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| Meta Title | Netflixâs Love Affair With Korean Content Isnât Ending With Squid Game |
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| Boilerpipe Text | The whole world was watching
âSquid Gameâ
in the first three days after its Season 3 premiere. The dystopian thriller from director Hwang Dong-hyuk debuted at No. 1 in all 93 countries where Netflix ranks its viewership â a first for the streamer. The final season also secured 60.1 million views globally in its first three days â another first.Â
And its viewership is only expected to grow. The first season is still the most-watched title of all time, with 265.2 million views in its first 90 days. As for Season 2, that ranks as the third most-watched series ever behind âWednesdayâ with 192.6 million views.
This isnât a fluke or even a âSquid Gameâ-specific phenomenon. In 2023, the streamer pledged to spend
$2.5 billion in South Korea
over the next four years. As Netflix has increased its investment in Korean shows and movies, viewers have embraced this subgenre. A study commissioned by Netflix from
the independent research firm 2CV
found that 60% of Netflixâs 280 million users have viewed Korean content, with more than two-thirds of American subscribers having watched K-content for more than two years.Â
âKorean content is the most watched non-English shows on Netflix, and thatâs actually more than Spanish-language content,â Don Kang, vice president of Korean content at Netflix, told TheWrap. Thatâs notable considering Spanish is the fourth most-spoken language in the world,
according to Ethnologue
. Korean doesnât even make the top 20. âIt just speaks to the level of travelability and the expansion the Korean content has enjoyed through Netflix.â
At a time when television and film is more globalized than ever, securing big, buzzy markets has become vital. Prime Video is available in over 200 countries and territories, while Netflix reaches closer to 190 countries and HBO Max stands at 65. Netflix has emerged as one of the dominant streaming players because of its commitment to localization rather than trying to force a global hit. The world may be tuning in to watch Korean content, but these shows come from local creators who are simply trying to tell Korean stories. Itâs a strategy that CCO Bela Bajaria has emphasized time and time again. And with Netflixâs K-content, you can see it working.
Diesel Labs, a content intelligence company that tracks conversations on social media to assess peopleâs opinions, found similar levels of excitement. During the first three weeks leading up to their launches, both âSirensâ and âGinny & Georgiaâ Season 3 â two series that are considered to be mid-sized English-language hits â saw 1.6 million engagements online. The Korean romance âWhen Life Gives You Tangerinesâ saw 2.7 million engagements. âSquid Gameâ clocked in at a staggering 16.5 million engagements.Â
âIt doesnât feel like itâs a short fad,â Anjali Midha, president and CEO of Diesel Labs, told TheWrap.Â
Midha pointed to the recently released âKPop Demon Hunters,â a Sony English-language animated movie that has reached the streamerâs Top 10 list in all 93 countries and scored 33.4 million views in its first two weeks.
âKorean culture has become familiar enough for the U.S. to start investing in Korean stylistic content,â Midha said. âThat suggests that this is more like an anime. Itâs a genre that weâre going to see more of over time.âÂ
In the second half of 2024,
almost a third of all viewing on Netflix
came from non-English shows and films. A study from the technology research and advisory group
Omdia broke down
language viewership trends even further. In the first half of 2024, Korean shows accounted for 8.71% of all non-English language viewership on Netflix, while Spanish-language content followed closely behind at 7.11%. Spanish-language viewing was also more than double that of French, German and Portuguese viewing combined.
Chart that shows percentage of non-English content on Netflix in first half of 2024 vs. Language
The unexpected success of âSquid Gameâ in 2021 is a major reason why Korean content has taken off. But K-contentâs global rise can also be attributed to Netflixâs continued willingness to invest in newer Korean talents, a country that has made a serious effort to appeal to U.S. media and a culture that prefers morally clear narratives that can be appealing to a broad audience. âSquid Gameâ may be the biggest example, but the era of K-content is only the beginning.
