$600 scripts, $1.4T mobile money, 51M Vskit users — Africa’s vertical drama revolution is beginning
Sub-Saharan Africa is the last major market to verticalize. Nollywood is the world’s 2nd largest film industry by volume, producing thousands of features annually. The continent is mobile-first: Transsion controls 47% of smartphones in Africa, and 3.92% credit card penetration means traditional app store payments barely work. The conditions are perfect for vertical drama — short-form, mobile-native content that can be monetized via mobile money instead of credit cards.
Based in Nigeria, co-founded by Ifeoma Areh and Elijah Affi, the Microdrama Academy is training African creators for the global vertical drama market ($26B). It is the first formal vocational program dedicated to vertical drama production in Africa. The academy teaches the specific skills required for 9:16 storytelling: vertical framing, 60-second pacing, cliffhanger engineering, and mobile-first production techniques.
Mansa’s first titles demonstrate how Nollywood’s narrative DNA translates to vertical format. The Heiress, The Baller & The Secret Society (27 episodes) features themes of secret billionaires, betrothals, and domestic revenge — tropes that mirror both global micro-drama conventions and Nollywood traditions. The thematic overlap is not coincidental: Nollywood has been telling stories about wealth, power, and family drama for decades. Vertical drama is just a new container for proven narrative formulas.
African vertical drama production is the cheapest in the world. Scripts cost as little as $600. A full production cycle is approximately 1 month development + 1 week filming + 1 week post-production. Nollywood crews are experienced with constraints — the industry built itself on micro-budgets and fast turnaround. Total production cost for a series: $5K–$15K, compared to $50K–$300K in the US.
Feature phones are still common. Data is expensive relative to income. Bandwidth sensitivity makes 60-second clips ideal — they can be watched on 2G/3G without buffering. Transsion pre-installs create a “walled garden” that bypasses app stores entirely. USSD/SMS payments serve the most basic phones, enabling monetization for users who cannot download apps.
$1.4T flowed through mobile money in Sub-Saharan Africa in 2025 — 66% of global mobile money volume. M-Pesa micro-payments of a few cents per episode match daily income cycles. This is the only viable path for mass monetization on a continent where credit card penetration is 3.92%. The mobile money infrastructure is mature, ubiquitous, and perfectly suited to micro-transactions.
Transsion (Chinese company) controls 47% of African smartphone market share. Khaby Lame, the world’s most-followed TikToker, was acquired by Rich Sparkle Holdings, a Chinese MCN. There is significant silent Chinese investment in African digital creators and platforms. The same Chinese companies that built the duanju market in China are quietly positioning themselves in Africa’s emerging vertical drama ecosystem.
Full analysis of vertical drama’s expansion into Africa with 65+ company profiles in the report.
Vertical Invasion 2026 →Emerging. Mansa launched in February 2026 with a $12M seed round, targeting Nigeria, Kenya, Uganda, and South Africa. Vskit has 51M users. The market is early but growing.
Mansa (dedicated vertical drama platform), Vskit (Transsion’s 51M-user short-video app), and JACO (Arabic/African short video).
Yes. Nollywood is going vertical via Mansa and the Microdrama Academy. Nigeria’s position as the world’s 2nd largest film industry makes it a natural fit.
Romance, revenge, family drama — same tropes as global micro-drama but culturally adapted. Secret billionaires, betrothals, domestic revenge mirror both global conventions and Nollywood traditions.
Microdrama Academy (training, co-founded by Ifeoma Areh and Elijah Affi), Mansa (production + distribution), and individual Nollywood producers adapting to the format.