They are as short as a toothbrushing tutorial but pack the same spicy wallop as a BookTok romantasy. They’re as bingeable as a bajillion-dollar Netflix series, but with the stripped-down aesthetics of a Hallmark movie.
I’m talking, of course, about microdramas—the fast, fizzy serialized videos flooding phones worldwide. In just a few years, they’ve become a full-blown phenomenon, generating billions in revenue without Hollywood’s help. At least, not until now.
As studios grapple with a sluggish summer box office and another thin fall TV lineup, a growing legion of viewers is glued to stories made exclusively for their phones. Microdramas—or vertical shows, as they’re often called—blend the raw emotion of K-dramas with a TikTok sensibility. Think high-intensity, telenovela-like series, unfurling in one-to-three-minute chunks across 50 to 100 mostly paywalled episodes. They may have titles such as Doctor Boss Is My Baby Daddy or Signed, Sealed, Deceived by My Billionaire Mailboy, but their massive, global fan base makes them impossible to dismiss.
