days depending on your stack complexity.

2

Compliance Documentation

Taiwan has specific requirements for game content and data handling. We prepare the necessary documentation and guide you through the submission process with local authorities.

The paperwork phase—not exciting, but it prevents issues later.

3

Platform Integration

We configure your game for iOS and Android stores in the Taiwan region, set up localized payment methods, and test the full purchase flow with local currency.

This includes testing on devices commonly used in Taiwan—not just flagship phones.

4

Localization Review

Beyond just translation. We check your game's tone, cultural references, and interface elements to make sure they work for local players. Sometimes small adjustments make a big difference.

We've seen games fail because of subtle cultural misreads.

5

Soft Launch Prep

Before the official launch, we run a limited release to gather real player data. This helps us fine-tune server capacity, identify unexpected bugs, and adjust monetization based on actual behavior.

Typically 7-10 days with a controlled user group.

6

Launch Support

We monitor your game's performance closely during the first two weeks. Quick response to any technical issues, player feedback analysis, and immediate adjustments if something's not working as expected.

You won't be figuring this out alone at 2am.

Our Approach to Mobile Game Infrastructure

We built this framework after launching 40+ mobile games across Asia. It's not theoretical—every step comes from solving real problems that came up during actual launches.

What makes Taiwan different? Payment preferences lean heavily toward convenience stores and mobile carriers. Players expect customer service in Mandarin Chinese, and they're less forgiving of server lag than markets in other regions.

  • Server architecture optimized for Taiwan's CDN networks and ISP landscape
  • Integration with local payment providers like LINE Pay and FamiPort
  • Customer support pipeline that handles Traditional Chinese inquiries efficiently
  • Analytics setup tracking metrics that matter for retention in this market
  • Community management strategies adapted to how Taiwanese players communicate

The goal isn't just getting your game online—it's making sure players stick around past day three. That requires understanding what local players actually expect from their mobile gaming experience.

Mobile game development workspace showing server configuration and testing environment Technical documentation and platform integration planning for Taiwan market

What You Get During Onboarding

These are the practical things we handle so you can focus on improving your game based on real player feedback.

Technical Setup

We configure your backend, set up monitoring tools, and establish the connection to Taiwan-optimized CDN services. You get documentation for everything we implement, so you're not dependent on us long-term.

This includes automated alerts for performance issues and a dashboard showing real-time server health across different regions of Taiwan.

Platform Certification

Getting approved on app stores requires specific documentation and formatting. We handle the submission process for both iOS App Store and Google Play, addressing any rejection reasons promptly.

We've navigated the approval process enough times to know what triggers manual reviews and how to avoid unnecessary delays.

Player Communication

Your first wave of players will have questions and issues. We set up your support channels, create response templates in Traditional Chinese, and handle initial inquiries while training your team.

This includes monitoring social media channels where Taiwanese gamers typically discuss new releases and addressing concerns before they spread.

Performance Analysis

Raw data doesn't help much without context. We track your KPIs, compare them against similar games in Taiwan, and explain what the numbers actually mean for your specific situation.

Weekly reports during your first month include specific recommendations based on what we're seeing in player behavior and technical performance.

Hiromi Takeda, Technical Integration Lead

Hiromi Takeda

Technical Integration Lead

"Most technical problems during launch come from overlooking regional infrastructure differences. We catch those before they become player-facing issues."

Sofie Lindström, Market Operations Coordinator

Sofie Lindström

Market Operations Coordinator

"The compliance documentation seems tedious, but it's what keeps your game from getting pulled after launch. Better to handle it properly from day one."