WeChat's Red Packet Code Crackdown Sparks Controversy
WeChat Restricts Red Packet Codes Amid Festive Marketing Rush
The annual Lunar New Year "red packet war" among tech giants took an unexpected turn this week as users discovered sharing restrictions within WeChat. Alibaba's Qwen AI assistant had just launched its "3 billion yuan free shopping" campaign on February 6th, which proved wildly popular - surpassing 5 million orders within five hours and topping Apple's App Store charts.
Sharing Roadblocks Emerge
However, excitement turned to frustration when users found they couldn't copy Qwen's red packet codes within WeChat chats. The issue appears when codes contain phrases like "more information" - long-pressing these messages no longer shows the copy option, effectively breaking the social sharing chain crucial for such promotions.
Surprisingly, the restriction doesn't just target competitors. Our tests confirmed that Tencent's own Yuanbao AI app faces identical copying limitations in WeChat. This raises eyebrows considering Yuanbao is Tencent's product competing in the same AI assistant space.
Platform Wars Heat Up
With Chinese New Year approaching, what began as a battle of promotional scales has shifted to fundamental access points. Users hoping to collect holiday red packets now face uncertainty depending on which platforms they use for sharing.
The timing couldn't be more critical - the Lunar New Year period sees billions exchanged digitally through these marketing campaigns. Last year, over 800 million people participated in various platforms' red packet activities.
As of publication, WeChat hasn't commented on these restrictions or whether they represent intentional policy changes. Industry watchers will be monitoring whether other platforms implement similar barriers during this crucial marketing period.
Key Points:
- Alibaba's Qwen saw massive early success with its 3 billion yuan shopping promotion
- WeChat appears to block copying of certain red packet codes, including from Tencent's own Yuanbao
- No official explanation has been provided for these sharing limitations
- The restrictions emerge during peak season for digital red packet campaigns
- Platform interoperability becomes unexpected battleground in festive marketing wars



