As the West grapples with a crisis of the future, Asia is industrializing its narratives and exporting its cultural codes on a global scale. This structural shift is already reshaping the creative industries. From fashion and beauty to retail, experience has become the new center of gravity.
South Korea leads the way
BTS sells four million copies on the day a new album is released. KPop Demon Hunters becomes Netflix’s biggest hit, reaching 236 million views. Parasite wins the Academy Award for Best Picture. Squid Game turns everything from kimchi and gaming to hustle culture into global conversation points. Welcome to the K-ecosystem, the driving force behind a new generation of Asian cultural narratives and one of the most powerful engines of influence shaping the global imagination today.
Thaïland, the new creative frontier
In the wake of Hallyu, another wave is beginning to rise: the T-wave. Drawing inspiration from Korean fandom culture while forging its own path, Thailand is emerging as a new cultural force. Combining greater social freedom, a confident queer culture and a strong affinity with Korean aesthetics, it is cultivating new communities. For the fashion industry, this remains largely untapped territory.
China and the new scale of influence
At the heart of this broader Asian shift stands China as a new standard-bearer. The world’s second-largest economy, the leading exporter of goods, and a key driver of luxury growth for two decades, China long embraced the codes of Western desirability. At its peak, Chinese consumers accounted for nearly 40% of global luxury purchases. Today, however, China is asserting a new form of creative national pride, one that looks outward rather than inward. The rise of China Maxxing perfectly embodies this movement.
Merchtainment and live shopping: retail reinvented
Behind this mosaic of cultural references lies a radically different model of desirability: storytelling. The Gentle Monster flagship store in Paris is a perfect illustration. The Korean eyewear brand has built its identity around “merchtainment”—a blend of merchandise and entertainment—through immersive themed spaces, constantly renewed experiences and the development of a brand lore that transforms purchasing into a sense of belonging. The objective is no longer simply to sell products, but to create emotion.


