Arena sticks to Honor's core MOBA formula, where teams of five distinctive heroes clash in a bid to take over each other's bases. The largest change is a cultural one: Arena drops Chinese legends in favor of Western fantasy tropes, and it switches to Facebook for connecting friends instead of WeChat.

The game has been available in Europe since August, and has had at least some success with more than 2 million downloads. The problem, as The Verge notes, is that Chinese companies have historically had problems translating the success of their domestic games to an international audience. The titles rarely have any name recognition outside of China, and there are differences in gaming habits that make success difficult. Where limited access to games has led to MOBAs becoming wildly popular on phones in China, there's a stigma against mobile gaming in North America.

Tencent is creating an eSports league to boost competitive play and is partnering with livestreamers to drum up hype, but there's no guarantee of success -- certainly not when it has to take on established titles like Vainglory. However, it's the attempt that matters. Chinese behemoths like Tencent know they'll have to move beyond their home turf to keep growing, and that means doing more than acquiring foreign companies (Tencent owns League of Legends' Riot Games and a piece of Activision Blizzard) to ride on their successes.

Update: It's out! You can grab it on Android or iOS for free.