



Upon the one-year anniversary of KPop Demon Hunters, there are plenty of ways to measure the power of KPop Demon Hunters: in stadium-sized screams, demon-slaying showdowns, spice levels of hot sauce, repeat soundtrack plays, and the number of times you’ve tried to hit that “Golden” high note in your car with the windows rolled up.
But sometimes, the numbers tell their own hidden story. From the height difference between the tallest Saja Boy and shortest HUNTR/X member to the hundreds of voices layered into one unforgettable song, here are some of the most important digits in KPop Demon Hunters.

Derpy Tiger may have stolen hearts with his chaotic charm, but Sussie Bird brings the watchful energy. The supernatural bird has six eyes, which feels pretty useful when your job involves tagging along on demon-world deliveries — and keeping tabs on Derpy Tiger.

The Saja Boys may loom large in more ways than one. The tallest member of the demon boy band stands six feet tall — a full foot taller than HUNTR/X’s Zoey, who measures in at five feet. Of course, anyone who’s seen Zoey in action knows she doesn’t need physical height to command a stage or win a battle.


The movie features the most costume changes of any animated film — and Rumi alone has 23 of them. That meant every performance look, battle-tested fit, and offstage ensemble had to be designed with the same level of attention to silhouette and character. HUNTR/X may be dead set on saving the world, but they’re also never missing a wardrobe change.


Before Jinu got his final look, his hair went through somewhere between 30 and 50 different hairstyle designs. That may sound like a lot of follicular soul-searching — but when you’re designing a demon idol with main-character angst and a billion-dollar swoop, the hair has to move exactly right.

“What It Sounds Like” contains the most vocal layers of any song on the soundtrack, with about 400 stacked into the final track. The result is the kind of massive, shimmering wall of sound that makes the song feel like an emotional exorcism and a worthy climax to the epic showdown it accompanies.


The film’s lighting style draws from three main sources: Korean dramas, K-pop music videos and concerts, and editorial fashion. That combination helps give KPop Demon Hunters its uniquely heightened, glossy color palette.


It took more than 1,000 dedicated production crew members to bring the world of KPop Demon Hunters to life. From the supernatural action to the performance sequences to the smallest character details, the film’s scale reflects the enormous team effort behind every frame.

The soundtrack’s catchiest sing-along hooks didn’t happen by accident. The KPop Demon Hunters team worked with 15 songwriters to craft the songs that power HUNTR/X, the Saja Boys, and the film’s biggest emotional moments.


Perhaps the number of members in HUNTR/X is truly the luckiest number. The KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack crossed 3 billion streams on Spotify in just three months, becoming the fastest album by any Asian act in Spotify history to surpass that milestone. For a movie about idols whose music protects the world, that feels more than a little fitting.

The soundtrack made Billboard history, with four songs landing in the Hot 100 Top 10 simultaneously — the first soundtrack ever to achieve that feat. In other words: HUNTR/X and the Saja Boys didn’t just battle onscreen. They took over the charts, too.


Stream KPop Demon Hunters now, only on Netflix, and discover countless more ways to celebrate the anniversary here.











































































































