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Step into any K-pop concert and one sight will steal your breath before the first beat drops: thousands of glowing wands rising in unison, painting the arena in a single fandom color. These are K-pop light sticks, known in Korean as eung-won-bong (응원봉, literally cheering stick). More than concert accessories, they are badges of identity, miniature monuments to fan devotion, and increasingly the most coveted piece of merch in any idol’s catalog.
From White Balloons to Glowing Bongs: A Short History
Before light sticks, there were balloons. In the mid-to-late 1990s, when first-generation idols like H.O.T., Sechskies, and g.o.d. ruled the stage, each fandom claimed a signature color: white balloons for H.O.T., yellow for Sechskies, sky blue for g.o.d., and orange for Shinhwa. Concert venues turned into seas of color, and the visual grammar of K-pop fandom was born.
The first uniquely shaped light stick is credited to solo artist Se7en, who debuted under YG Entertainment in 2003 and rolled out a stick shaped like the number 7, the Chilbong. The real turning point arrived in 2007 when G-Dragon designed BIGBANG’s yellow crown-topped Bang Bong, a piece of merchandise that established the entire blueprint for what a light stick should be.
Each Major Group’s Signature Design
Every legendary group now has a bong as recognizable as its logo. BTS’s ARMY Bomb is the most famous of all, a translucent globe-shaped wand whose latest Ver. 4, released in November 2025, supports advanced Bluetooth, expanded LED colors beyond the original seven, and a Self Mode that turns it into a mood lamp at home.
BLACKPINK’s Bl-ping Bong takes the form of a pink heart hammer, a playful nod to the group’s fierce-yet-feminine image. TWICE swings the lollipop-shaped Candy Bong Z, while SEVENTEEN’s Carat Bong features a sparkling diamond head saluting their fandom name CARAT. NCT’s sleek prism-cut Neo Pong matches the group’s futuristic concept, and aespa’s newly revealed Ver. 2 forms a curved æ-letter shape, designed so two sticks held together complete the symbol, a metaphor for connection. ENHYPEN’s diamond-and-hourglass EN- light stick and Mamamoo’s radish-shaped Moo Bong round out a roster of designs that range from elegant to charmingly absurd.
How Light Sticks Sync With Music: The Ocean Effect
The signature visual of a modern K-pop concert is the ocean, when thousands of light sticks shift colors in perfect unison with the music. Every modern bong released after 2018 includes Bluetooth chips and embedded control circuits. Fans pair their stick with the artist’s official app (Weverse for HYBE groups, similar apps for SM, JYP, YG), enter their seat number, and let the central control system take over.
HYBE’s integrated light stick control system, unveiled in 2023, can drive up to 65,000 colors in real time across an entire arena. Behind the scenes, a small team of operators called namchibongs sits at a tablet console, manually firing color cues and flashing patterns in time with the choreography. The result is the breathtaking visual where 50,000 strangers become one rippling ocean of purple, pink, or whatever fandom color is in play.
How to Spot Authentic vs Fake Light Sticks
Counterfeit light sticks have become a serious problem as demand has exploded. Korea Times reported that searches for the BTS ARMY Bomb surged 1,764 percent year-on-year in early 2026, pushing resale prices sky high and flooding marketplaces with knockoffs.
Telltale signs of a fake: packaging dimensions that are off by a centimeter or two, lower-quality cardstock, slightly wrong logo proportions, missing inserts (real boxes contain a quick-start card and often a photocard), and most importantly, no Bluetooth pairing function. Fakes cannot sync with concert control systems at all, so they stay stubbornly dark while the rest of the arena pulses in color. The only reliable rule is to buy from official channels and avoid AliExpress, eBay resellers, or no-name Amazon shops no matter how convincing the photos look.
Where to Buy: Weverse Shop, Ktown4u, and Agency Stores
For HYBE artists (BTS, TXT, ENHYPEN, SEVENTEEN, LE SSERAFIM, BOYNEXTDOOR, &TEAM), the safest source is Weverse Shop. The platform ships globally, and a physical Weverse Shop sits inside HYBE Insight in Yongsan near Hangangjin Station for fans visiting Seoul.
Ktown4u is the broadest multi-agency retailer, with a flagship store in Hongdae and another in Myeongdong, plus an online shop that handles overseas orders. Ktown4u carries virtually every active group across agencies and is reliable for authenticity. SM, JYP, and YG also run their own newsroom-linked stores (SMTOWN & STORE, JYP Shop, YG SELECT), and many idol agencies operate Seoul pop-up stores at COEX, IFC Mall, and The Hyundai Seoul. Most current-generation sticks run between 35,000 and 65,000 KRW (about US$28 to $50).
Collecting Culture: Light Sticks as Fandom Currency
For many fans, the light stick is not a one-time purchase but a collection. Most major groups release a Ver. 2, Ver. 3, and sometimes a 10th-anniversary edition, with each upgrade adding new colors, longer battery life, and improved Bluetooth. Special edition sticks (BTS Special Edition, SEVENTEEN 10th Anniv., aespa Ver. 2) sell out within hours and resell on secondhand platforms like Bunjang for two to three times the retail price.
Light sticks have also become symbolic outside K-pop. During the 2024 Paris Olympics, HYBE produced “Team Korea” light sticks for fans cheering Korean athletes. In December 2024, K-pop light sticks famously appeared at political rallies in Seoul, replacing traditional candles as the new visual of civic gathering. The Korea Heritage Service even released a Gyeongbokgung Palace light stick in 2026, complete with dancheong-pattern stickers, proving the format has officially escaped its concert origins.
First-Timer’s Tips for a K-Pop Concert
Heading to your first show? A few essentials beyond the stick itself: charge it fully the night before, since dead bongs cannot sync with the ocean. Pair it with the artist’s app and enter your seat number when you arrive. Bring a power bank, photocards or keychains for bag decoration, and a clear or compact bag to clear security quickly. Etiquette matters too. Avoid bringing another group’s light stick to a concert (it’s widely considered disrespectful), keep your stick raised but not blocking other fans’ views, and join the wave: when the arena drops into a sudden black ocean (no light sticks raised) it is usually a deliberate, coordinated protest, so read the room before lighting up.
Why a Glowing Stick Matters
K-pop light sticks have evolved from balloon replacements into the most concentrated symbol of fandom in modern music. They turn a stadium into a shared canvas, link fan and idol through Bluetooth-driven choreography, and let everyone in the room declare their identity simply by raising a glowing wand. Whether you collect them, gift them, or wave one for the first time at a Seoul concert, an eung-won-bong is a piece of K-pop culture you carry home in your suitcase, still glowing.
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