When a K-pop song is released, its lifespan doesn't end on the music charts. Within hours of its release, the same choreography is reborn in front of practice room mirrors, in the middle of Hongdae streets, and in plazas in Taipei and Bangkok. This is dance cover (cover dance) — a moment when fans transform from consumers to performers, and the fastest way for K-pop to cross borders. This page is a hub that gathers cover stages by crews and buskers, both domestic and international, in one place.
The key is not to simply replicate the original artist's stage, but to incorporate individual interpretations. Even for the same song, a 5-member song might be re-arranged and performed by 3 people, male crews might powerfully reinterpret girl group songs, and completely different atmospheres are created with costume concepts like school uniforms, hanbok, or suits. How well they embody the 'killing parts' of the original choreography is the viewing highlight of a cover stage.
| Stage | Features | Watch Here |
|---|---|---|
| Hongdae Busking | Live covers interacting with street audiences, the heart of Korean cover dance | 홍대버스킹 |
| KPOP IN PUBLIC | Global format filmed in a single take in urban areas/plazas | Videos on this page |
| Fancam | Records of performances on stage captured from the perspective of one person/one team | 직캠 |
| Overseas Crews | Local cover scenes in various Asian countries, such as Taiwan | 타이완 댄스커버 |
The representative format for dance cover videos is 'KPOP IN PUBLIC'. It's not in a studio, but the entire choreography is performed in a single take, without editing, in public spaces where passersby are present. If a mistake is made, they start over from the beginning — which means completing it itself proves their skill. The same format is repeated worldwide, from Seoul's Hongdae and Times Square to Taipei's Ximending, serving as a standard textbook for K-pop choreography.
The main protagonists of dance cover are not individuals, but crews. Because the member lineup differs from the original group, repositioning and re-designing formations are essential, and in this process, each crew develops its own unique color. The speed competition to upload covers within days of a new song's release, and the interpretative competition where various crews perform the same song differently, are the engines that drive this culture. Crew-specific stages can be viewed by team in the subcategories of this hub.
Q. What is the difference between dance cover and fancam? A. Dance cover is a performance where fans or crews reenact and reinterpret the original choreography in their own way, while a fancam is a recording of a stage (whether by the original artist or a cover team) filmed focusing on one subject. There are many fancams of cover stages as well, so the two cultures overlap.
Q. Why is KPOP IN PUBLIC a single take? A. Because completing the entire choreography without editing is itself a proof of skill. The fact that it's completed while embracing variables like noise, passersby, and weather in a public space is the charm of this format.
Q. Where can I watch dance covers live? A. In Korea, Hongdae Walking Street busking is a prime example. Live cover stages by crews continue during weekend evenings. You can get a feel for the atmosphere by watching the Hongdae Busking videos beforehand.