K-content benefits from the Netflix effect
The Korean Wave first took off in the 1990s when shows like âWhat Is Loveâ and âStar in My Heartâ became popular in China. The phenomenon eventually began to emerge in Japan in the early 2000s, leading to an increase in Korean tourism, and had a niche following in the U.S. But it wasnât until Netflix entered the playing field and âParasiteâ won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020 that the K-content TV show game changed.Â
âK-dramas have existed for a long time, since the â60s, but it was only with the entrance of Netflix where the production values really became higher,â Steve Choe, a scholar of Korean media, told TheWrap. Since Netflixâs increased investment in K-content, Choe has noticed that more of his students are coming from places like the Middle East, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Latin America and Europe.
âKingdomâ (Netflix)
Netflixâs first original Korean series set the stage for its investments to come. Based on the webtoon series âThe Kingdom of the Gods,â 2019âs âKingdomâ was an ambitious thriller that combined a period drama set in the 17th century with zombie horror.Â
âNo other TV stations or streaming services back then in Korea would commission something like that,â Kang said. âSo weâve always been trying to be a place where you can tell stories that no one else will tell at a scale that has not been done before.â
âNetflix offers opportunities for young filmmakers and writers who are not yet established,â Areum Jeong, assistant professor of Korean studies at Arizona State University, told TheWrap. âIf you look at Korean broadcasting stations, they tend to go with big-name directors and big-name writers. They donât want to take a chance with young writers because they might flop, so they work with the same screenwriter again and again.â
When it comes to which projects to invest in, Kang always prioritizes local first: teams and creators from South Korea who are making Korean stories for Korean audiences. âThe main thing is really finding that unique voice in your own country or region,â Kang said.
âAll of Us Are Deadâ (Yang Hae-sung/Netflix)
Why audiences canât get enoughÂ
At first glance, it may not seem like thereâs a common thread between a show about murderous childrenâs games like âSquid Gameâ and a cross-border romance like âCrash Landing on You.â But for Choe, itâs the easy morality of these universes thatâs appealing and even comforting to audiences. The sources of distress are often broad and relatable whether they be the weight of a patriarchal system or the evils of capitalism.Â
âTheyâre therapeutic for individuals around the globe who suffer because of circumstances beyond their control,â Choe said.
Another reason for their popularity has to do with production quality. Using its AI model thatâs been trained on social media responses, Diesel Labs found that people praise the lighting, costuming, twists and character development of K-content. Thatâs notable considering one of the big complaints about non-American shows is often that they look or feel cheap.
Midha also noted that South Korea has made a concerted effort over the past decade to expose more of its culture, music and content to the rest of the world. âItâs remarkable to see the success that those efforts have had. I donât know that any other country has been so specific about the desire to export content in that way,â she said.
Choe echoed her analysis, noting that thereâs long been a close relationship between Korean content and its government. When Korean ambassadors travel to the U.S. or Europe, itâs not unusual for them to meet with the heads of streaming platforms in those countries.
âThe Glory â (Graphyoda/Netflix)
K-contentâs future on NetflixÂ
Netflix has no plans to dampen its love affair with South Korea.Â
The streamer is preparing to launch âPhysical: Asia,â a spinoff of the beloved unscripted competition series âPhysical: 100,â as well as Season 2 of âCulinary Class Warsâ and the makeover show âBetter Late Than Single.â On the scripted TV front, âGenie, Make a Wish,â a new romantic comedy from âThe Gloryâ creator Kim Eun-sook, is on the horizon alongside new dramas like âThe Price of Confession,â âTrigger,â âAs You Stood Byâ and âYou And Everything Else,â as well as comedies like âAemaâ and âCan This Love Be Translated?â Netflix is even investing more in Korean movies with âWall To Wall,â âMantis,â Byun Sung-hyunâs âGood News,â âGreat Floodâ and the latest film from âBurningâ director Lee Chang-dong. Even Netflixâs latest advertising push â
âYou donât have to speak it, to love itâ
â is dedicated to showing fan reactions to Korean content and highlighting the titles to come.
âIf you look at the volume of shows that weâve been producing, it has steadily increased,â Kang said.
