From Chinese duanju to a $14B global industry — the format that's eating Hollywood for breakfast
Vertical drama is a format of scripted entertainment designed exclusively for smartphones. Key characteristics:
The format goes by several names globally: vertical drama (English), duanju / 短剧 (Chinese), micro-drama, short-form drama, and portrait drama. All refer to the same fundamental format.
The format's history runs through three phases:
Short-form scripted content emerged on Douyin and Kuaishou in China during the early 2010s. Initially low-budget, user-generated-adjacent content, duanju gradually professionalized into a massive industry. By 2024, the Chinese duanju market hit CNY 50.4B ($7B), surpassing China's entire film box office.
Jeffrey Katzenberg's Quibi raised $1.75B to bring short-form premium content to mobile. It failed within 6 months. The reasons illuminate why vertical drama succeeded: Quibi used horizontal format (not phone-native), charged a premium subscription (no free hook), and launched during COVID when people had time for full-length content. Quibi proved the concept but got every implementation detail wrong.
ReelShort (Crazy Maple Studio) cracked the formula: vertical format, free hook episodes, coin-based monetization. Revenue went from $36M (2023) to $1.08B (2025 est.). The market exploded to 331+ apps globally, with projected consolidation to 5–8 survivors. The combined global market reached $14B in 2026.
The user experience follows a deliberate psychological funnel:
The format is closer to mobile gaming economics than to Netflix. High monetization per session, high churn, heavy user acquisition spending. Platforms invest 5–9x their production budget on marketing.
Duanju (短剧) literally means "short drama" in Chinese. The domestic Chinese market is the format's birthplace and largest single market:
For a deep dive into the Chinese market, see our Duanju Guide.
For the complete landscape of 65+ companies, see the Vertical Invasion 2026 report.
Vertical drama is not a niche curiosity. It is a structural shift in entertainment consumption:
The complete market analysis with 65+ companies, 30 chapters, and 1,600+ data points.
Vertical Invasion 2026 →Portrait (9:16) scripted series, 60–90 second episodes, 60–100 episodes per season. Designed for smartphone viewing with coin-based or subscription monetization. Also known as duanju, micro-drama, or short-form drama.
Mobile-native format (no rotation needed), free initial episodes create a hook, 1-minute dopamine-hit episodes fit into any schedule gap, cliffhangers drive binge behavior, and coin-based monetization mirrors successful mobile gaming psychology.
Typically 60–90 seconds per episode. A full series of 80–100 episodes totals approximately 80–90 minutes of content — a feature film consumed in 1-minute increments.
Designed primarily for smartphone viewing in portrait orientation. Some users cast to TV via AirPlay or Chromecast, but the experience is optimized for handheld devices. The 9:16 format with large text and close-up shots is designed for small screens.
Originated in China as duanju (短剧) in the early 2010s on platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou. Globalized by ReelShort (Crazy Maple Studio) starting in 2022. Quibi attempted a related concept in 2020 but failed due to horizontal format and premium-only pricing.