
There’s something quietly powerful about the number nine. Nine members, nine voices, and now — one long-awaited new destination. On 1 April 2025, fromis_9 made their move in the K-pop world not with a routine comeback, but with their official Japanese debut via the EP From Our 20s. The date might raise an eyebrow or two, but for the millions of fans who have followed this group across nearly eight years, there is nothing remotely joke-worthy about this moment.
fromis_9 are not just another K-pop act chasing new markets. They are a group that has genuinely been tested by time — management transitions, industry upheavals, and no small number of obstacles along the way. Which is exactly why From Our 20s is more than just an album title. It’s a declaration.
From Produce 48 to Tokyo
For Malaysian K-pop fans who have kept their finger on the pulse, fromis_9 needs no introduction. The group got their start on the reality competition Idol School in 2017 under Off The Record Entertainment, before gaining significant international attention when several members appeared on Produce 48 — the Korea-Japan collaboration that had all of Asia talking at the time. Jang Gyuri, in particular, won over countless viewers during that season and became a recognisable face well beyond the Korean fanbase.
From there, fromis_9 carved out a distinct identity built around friendship, sincerity, and the uncomplicated joy of youth. Their concept never tried too hard to be edgy or mysterious — they simply showed up as themselves, and that authenticity is precisely what kept fans loyal. Now, under new management, they are bringing that same spirit to Japan, one of the largest music markets in the world.
Why ‘From Our 20s’ Carries More Weight Than Most Album Titles
“Your twenties are defined by uncertainty — but also by a kind of courage that only comes around once.”
The title From Our 20s lands with real weight. The members of fromis_9 are genuinely living through their twenties right now — an era that Korean culture often frames as one of immense pressure, sky-high expectations, and an ongoing search for identity. Choosing this as the banner for their Japanese debut is a deeply intentional move: they are not pretending everything is polished and perfect, but rather celebrating the season they are in, messiness and beauty alike.
According to hellokpop.com, the EP marks a meaningful new beginning for the group within the context of their new management setup — bringing fresh energy not just to their musical direction, but to their long-term career strategy as well. A Japanese debut this carefully considered, rather than simply recycling old material for a foreign audience, signals that there is a bigger vision at play here.
The Japanese Market and What It Means for K-pop
Japan has always been one of the defining milestones in any K-pop group’s career — not because it’s easy, but because it’s anything but. Japanese listeners are widely regarded as among the most discerning and devoted music audiences in the world. They still buy physical albums in numbers that would impress even in this streaming age, they show up for concerts with remarkable dedication, and once an artist truly wins them over, they build one of the most enduring fanbases imaginable.
For fromis_9, the connection to Japan actually runs deeper than this debut suggests. Much of it traces back to the shared cultural space created by Produce 48, which bridged Korea and Japan in ways that left a lasting impression on both sides. There is an emotional continuity here that shouldn’t be underestimated — these are not unfamiliar faces arriving in a new market. They are returning to a place where memories were already made, this time with a more mature and fully-realised identity.
The Malaysian Fan Perspective: What the Local Community Is Hoping For
In Malaysia, the fromis_9 fanbase — affectionately known as Flover — stretches from Kuala Lumpur all the way to Kota Kinabalu. They are active and vocal across platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and Discord, sharing updates with infectious enthusiasm even when the time zone gap turns midnight livestreams into a regular fixture of fan life. For local Flovers, news of the Japanese debut landed as a mix of genuine excitement and quiet hope — excitement that the group continues to grow, and hope that this momentum might eventually translate into an Asian tour with KL on the itinerary.
In the broader Malaysian context, K-pop has long since moved beyond the realm of mere entertainment. It shapes musical taste, fashion sensibilities, the way young people talk, and for some, even their career aspirations. fromis_9, with their wholesome, warm, and consistently cheerful image, are the kind of group that is easy to love without reservation — accessible to fans from all walks of life, regardless of background.
A New Chapter, Right on Time
There is a certain poetic irony to the fact that an album called From Our 20s arrives precisely as all nine members are living through their actual twenties — complete with every real-world challenge that comes with it. A management transition is no small thing in the Korean entertainment industry, which is notorious for its demanding contracts and fierce competition. That fromis_9 came through that period not just intact but moving forward with purpose speaks volumes. This Japanese debut isn’t proof that they survived — it’s proof that they are thriving.
For Malaysian fans who have been along for the ride since the early days, From Our 20s feels like a thank-you note wrapped in music. And for those just discovering fromis_9 for the first time, there genuinely could not be a better moment to jump in — because the best chapter of their story may well be just getting started.