Overall, Netflixâs investment in K-content has proven to be positive for the country. The 2CV study found that 67% of Netflix users say they feel positively about South Korea, compared to 37% of non-Netflix users, with an equal amount of Netflix users expressing interest in visiting the country vs. 41% of non-Netflix users.Â
But some are hesitant about South Koreaâs increased reliance on the streamer, especially during a time when creating K-content is becoming more expensive. A big source of concern has to do with the lack of residuals. âSquid Gameâ creator Hwang has become the unofficial poster child for this worry since heâs spoken publicly in the past about how his Season 1 contract didnât contain any clauses for performance-related bonuses. He later
assured TheWrap
he was paid more for Seasons 2 and 3. âIt got better, for sure. Thatâs why I did it,â Hwang said.Â
Though Jeong sees Netflixâs investment in South Korea as a âprofitable partnership,â she also noted that âdiscussions are ongoing regarding IP rights and whether Korean creatives are being compensated fairly.â
âWe try to be fair, of course. Itâs only right for us to treat the creators fairly if they have such massive shows,â Kang said. âWe try to match what the industry norm is. We pay them upfront, and we take all the risks in terms of whether itâs a hit or whether itâs a flop. The entire financial responsibility falls on us, and we pay them top of the market, regardless.âÂ
As for the rising production costs of K-content, Kang sees it as less of a concern and more of a symptom of a growing entertainment ecosystem. âFor someone to say production costs have risen, it means the people who make the show are being compensated more,â he said. |
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# Netflixâs Love Affair With Korea Isnât Ending With âSquid Gameâ
Pro Available to WrapPRO members
The streamerâs head of Korean content explains the strategy thatâs led to 60% of its 280 million users watching shows and movies from South Korea

[Kayla Cobb](https://www.thewrap.com/author/kayla-cobb/ "Posts by Kayla Cobb")
July 7, 2025 @ 6:00 AM
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Collage of "Crash Landing on You," "Squid Game" and "Extraordinary Attorney Woo" (Photo Credit: Netflix, TheWrap, Christopher Smith)
***
The whole world was watching [âSquid Gameâ](https://www.thewrap.com/tag/squid-game/) in the first three days after its Season 3 premiere. The dystopian thriller from director Hwang Dong-hyuk debuted at No. 1 in all 93 countries where Netflix ranks its viewership â a first for the streamer. The final season also secured 60.1 million views globally in its first three days â another first.
And its viewership is only expected to grow. The first season is still the most-watched title of all time, with 265.2 million views in its first 90 days. As for Season 2, that ranks as the third most-watched series ever behind âWednesdayâ with 192.6 million views.
This isnât a fluke or even a âSquid Gameâ-specific phenomenon. In 2023, the streamer pledged to spend [\$2.5 billion in South Korea](https://time.com/6289170/netflix-invests-south-korea-content-k-dramas/) over the next four years. As Netflix has increased its investment in Korean shows and movies, viewers have embraced this subgenre. A study commissioned by Netflix from [the independent research firm 2CV](https://assets.ctfassets.net/4cd45et68cgf/7BVMGcs5hIEsQqtOiT3zHm/839b3cde8e2ac111ef4b52e9ddb9bdb8/FULL_KR_Cultural_Affinity_Report_-_June_2025_EN_.pdf) found that 60% of Netflixâs 280 million users have viewed Korean content, with more than two-thirds of American subscribers having watched K-content for more than two years.
âKorean content is the most watched non-English shows on Netflix, and thatâs actually more than Spanish-language content,â Don Kang, vice president of Korean content at Netflix, told TheWrap. Thatâs notable considering Spanish is the fourth most-spoken language in the world, [according to Ethnologue](https://www.ethnologue.com/insights/ethnologue200/). Korean doesnât even make the top 20. âIt just speaks to the level of travelability and the expansion the Korean content has enjoyed through Netflix.â
At a time when television and film is more globalized than ever, securing big, buzzy markets has become vital. Prime Video is available in over 200 countries and territories, while Netflix reaches closer to 190 countries and HBO Max stands at 65. Netflix has emerged as one of the dominant streaming players because of its commitment to localization rather than trying to force a global hit. The world may be tuning in to watch Korean content, but these shows come from local creators who are simply trying to tell Korean stories. Itâs a strategy that CCO Bela Bajaria has emphasized time and time again. And with Netflixâs K-content, you can see it working.

