Naver Webtoon becomes the No. 1 webtoon platform in France in July 2023
At the height of the COVID-19 pandemic a few years back, social distancing was the dominant rule of life. People stayed at home, with many of them killing time reading webtoons and watching videos on their smartphones.
Back then, South Korea’s webtoon companies enjoyed the high time as quite a few of them were made into K-drama and then featured on over-the-top (OTT) players around the globe. Those were the days.
Post-pandemic, people no longer watch mobile webtoons as much as before. Those good ole days are gone. And Korean webtoon makers are suffering.
According to IGAWorks Co., a Korean mobile data analysis firm, the combined use time of Korea’s four major webtoon platforms – Naver Webtoon, KakaoPage, Naver Series and Kakao Webtoon – peaked at the end of 2022 and is falling.
The major four’s monthly platform use time on Android smartphones was 99.49 million hours in April, down 11.2% from the same month a year earlier.
The decline accelerated from a decrease of 5.8% in 2023 from the prior year.
Kakao Page, a popular mobile app offering webtoons and web novies
During the pandemic, people’s monthly use of the four webtoon platforms rose 29.3% in April 2022 from the same month three years earlier.
Despite the declining popularity of webtoons, however, the domestic webtoon industry steadily grew to 1.83 trillion won ($1.33 billion) in 2022, up 16.8% from the previous year, according to the Korea Creative Content Agency.
FEELING THE PINCH
Industry officials said growth in the Korean webtoon market peaked in 2022.
“Naver Webtoon and KakaoPage seemed to maintain their growth recently. But webtoon makers, which supply webtoons to such platforms, have been feeling the pinch for some time,” said Choi Sang-gyu, chief executive of RealDraw, an AI webtoon generator.
According to InnoForest, a Korean company that analyzes startups’ growth models, nine out of 10 domestic webtoon makers saw their earnings worsen last year, with eight of them remaining in the red.
‘Moving’ is the most watched drama series ever on Disney+ app
KidariStudio Inc. posted an operating loss of 5.74 billion won in 2023, a turnaround from 4.26 billion won in profit the year prior.
Samyang CNC Co. also swung to a loss. It posted 1.45 billion won in operating loss last year compared with a profit of 1.92 billion won in 2022.
YLAB Co. saw its losses dramatically widen to 5.51 billion won from 440 million won a year earlier.
Naver Webtoon, an affiliate of Korea’s leading online platform operator Naver Corp., posted a 2023 operating profit of 64.3 billion won, barely changed from its year-earlier profit.
“If the webtoon industry remains in a quandary, it means K-drama producers will also find it hard to secure good original webtoons to dramatize,” said an industry executive.
Korean drama series that have enjoyed global popularity on the back of the Korean wave, or hallyu, are mostly based on webtoons.
Recent examples include “Moving,” “Mask Girl,” “Sweet Home,” and “All of US Are Dead,” which have also become popular abroad.
OVERWHELMED BY TIKTOK, YOUTUBE
Analysts attribute the declining popularity of webtoons to the rise of short-form video content available on platforms such as TikTok and YouTube.
Kakao Japan runs Piccoma, a leading webtoon platform
The use time of TikTok on Android smartphones in Korea more than tripled to 39.31 million hours in April from the same month five years ago.
The use time of YouTube, which recently strengthened its short-form content Shorts, increased 15.5% to 1.24 billion hours in April from two years earlier.
With the domestic webtoon market struggling, companies are turning their sights overseas.
Realdraw, established in 2023, said it is targeting the Japanese market rather than the domestic market for its drama production debut.
Analysts said overseas markets are also hard for Korean webtoon makers to crack.
In 2020, some 56.7% of Korean webtoon producers exported their products. The ratio fell to 43.6% in 2022, meaning selling webtoons overseas became harder.
By Joo-Wan Kim
kjwan@hankyung.com
In-Soo Nam edited this article.