Over the past decade, BL (boys’ love) and GL (girls’ love) genres have quietly, then forcefully, reshaped the landscape of Asian pop culture—expanding from niche fandoms into mainstream streaming hits, genre-defining dramas, and transnational soft power tools. An article in Pop Inquirer traces this phenomenon, exploring how anime, manhwa, and dramas across Asia are providing new frames for queer representation. Here’s a richer, country-by-country mosaic of how BL and GL culture are flourishing—and the challenges they still face.
In Japan, BL is the original wellspring. Emerging from 1970s shōjo manga traditions, BL has long catered to a female readership fascinated by male–male romance. Its roots remain strong in doujinshi and niche manga, but the genre is now riding a wave of global attention. Japan’s BL industry is actively forming creative partnerships across Asia, helping export its titles beyond its borders. Meanwhile, GL (often labeled “yuri” in Japan) has had a slower but steady presence—recent live-action adaptations such as Ayaka Is in Love with Hiroko signal growing appetite for queer women’s stories.
South Korea stands out for its recent BL surge: what began modestly is now going full throttle. Streaming platforms have embraced BL as a way to diversify romantic dramas. In 2025, Secret Relationships (based on a webtoon) dramatizes a love triangle among men in a workplace setting, and Love for Love’s Sake presents a fantasy-tinted queer narrative. While glossy and attractive, many Korean BLs still face constraints: content moderation, social conservatism, and cautious portrayals that favor romance without delving into queer politics. But they are undeniably helping boost visibility and normalize gay relationships in popular culture.
Thailand perhaps offers the most vivid case study. Here, BL is not just entertainment—it’s cultural export and soft power. Thai BL dramas have leapt from campus romance to high-budget productions with international reach, helping the country punch above its weight in Asian fandom circuits. Observers note that Thai dramas now deploy BL and GL as tools of cultural diplomacy—shaping image as a tolerant, trendsetting creative hub. GL, which long lagged behind BL, is now picking up steam: Thailand’s first full-length GL series, Pink Theory (GAP), premiered in 2022, and by 2024 several more followed. Some estimates even claim that nearly half of Thai TV series now fall under BL or GL categories. That said, critics warn that many stories remain formulaic, rarely challenging institutional homophobia or complex queer realities. Taiwan and Hong Kong offer another flavor. Taiwanese BL has long been influential in Mandarin-speaking markets, often adapting hit web novels or comics into series aimed at both local and diaspora audiences. Mandopop stars, cross-strait talents, and Taiwanese filmmakers have helped give BL a polished, cross-border appeal. Though the original Inquirer article did not delve deeply into Taiwan, BL Watcher confirms a healthy slate of Taiwanese BL titles slated for 2025. In Hong Kong, budget constraints and censorship sometimes limit full mainstream deployment, but the region’s anime and manga fandom keeps BL and GL content alive in independent media scenes.
Across Southeast Asia—countries such as the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia—the impact is more uneven but emergent. In the Philippines, local erotic romances and “boys’ love” novels have circulated for years in print and online; now dramas and adaptations are gradually appearing, often with fan translation support. BL Watcher even lists the Philippines and Vietnam among surprising players joining the genre’s regional wave. In Vietnam, BL web novels and “Boys’ Love” fandoms are growing, though state censorship and conservative social norms constrain adaptation into mainstream film or TV. China’s BL landscape is complex due to official censorship. While openly romantic male–male content is heavily restricted, Chinese creators sometimes embed queerness in coded systems or speculative genres. Notably, the 2025 Chinese drama Desire is being celebrated as the first live-action Omegaverse (Alpha-Beta-Omega) MPREG drama—a bold twist on the BL form, though still operating in a space that can skirt censorship via allegory. Whether that signals new leeway or represents an isolated experiment remains an open question. Taken together, BL and GL culture in Asia offer more than romantic fantasies. These genres allow queer representation to seep into mainstream consciousness—often through soft narratives palatable to broad audiences. They let creators test boundaries, fans build communities across borders, and societies gradually imagine alternative relational norms. Yet tension remains. Many stories remain cautious, centering love’s sweetness while side-stepping systemic oppression. Queer voices beyond male–male romance—trans, nonbinary, queer women, intersectional identities—often remain underrepresented. And in nations where LGBTQ+ rights lag, even popular BL content can’t fully translate into legal or social progress. Still, the tide has shifted. BL and GL are no longer underground whispers—they’re streaming stars, fandom phenomena, cultural bridge-builders. In 2025, as new hits debut from Thailand, Korea, Japan, China, and beyond, they carry both the joy of romance and the quiet insistence: queer lives belong on screens, across borders, and in the collective imagination.