Diesel Labs, a content intelligence company that tracks conversations on social media to assess peopleâs opinions, found similar levels of excitement. During the first three weeks leading up to their launches, both âSirensâ and âGinny & Georgiaâ Season 3 â two series that are considered to be mid-sized English-language hits â saw 1.6 million engagements online. The Korean romance âWhen Life Gives You Tangerinesâ saw 2.7 million engagements. âSquid Gameâ clocked in at a staggering 16.5 million engagements.
âIt doesnât feel like itâs a short fad,â Anjali Midha, president and CEO of Diesel Labs, told TheWrap.
Midha pointed to the recently released âKPop Demon Hunters,â a Sony English-language animated movie that has reached the streamerâs Top 10 list in all 93 countries and scored 33.4 million views in its first two weeks.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-2-netflix-behind-the-scenes-hwang-dong-hyuk/)
**Read Next**
[âSquid Gameâ Season 2: From Illness to 500-Person Shoots, Behind the Scenes of Netflixâs Mega-Hit](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-2-netflix-behind-the-scenes-hwang-dong-hyuk/)
âKorean culture has become familiar enough for the U.S. to start investing in Korean stylistic content,â Midha said. âThat suggests that this is more like an anime. Itâs a genre that weâre going to see more of over time.â
In the second half of 2024, [almost a third of all viewing on Netflix](https://about.netflix.com/en/news/what-we-watched-the-second-half-of-2024) came from non-English shows and films. A study from the technology research and advisory group [Omdia broke down](https://omdia.tech.informa.com/pr/2024/oct/omdia-korean-and-spanish-content-dominate-netflixs-non-english-viewing-capturing-16-percent-of-global-viewing) language viewership trends even further. In the first half of 2024, Korean shows accounted for 8.71% of all non-English language viewership on Netflix, while Spanish-language content followed closely behind at 7.11%. Spanish-language viewing was also more than double that of French, German and Portuguese viewing combined.

Chart that shows percentage of non-English content on Netflix in first half of 2024 vs. Language
The unexpected success of âSquid Gameâ in 2021 is a major reason why Korean content has taken off. But K-contentâs global rise can also be attributed to Netflixâs continued willingness to invest in newer Korean talents, a country that has made a serious effort to appeal to U.S. media and a culture that prefers morally clear narratives that can be appealing to a broad audience. âSquid Gameâ may be the biggest example, but the era of K-content is only the beginning.
## K-content benefits from the Netflix effect
The Korean Wave first took off in the 1990s when shows like âWhat Is Loveâ and âStar in My Heartâ became popular in China. The phenomenon eventually began to emerge in Japan in the early 2000s, leading to an increase in Korean tourism, and had a niche following in the U.S. But it wasnât until Netflix entered the playing field and âParasiteâ won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020 that the K-content TV show game changed.
âK-dramas have existed for a long time, since the â60s, but it was only with the entrance of Netflix where the production values really became higher,â Steve Choe, a scholar of Korean media, told TheWrap. Since Netflixâs increased investment in K-content, Choe has noticed that more of his students are coming from places like the Middle East, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Latin America and Europe.

âKingdomâ (Netflix)
Netflixâs first original Korean series set the stage for its investments to come. Based on the webtoon series âThe Kingdom of the Gods,â 2019âs âKingdomâ was an ambitious thriller that combined a period drama set in the 17th century with zombie horror.
âNo other TV stations or streaming services back then in Korea would commission something like that,â Kang said. âSo weâve always been trying to be a place where you can tell stories that no one else will tell at a scale that has not been done before.â
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-k-drama-revenue-netflix/)
**Read Next**
['Squid Game's Legacy: Unpacking the Global Value of Korean TV on Netflix \| Chart](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-k-drama-revenue-netflix/)
âNetflix offers opportunities for young filmmakers and writers who are not yet established,â Areum Jeong, assistant professor of Korean studies at Arizona State University, told TheWrap. âIf you look at Korean broadcasting stations, they tend to go with big-name directors and big-name writers. They donât want to take a chance with young writers because they might flop, so they work with the same screenwriter again and again.â
When it comes to which projects to invest in, Kang always prioritizes local first: teams and creators from South Korea who are making Korean stories for Korean audiences. âThe main thing is really finding that unique voice in your own country or region,â Kang said.

