
Three Korean titles to keep an eye out for in March
March is about to feel overwhelming in the most amazing way possible if you have even a teeny-tiny soft spot for Korean content because Netflix has decided to roll out romance, music, and documentary energy in the same month. And none of the coming programmes are random filler content. These are releases that already come with fandom and lots and lots of anticipation.
You are getting a fantasy rom-com led by Jisoo and not one but two releases about BTS, who are about to make their grand comeback this year.
All of this is really special for those fans who have been tracking the updates of the return of the band for months, and now that they’ll be on Netflix officially, fans from all over the world will get a second bite at the cherry.
So if March looked normal on your calendar a few days ago, allow us to burst that bubble because three Korean titles are arriving that will demand your attention, whether you planned for them or not.
Three Korean titles to keep an eye out for in March
Boyfriend on Demand: Season 1 (March 6th)
If you have ever joked about wanting a risk-free relationship, then Boyfriend on Demand is about to test how serious you were because this ten-episode romantic comedy fantasy follows Seo MiRae, a webtoon producer who decides real men are exhausting, so she signs up for a virtual dating simulator called Monthly Boyfriend. Here she can trial perfect partners without consequences, which sounds genius until those unrealistically flawless men start stirring actual feelings she did not plan for.
Jisoo steps into this world alongside Seo In Guk, Park Ji Ho, Kim Sung Cheol, and Ryu Abel, and the concept alone already carries that addictive hook where fantasy begins to blur into emotional reality. That is because when your ideal partner exists in a controlled digital space, you think you are safe, yet the series promises to push Mi Rae toward confronting what she truly wants in love beyond curated perfection, which is a dangerous emotional road if you are already soft-hearted.
BTS THE COMEBACK LIVE ARIRANG (March 21st)
Time to take a breath because this is not a normal concert stream. BTS are returning for their first live performance since October 2022, and it is happening exclusively on Netflix, which already makes it historic. Then add the fact that this live event debuts their fifth studio album, ARIRANG, and suddenly March twenty-first feels massive.
Directed by Hamish Hamilton, who just directed the Super Bowl halftime, this is positioned as more than a stage performance. It is the comeback moment fans have been waiting for. The scale will be huge, and if you are anticipating something groundbreaking, do not stop. The emotional weight of seeing their favourite idols reunite in front of a global audience after years away is going to hold a lot of cultural significance. In the end, it is about returning era energy, about reclaiming the spotlight, about reminding everyone why they dominate worldwide.
BTS The Return (March 27th)
As if the live event was not enough, Netflix is also dropping BTS. The Return is a ninety-one-minute documentary directed by Bao Nguyen, which means viewers are getting both the view of the comeback plus the story behind it. This is the part where cameras go a lot closer. Where preparation, stress rehearsal moments plus reflections are captured in a way that stage lights cannot show.
The documentary promises context around the group’s return era, which matters because their absence reshaped global music conversation for years, so watching how they navigate stepping back into that space will hit differently for long-time fans who tracked every update through hiatus seasons. You are not just watching a performance. You are watching history reconnect with its audience.