Chinese shares continued their sharp fall on Monday as concerns over the country's slowing growth and volatile markets sparked panic among traders.
The mainland benchmark index, the Shanghai Composite, closed down 8.5% at 3,209.91 points, extending last week's losses.
The sell-off continued despite Beijing's latest attempts to reassure investors.
China's dramatic tumble has dragged down markets across the region.
The Hong Kong Hang Seng index dropped 4.9% to 21,313.28, while the region's biggest stock market, Japan's Nikkei 225 closed 4.6% lower at 18,540.68 points, its lowest level in nearly five months.
In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 finished 4.1% lower at 5,001.30, while South Korea's Kospi index wrapped the day 2.5% lower at 1,829.81 points.
Beijing's latest intervention, to allow its main state pension fund to invest in the stock market, failed to reassure traders both in China and abroad.
Under the new rules, the fund will be allowed to invest up to 30% of its net assets in domestically-listed shares. By increasing demand for them, the government hopes prices will rise.
Analysis: Celia Hatton, BBC News Beijing Correspondent:
"Every time I look at what's happening in the stock market, I feel sick and I can't eat. China, please save my money," a panicked Chinese investor wrote online.
Many others are voicing the same desires: if the mainland's stock markets are faltering, they want the state to come to the rescue. It's not just a hope, it's an expectation.
And that's where the government's problem lies. Beijing's economic reform plan hinges on its pledge to withdraw from the market economy. China's stock markets will never mature if the state is always hovering in the background, like an anxious parent.
However, 80% of China's investors are individuals managing their own portfolios. In contrast, foreign stock exchanges are usually dominated by large, institutional investors. Of course, China's stock market wealth is concentrated among the elite. China's rookie investors don't have the ability to sway the markets on their own, because the values of their portfolios are relatively small.
But that still leaves millions of ordinary people dangerously exposed to the fluctuations in the market. And, as China's internet forums indicate, those are people who believe the government can and should guarantee their investments.
If millions of angry citizens lose their life savings in the stock market and the state does nothing to ease their pain, the government may face its greatest fear: widespread social unrest.
A 'one-trick pony'?
Simon Littlewood, president at business advisory firm ACG Global told the BBC there were concerns that the world's second biggest economy was "a one-trick pony as they have been trying repeatedly over the past few months to put more liquidity into their economy", yet so far have failed to calm markets.
Over the past week, China's benchmark Shanghai Composite fell 12%, adding up to a 30% drop since the middle of June.
The sharp fall sparked a global sell-off, with the Dow Jones in the US losing 6%, while the UK's FTSE 100 posted its biggest weekly loss this year of 5%.
Earlier this month, the Chinese central bank devalued the yuan in an attempt to boost exports.
IMF: 'No crisis'
Over the weekend, the International Monetary Fund weighed in on the global sell-off in an attempt to avoid further market panic.
China's economic slowdown and fall in equities was not a crisis but a "necessary" adjustment for the economy, a senior IMF official said on Sunday.
"It's totally premature to speak of a crisis in China", Carlo Cottarelli, IMF executive director representing countries such as Italy and Greece on its board, told a press conference, reiterating the international lender's forecast for a 6.8% expansion of the Chinese economy this year, below the 7.4% growth achieved in 2014.
On Friday, figures showed China's factory activity in August shrank at its fastest pace in more than six years.
This came after official figures showed the country's economic growth continuing to slow. For the three months to the end of July, the economy grew by 7% compared with a year earlier - its slowest pace since 2009.
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