âAll of Us Are Deadâ (Yang Hae-sung/Netflix)
## Why audiences canât get enough
At first glance, it may not seem like thereâs a common thread between a show about murderous childrenâs games like âSquid Gameâ and a cross-border romance like âCrash Landing on You.â But for Choe, itâs the easy morality of these universes thatâs appealing and even comforting to audiences. The sources of distress are often broad and relatable whether they be the weight of a patriarchal system or the evils of capitalism.
âTheyâre therapeutic for individuals around the globe who suffer because of circumstances beyond their control,â Choe said.
Another reason for their popularity has to do with production quality. Using its AI model thatâs been trained on social media responses, Diesel Labs found that people praise the lighting, costuming, twists and character development of K-content. Thatâs notable considering one of the big complaints about non-American shows is often that they look or feel cheap.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/peacock-love-island-usa-brand-partnerships-megan-thee-stallion-swimwear/)
**Read Next**
[How Peacock Hopes to Spin 'Love Island USA' Audience Into Brand-Partnership Gold](https://www.thewrap.com/peacock-love-island-usa-brand-partnerships-megan-thee-stallion-swimwear/)
Midha also noted that South Korea has made a concerted effort over the past decade to expose more of its culture, music and content to the rest of the world. âItâs remarkable to see the success that those efforts have had. I donât know that any other country has been so specific about the desire to export content in that way,â she said.
Choe echoed her analysis, noting that thereâs long been a close relationship between Korean content and its government. When Korean ambassadors travel to the U.S. or Europe, itâs not unusual for them to meet with the heads of streaming platforms in those countries.

âThe Glory â (Graphyoda/Netflix)
## K-contentâs future on Netflix
Netflix has no plans to dampen its love affair with South Korea.
The streamer is preparing to launch âPhysical: Asia,â a spinoff of the beloved unscripted competition series âPhysical: 100,â as well as Season 2 of âCulinary Class Warsâ and the makeover show âBetter Late Than Single.â On the scripted TV front, âGenie, Make a Wish,â a new romantic comedy from âThe Gloryâ creator Kim Eun-sook, is on the horizon alongside new dramas like âThe Price of Confession,â âTrigger,â âAs You Stood Byâ and âYou And Everything Else,â as well as comedies like âAemaâ and âCan This Love Be Translated?â Netflix is even investing more in Korean movies with âWall To Wall,â âMantis,â Byun Sung-hyunâs âGood News,â âGreat Floodâ and the latest film from âBurningâ director Lee Chang-dong. Even Netflixâs latest advertising push â [âYou donât have to speak it, to love itâ](https://www.forbes.com/sites/reginakim/2025/06/05/netflix-martha-stewart-top-and-lil-yachty-welcome-you-to-the-k-era/) â is dedicated to showing fan reactions to Korean content and highlighting the titles to come.
âIf you look at the volume of shows that weâve been producing, it has steadily increased,â Kang said.
Overall, Netflixâs investment in K-content has proven to be positive for the country. The 2CV study found that 67% of Netflix users say they feel positively about South Korea, compared to 37% of non-Netflix users, with an equal amount of Netflix users expressing interest in visiting the country vs. 41% of non-Netflix users.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/netflix-tf1-deal-impact-analysis/)
**Read Next**
[How Netflix's Landmark TF1 Deal in France Sets the Stage for a New Streaming-Linear TV Model](https://www.thewrap.com/netflix-tf1-deal-impact-analysis/)
But some are hesitant about South Koreaâs increased reliance on the streamer, especially during a time when creating K-content is becoming more expensive. A big source of concern has to do with the lack of residuals. âSquid Gameâ creator Hwang has become the unofficial poster child for this worry since heâs spoken publicly in the past about how his Season 1 contract didnât contain any clauses for performance-related bonuses. He later [assured TheWrap](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-2-netflix-behind-the-scenes-hwang-dong-hyuk/) he was paid more for Seasons 2 and 3. âIt got better, for sure. Thatâs why I did it,â Hwang said.
