this post was submitted on 26 Dec 2023
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I'd guess because Google Play is a set of services that just use "Play" as a prefix.
Even more likely is Google Play is specifically a trademark
https://developer.android.com/distribute/marketing-tools/brand-guidelines
In a screenshot it's 'Play' + katakana. In some languages I checked on Wikipedia it's always 'Google play' or partially or completely translated, in korean it's completely in hieroglyphics, in chinese it's used both ways (with play staying in english), in japanese it's called entirely in english:
Brand managers influence wikipedia too, some even create their own pages and update them. It makes me think it's a marketing thing - a dedicated department thinking if they can translate these words and if it makes the brand look better to the public. Like that script in burmese (Myanmar) it has it all translated into their language: https://my.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E1%80%82%E1%80%B0%E1%80%82%E1%80%9A%E1%80%BA_%E1%80%95%E1%80%9C%E1%80%B1%E1%80%B8