
#SHOWBiZ: NCT Dream to bring 'The Dream Show 4' to KL in December
The seven-member group, consisting of Mark, Renjun, Jeno, Haechan, Jaemin, Chenle, and Jisung, will perform for two nights at the Axiata Arena on Dec 13 and 14 at 5pm.
The concert will feature a 'space-time travel' concept, guiding fans on a musical journey from the group's early days to their current era and beyond.
Attendees can look forward to a high-energy show with powerful choreography, impressive visuals, and all their chart-topping hits, cementing the group's reputation as 'performance kings'.
The tour began with a sold-out three-night run at the Gocheok Sky Dome in Seoul this July, earning widespread acclaim.
The band will then captivate audiences across Asia with stops in Bangkok, Hong Kong, Jakarta, Singapore, and Taipei, before concluding the year with a grand finale in Kuala Lumpur.
Notably, the group will once again perform at some of Asia's largest venues, including Rajamangala National Stadium in Bangkok, Kai Tak Stadium in Hong Kong, and Jakarta International Stadium, making Kuala Lumpur an exclusive and highly anticipated stop on this world tour.

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The Star
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7 hours ago
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Barnama
8 hours ago
- Barnama
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President Lee Jae Myung (centre) speaks on "K-Pop: The Next Chapter," aired on English-language broadcaster Arirang TV, in this photo provided by the presidential office on Aug 20, 2025. SEOUL, Aug 21 (Bernama-Yonhap) -- South Korean President Lee Jae Myung has pledged to develop South Korea's cultural sector into one of the nation's core industries after meeting the creatives behind the hit Netflix animated film KPop Demon Hunters, Yonhap news agency reported. Lee appeared on Arirang TV's prerecorded programme K-Pop: The Next Chapter, aired Wednesday, where he sat down with Korean-Canadian co-creator Maggie Kang, members of TWICE Jihyo and Jeongyeon, DJ and music producer and music critic Kim Young-dae. 'The opportunity to show the power of Korean culture is beginning in a full-fledged manner,' Lee said. 'By building solid foundations, we will make (the cultural sector) a key industry.' bootstrap slideshow He acknowledged concerns that the industry may appear vibrant on the surface but lack depth. 'I agree with concerns that South Korea's cultural industry may appear glamorous on the surface but is void inside with its roots decaying. The government will build strong foundations, starting now,' he said. Lee stressed that politics should not interfere with culture, in an apparent reference to past blacklists excluding critical artists from state support. 'It is the government's duty to create a free environment,' he said, warning that surveillance and regulation could harm the sector. The global success of KPop Demon Hunters, produced by Sony Pictures Animation and distributed by Netflix, has fuelled calls for greater support for Korean firms in developing original content and intellectual property rights. Lee noted that one of the film's standout characters was Derpy the tiger.