Though Jeong sees Netflixâs investment in South Korea as a âprofitable partnership,â she also noted that âdiscussions are ongoing regarding IP rights and whether Korean creatives are being compensated fairly.â
âWe try to be fair, of course. Itâs only right for us to treat the creators fairly if they have such massive shows,â Kang said. âWe try to match what the industry norm is. We pay them upfront, and we take all the risks in terms of whether itâs a hit or whether itâs a flop. The entire financial responsibility falls on us, and we pay them top of the market, regardless.â
As for the rising production costs of K-content, Kang sees it as less of a concern and more of a symptom of a growing entertainment ecosystem. âFor someone to say production costs have risen, it means the people who make the show are being compensated more,â he said.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-3-lee-jung-jae-interview/)
**Read Next**
['Squid Game' Star Lee Jung-jae Initially Wondered if Season 3 Was the Best Ending for Gi-hun](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-3-lee-jung-jae-interview/)

## [Kayla Cobb](https://www.thewrap.com/author/kayla-cobb/)
Kayla is a senior TV writer at TheWrap, covering the business and content of streaming and linear television. Before joining TheWrap in April of 2023, she was the Senior TV Reporter at Decider, the New York Postâs entertainment vertical that focuses on the streaming industry. Kayla is also a member of the Television Critics Association.
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| Readable Markdown | The whole world was watching [âSquid Gameâ](https://www.thewrap.com/tag/squid-game/) in the first three days after its Season 3 premiere. The dystopian thriller from director Hwang Dong-hyuk debuted at No. 1 in all 93 countries where Netflix ranks its viewership â a first for the streamer. The final season also secured 60.1 million views globally in its first three days â another first.
And its viewership is only expected to grow. The first season is still the most-watched title of all time, with 265.2 million views in its first 90 days. As for Season 2, that ranks as the third most-watched series ever behind âWednesdayâ with 192.6 million views.
This isnât a fluke or even a âSquid Gameâ-specific phenomenon. In 2023, the streamer pledged to spend [\$2.5 billion in South Korea](https://time.com/6289170/netflix-invests-south-korea-content-k-dramas/) over the next four years. As Netflix has increased its investment in Korean shows and movies, viewers have embraced this subgenre. A study commissioned by Netflix from [the independent research firm 2CV](https://assets.ctfassets.net/4cd45et68cgf/7BVMGcs5hIEsQqtOiT3zHm/839b3cde8e2ac111ef4b52e9ddb9bdb8/FULL_KR_Cultural_Affinity_Report_-_June_2025_EN_.pdf) found that 60% of Netflixâs 280 million users have viewed Korean content, with more than two-thirds of American subscribers having watched K-content for more than two years.
âKorean content is the most watched non-English shows on Netflix, and thatâs actually more than Spanish-language content,â Don Kang, vice president of Korean content at Netflix, told TheWrap. Thatâs notable considering Spanish is the fourth most-spoken language in the world, [according to Ethnologue](https://www.ethnologue.com/insights/ethnologue200/). Korean doesnât even make the top 20. âIt just speaks to the level of travelability and the expansion the Korean content has enjoyed through Netflix.â
At a time when television and film is more globalized than ever, securing big, buzzy markets has become vital. Prime Video is available in over 200 countries and territories, while Netflix reaches closer to 190 countries and HBO Max stands at 65. Netflix has emerged as one of the dominant streaming players because of its commitment to localization rather than trying to force a global hit. The world may be tuning in to watch Korean content, but these shows come from local creators who are simply trying to tell Korean stories. Itâs a strategy that CCO Bela Bajaria has emphasized time and time again. And with Netflixâs K-content, you can see it working.

