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Microdrama Is Streaming’s New Top-of-Funnel in Southeast Asia


Streaming platforms racing to acquire microdrama content are not simply chasing a trending format – they are buying a direct line into the fast-attention layer where Southeast Asian audiences spend the overwhelming majority of their digital leisure time, according to new research presented at the APOS conference in Bali by Dhivya T, head of insights at ampd and Media Partners Asia.

The argument rests on a behavioral framework Dhivya laid out for the conference. Consumers in the region divide their attention between two distinct modes: fast attention, which is algorithmically served through social feeds, messaging and short-form video at high frequency and short session length, and slow attention, which is self-selected, committed viewing on premium platforms at longer but far less frequent sessions. Fast attention dominates the clock. Slow attention generates deeper engagement. Until now, the two have operated as a sequential funnel – audiences built in the fast layer, then converted to premium.

Microdrama collapses that sequence. Built on serialized, cliffhanger-driven storytelling delivered in short episodes with pay-per-episode monetization, it is the first format that builds audience and extracts revenue simultaneously within the fast layer – without requiring a conversion step. Dhivya argued that streamers acquiring microdrama rights are effectively turning a previously awareness-only environment into a direct revenue channel, while also funneling the most engaged viewers toward longer-form premium catalogs.

The commercial logic is reinforced by the underlying data. Even among confirmed premium VOD subscribers – the most streaming-committed audience segment – the category accounts for roughly 8% of approximately five hours of daily mobile leisure time, or around one hour a day including the television set. That share holds flat across every daypart, including pre-dawn. No hour of the day belongs to premium, and no competing category owns a slot either: social, messaging, gaming and short-form video run alongside premium viewing at consistent ratios from morning through midnight.

A third of premium sessions, Dhivya noted, involve a second screen running concurrently – typically each market’s home app. Rather than cannibalizing the lean-back view, the two screens stack, pointing to an audience that has normalized simultaneous fast and slow consumption rather than choosing between them.

The fast-to-premium pipeline the research describes is already generating results beyond Southeast Asia. “Backrooms,” a horror title originating in a 4chan meme and directed by a YouTube creator, became A24’s biggest opening ever. “Obsession,” from another YouTube creator, became the biggest release in Focus Features’ history. In Southeast Asia the same dynamic is playing out on streaming platforms: Baifern, who commands 13 million Instagram followers, fronts “My Dearest Assassin”; Indonesian horror title “Dusun Mayit” followed the path established by “KKN di Desa Penari,” moving from a viral X thread to a premium release.

On the question of which content wins once audiences arrive at the premium screen, the research found that local production strength is the decisive variable. In Indonesia, local titles hold a 33% share against Korean content’s 28%; in Thailand, local takes 28% to Korea’s 22%. In Malaysia, Korean content leads. In the Philippines, U.S. and Korean titles run near-level with local content in third – though Dhivya flagged the market as the next focus for streamers looking beyond the established Indonesian and Thai ecosystems.

Thai content travels widest across the region, reaching 6.4 million users outside Thailand across all Southeast Asian markets, driven by a diverse genre slate spanning crime and thriller, sci-fi and fantasy, drama and romance, BL/GL and horror. Indonesian content’s cross-border reach is narrower and anchored in horror, with the Philippines as the primary destination via Netflix. Philippine content has not yet demonstrated comparable regional travelability, though early investment signals suggest that is the gap streamers are now moving to close.

The broader conclusion Dhivya drew from the data: capturing cultural conversation in the fast-attention layer is the precondition for monetizable engagement on the premium one – and microdrama, for the first time, lets platforms do both at once.


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