idntt Brings 'FIRST ACTION' Fan Meeting Tour to Seoul — And Leaves Fans Wanting More
The 15-member K-pop group completed its three-city debut fan meeting tour with an explosive Seoul finale that hinted at what's still to come

For a group still in its first year, idntt is moving fast. The 15-member K-pop act, managed by Seoul-based label Modhaus, wrapped the Seoul leg of its debut fan meeting tour on March 28 — completing a journey that began in Tokyo, passed through Taipei, and ended at home in front of their most passionate crowd yet.
The event, titled FIRST ACTION, was more than a fan meeting in the traditional sense. It was idntt's first opportunity to perform for domestic audiences in a dedicated setting, and both the group and their fans treated it accordingly. The energy in the room, by all accounts, matched anything the previous two stops had produced — and in some moments, exceeded it.
Two Units, One Stage
idntt operates through two sub-units: unevermet and yesweare, each with their own distinct identity and sound. At the Seoul fan meeting, both units performed separately before coming together for a full-group finale that gave attendees the complete idntt experience in a single evening.
unevermet opened with "You Never Met" and "8시 11분" (8:11 PM), delivering the unit's signature blend of sharp choreography and emotional stage presence. yesweare followed with "Yes We Are" and "All I Need," showcasing the warmer, more melodic side of the group's sonic palette. Each unit also presented cover stages exclusive to the fan meeting — performances fans won't be able to see anywhere else.
The full-group portion of the show was where FIRST ACTION truly ignited. idntt opened the ensemble set with "BOYtude," their debut collective track, before launching into a group cover of NCT 127's "TOUCH" — a song chosen by fans themselves ahead of the event. The fan-voted cover drew one of the loudest responses of the night.
From there, the setlist kept building: "EGO: Limitless," "Pretty Boy Swag" (the group's latest title track), "Instant Chemistry," and "Moon Burn" rounded out an evening that demonstrated just how much performance material idntt has accumulated in a relatively short time. MC Heo Jun kept the proceedings moving between segments, steering fan games and interactions that filled the room with laughter as readily as the music filled it with energy.
A Group That Keeps Raising Its Own Bar
To understand why the Seoul fan meeting felt like such a milestone, it helps to understand how quickly idntt has been building toward this moment. The group launched with its first unit, unevermet, before expanding with yesweare — a structure that let each sub-unit develop its own fanbase and identity before combining forces.
The commercial validation has been real. The group's album yesweare, released earlier this year, moved 431,377 copies in its first week — a career-high for the act and a number that placed them firmly in the upper tier of emerging K-pop groups. Billboard Korea recognized them as January 2026's K-Pop Rookie of the Month, an acknowledgment that their early momentum had translated into genuine industry attention.
The fan meeting tour followed naturally from that momentum. Japan came first, in February, giving the group its first taste of live performance abroad. Taipei followed in early March, expanding the tour's geographic footprint and demonstrating that the idntt fanbase — known by the fandom name that has been building across social media platforms — had taken root internationally.
Seoul, though, was the one that carried the most emotional weight. Performing in front of domestic fans who have followed the group's development from the earliest announcements, the members of idntt delivered a show that felt like both a culmination and a beginning.
The Third Unit Is Still Coming
Perhaps the most significant thing about FIRST ACTION — at least from a fan perspective — is what it represents in terms of where idntt is in its own story. The group has been transparent from the start about its architecture: a total of 24 members, organized into three units, with the final unit yet to debut.
That third unit, known only as itsnotover, has not yet made its official entrance. When it does, it will complete the full idntt roster and unlock the group's "complete" era — a phase that FIRST ACTION was partly designed to acknowledge, celebrate, and build anticipation for.
The group said as much in their closing remarks to the audience. "Thank you from the bottom of our hearts for spending this day with us," they told fans gathered in Seoul. "We hope this moment becomes a precious memory that stays with you for a long, long time."
It was a statement that looked forward as much as it looked back — the kind of thing you say when you know the story is only just beginning.
What Fans Are Saying
Online response to the Seoul fan meeting has been enthusiastic. Clips from the fan-voted NCT 127 "TOUCH" cover circulated widely in the hours after the event, drawing in viewers who weren't in the room and sparking conversations about how a group this young is already this polished.
Many fans highlighted the visible chemistry between members during the interactive segments — the games, the unscripted exchanges, the moments that make fan meetings feel different from concerts. For a group whose public image is still forming, every moment of genuine personality on display helps define who idntt is for the audiences still getting to know them.
With FIRST ACTION now complete and itsnotover still waiting in the wings, the next chapter for idntt appears ready to begin. What it looks like when a group of 15 becomes 24 is a question fans are already asking — and by all indications, the answer is coming soon.
The broader context matters here too. idntt is part of a new wave of K-pop groups emerging from Modhaus, a label that has built its reputation on transparency and fan participation — releasing information about its artists gradually and involving the audience in key decisions, like the song choice for the fan-voted cover at FIRST ACTION. That approach has created a particularly engaged fanbase, one that feels invested in the group development in a way that goes beyond typical idol fandom dynamics.
For new listeners, FIRST ACTION served as an introduction to a group that is still being assembled — something rare in an industry where groups typically debut fully formed. idntt has made the process of becoming itself into part of the spectacle, and if the Seoul crowd reaction was any indication, that approach is working exactly as intended.
How do you feel about this article?
저작권자 © KEnterHub 무단전재 및 재배포, AI학습 및 활용 금지

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub
Entertainment journalist specializing in K-Pop, K-Drama, and Korean celebrity news. Covers artist comebacks, drama premieres, award shows, and fan culture with in-depth reporting and analysis.
Comments
Please log in to comment