Diesel Labs, a content intelligence company that tracks conversations on social media to assess peopleâs opinions, found similar levels of excitement. During the first three weeks leading up to their launches, both âSirensâ and âGinny & Georgiaâ Season 3 â two series that are considered to be mid-sized English-language hits â saw 1.6 million engagements online. The Korean romance âWhen Life Gives You Tangerinesâ saw 2.7 million engagements. âSquid Gameâ clocked in at a staggering 16.5 million engagements.
âIt doesnât feel like itâs a short fad,â Anjali Midha, president and CEO of Diesel Labs, told TheWrap.
Midha pointed to the recently released âKPop Demon Hunters,â a Sony English-language animated movie that has reached the streamerâs Top 10 list in all 93 countries and scored 33.4 million views in its first two weeks.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-2-netflix-behind-the-scenes-hwang-dong-hyuk/)
âKorean culture has become familiar enough for the U.S. to start investing in Korean stylistic content,â Midha said. âThat suggests that this is more like an anime. Itâs a genre that weâre going to see more of over time.â
In the second half of 2024, [almost a third of all viewing on Netflix](https://about.netflix.com/en/news/what-we-watched-the-second-half-of-2024) came from non-English shows and films. A study from the technology research and advisory group [Omdia broke down](https://omdia.tech.informa.com/pr/2024/oct/omdia-korean-and-spanish-content-dominate-netflixs-non-english-viewing-capturing-16-percent-of-global-viewing) language viewership trends even further. In the first half of 2024, Korean shows accounted for 8.71% of all non-English language viewership on Netflix, while Spanish-language content followed closely behind at 7.11%. Spanish-language viewing was also more than double that of French, German and Portuguese viewing combined.

Chart that shows percentage of non-English content on Netflix in first half of 2024 vs. Language
The unexpected success of âSquid Gameâ in 2021 is a major reason why Korean content has taken off. But K-contentâs global rise can also be attributed to Netflixâs continued willingness to invest in newer Korean talents, a country that has made a serious effort to appeal to U.S. media and a culture that prefers morally clear narratives that can be appealing to a broad audience. âSquid Gameâ may be the biggest example, but the era of K-content is only the beginning.
## K-content benefits from the Netflix effect
The Korean Wave first took off in the 1990s when shows like âWhat Is Loveâ and âStar in My Heartâ became popular in China. The phenomenon eventually began to emerge in Japan in the early 2000s, leading to an increase in Korean tourism, and had a niche following in the U.S. But it wasnât until Netflix entered the playing field and âParasiteâ won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2020 that the K-content TV show game changed.
âK-dramas have existed for a long time, since the â60s, but it was only with the entrance of Netflix where the production values really became higher,â Steve Choe, a scholar of Korean media, told TheWrap. Since Netflixâs increased investment in K-content, Choe has noticed that more of his students are coming from places like the Middle East, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Latin America and Europe.

âKingdomâ (Netflix)
Netflixâs first original Korean series set the stage for its investments to come. Based on the webtoon series âThe Kingdom of the Gods,â 2019âs âKingdomâ was an ambitious thriller that combined a period drama set in the 17th century with zombie horror.
âNo other TV stations or streaming services back then in Korea would commission something like that,â Kang said. âSo weâve always been trying to be a place where you can tell stories that no one else will tell at a scale that has not been done before.â
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-k-drama-revenue-netflix/)
âNetflix offers opportunities for young filmmakers and writers who are not yet established,â Areum Jeong, assistant professor of Korean studies at Arizona State University, told TheWrap. âIf you look at Korean broadcasting stations, they tend to go with big-name directors and big-name writers. They donât want to take a chance with young writers because they might flop, so they work with the same screenwriter again and again.â
When it comes to which projects to invest in, Kang always prioritizes local first: teams and creators from South Korea who are making Korean stories for Korean audiences. âThe main thing is really finding that unique voice in your own country or region,â Kang said.

âAll of Us Are Deadâ (Yang Hae-sung/Netflix)
## Why audiences canât get enough
At first glance, it may not seem like thereâs a common thread between a show about murderous childrenâs games like âSquid Gameâ and a cross-border romance like âCrash Landing on You.â But for Choe, itâs the easy morality of these universes thatâs appealing and even comforting to audiences. The sources of distress are often broad and relatable whether they be the weight of a patriarchal system or the evils of capitalism.
