KPop Demon Hunters‘ Netflix record has become even more unbeatable looking as a result of the latest milestone it’s swept past, making it all the more a definitive example of the utmost heights a film can rise to on streaming. In recent history, KPop Demon Hunters is by far the most successful case of a streaming-first movie, with the 2025 musical fantasy amassing 325,100,000 views, and an equally impressive 541,800,000 hours of viewtime – which is striking when you factor in that the film is only 1 hour and 40 minutes long.
This colossal reputation that’s come with this has been impossible to ignore, and has also helped KPop Demon Hunters pick up a wide array of other, more long-term feats too. The staggering acclaim of the film has led many who may have otherwise never given the movie a chance to become fans, and led even more to rewatch the story in order to pick up every stray reference and fun extra detail packed into the film’s narrative overall as well.
One of the more impressive records picked up by KPop Demon Hunters over the course of its streaming lifespan thus far has become doubly impressive in recent history. Indeed, the newest milestone for KPop Demon Hunters has underscored well and truly that its film records seem genuinely invincible at this point in time, and that any movie even hoping to come close to challenging it will need an unthinkable level of success in both the short term and long term.
KPop Demon Hunters’ Has Been In Netflix Weekly Top 10 Movies For Over A Year Without Slowing Down At All
Given KPop Demon Hunters became Netflix’s most-viewed movie of all time in relatively quick fashion, it was no surprise that it maintained its place in the top spots of the platform’s weekly most-watched English language film roster week on week for a fair few months after its release. That said, after the movie had stayed in this roster for a few months, many did start to note it more actively, given most films fall out of this leaderboard even if they experienced immense streaming success around this point or beforehand.
After the half-year mark of KPop Demon Hunters being in the weekly top 10 movie list, it became clear it was here to stay for the long run – and this was made concrete not long ago with the confirmation that KPop Demon Hunters had managed to remain in this leaderboard for a full calendar year’s worth of weeks, which is unheard of and a striking success for the film and its long-term reception.
Now, though, we’ve passed even this threshold, since Netflix’s official statistics have confirmed KPop Demon Hunters is still in this leaderboard as of June 22-28. This means the movie is now in its 54th week in this roster, and crucially came in at 6th place in this week also, meaning that the film is very much still going strong even past the point of it hitting the staggering feat of managing a full year in Netflix’s top 10.
KPop Demon Hunters’ Weekly Netflix Record Continuing Makes It Look Even More Unbeatable Than Before
Currently, it seems as though KPop Demon Hunters is set to amass many more weeks in Netflix’s top 10 movies lineup, taking it well past the year milestone and potentially closer to two years depending on whether things like the updates about KPop Demon Hunters 2 encourage audiences to once again seek out the original film.
Given KPop Demon Hunters‘ weekly leaderboard record already seemed unbeatable when it looked like it might finish up around the one year mark, the movie garnering even more success in this regard naturally only cemented the invincible-seeming nature of this feat all the more.
With any movie hoping to come close to this feat needing to net its own long-term fame for an increasingly unfathomable window of time, every extra week KPop Demon Hunters amasses in Netflix’s top 10 weekly movies only cements how impossible it seems for any other release to come close to this kind of result short of an outright miracle. That said, KPop Demon Hunters‘ success itself shows records can be broken in dramatic fashion if the right stars align for a release of this kind of quality, too – though it’s not clear if such a scenario will ever happen again to this level, and if so, when it might.