âTheyâre therapeutic for individuals around the globe who suffer because of circumstances beyond their control,â Choe said.
Another reason for their popularity has to do with production quality. Using its AI model thatâs been trained on social media responses, Diesel Labs found that people praise the lighting, costuming, twists and character development of K-content. Thatâs notable considering one of the big complaints about non-American shows is often that they look or feel cheap.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/peacock-love-island-usa-brand-partnerships-megan-thee-stallion-swimwear/)
Midha also noted that South Korea has made a concerted effort over the past decade to expose more of its culture, music and content to the rest of the world. âItâs remarkable to see the success that those efforts have had. I donât know that any other country has been so specific about the desire to export content in that way,â she said.
Choe echoed her analysis, noting that thereâs long been a close relationship between Korean content and its government. When Korean ambassadors travel to the U.S. or Europe, itâs not unusual for them to meet with the heads of streaming platforms in those countries.

âThe Glory â (Graphyoda/Netflix)
## K-contentâs future on Netflix
Netflix has no plans to dampen its love affair with South Korea.
The streamer is preparing to launch âPhysical: Asia,â a spinoff of the beloved unscripted competition series âPhysical: 100,â as well as Season 2 of âCulinary Class Warsâ and the makeover show âBetter Late Than Single.â On the scripted TV front, âGenie, Make a Wish,â a new romantic comedy from âThe Gloryâ creator Kim Eun-sook, is on the horizon alongside new dramas like âThe Price of Confession,â âTrigger,â âAs You Stood Byâ and âYou And Everything Else,â as well as comedies like âAemaâ and âCan This Love Be Translated?â Netflix is even investing more in Korean movies with âWall To Wall,â âMantis,â Byun Sung-hyunâs âGood News,â âGreat Floodâ and the latest film from âBurningâ director Lee Chang-dong. Even Netflixâs latest advertising push â [âYou donât have to speak it, to love itâ](https://www.forbes.com/sites/reginakim/2025/06/05/netflix-martha-stewart-top-and-lil-yachty-welcome-you-to-the-k-era/) â is dedicated to showing fan reactions to Korean content and highlighting the titles to come.
âIf you look at the volume of shows that weâve been producing, it has steadily increased,â Kang said.
Overall, Netflixâs investment in K-content has proven to be positive for the country. The 2CV study found that 67% of Netflix users say they feel positively about South Korea, compared to 37% of non-Netflix users, with an equal amount of Netflix users expressing interest in visiting the country vs. 41% of non-Netflix users.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/netflix-tf1-deal-impact-analysis/)
But some are hesitant about South Koreaâs increased reliance on the streamer, especially during a time when creating K-content is becoming more expensive. A big source of concern has to do with the lack of residuals. âSquid Gameâ creator Hwang has become the unofficial poster child for this worry since heâs spoken publicly in the past about how his Season 1 contract didnât contain any clauses for performance-related bonuses. He later [assured TheWrap](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-2-netflix-behind-the-scenes-hwang-dong-hyuk/) he was paid more for Seasons 2 and 3. âIt got better, for sure. Thatâs why I did it,â Hwang said.
Though Jeong sees Netflixâs investment in South Korea as a âprofitable partnership,â she also noted that âdiscussions are ongoing regarding IP rights and whether Korean creatives are being compensated fairly.â
âWe try to be fair, of course. Itâs only right for us to treat the creators fairly if they have such massive shows,â Kang said. âWe try to match what the industry norm is. We pay them upfront, and we take all the risks in terms of whether itâs a hit or whether itâs a flop. The entire financial responsibility falls on us, and we pay them top of the market, regardless.â
As for the rising production costs of K-content, Kang sees it as less of a concern and more of a symptom of a growing entertainment ecosystem. âFor someone to say production costs have risen, it means the people who make the show are being compensated more,â he said.
[](https://www.thewrap.com/squid-game-season-3-lee-jung-jae-interview/) |
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