Key Insights
iQIYI (爱奇艺)
iQIYI is China's leading subscription video platform, often called 'the Netflix of China.' It produced hit originals like The Knockout (狂飙, 1.2B+ views), The Bad Kids (隐秘的角落), and Light Chaser Rescue. In 2024, iQIYI had 101 million subscribers paying ¥15-68/month. Revenue reached ¥31.9 billion. Backed by Baidu, iQIYI focuses on premium original content and has pioneered interactive and VR content experiences.
Tencent Video (腾讯视频)
Tencent Video is China's largest streaming platform by user base. It leverages Tencent's IP ecosystem — adapting popular novels and games into series. Key originals include The Three-Body Problem, Joy of Life, and The Untamed. Pricing is ¥25-50/month, with bundled options through Tencent's VIP membership (covering music, games, and reading). Tencent Video invests heavily in variety shows and talent competitions.
Youku (优酷)
Youku, owned by Alibaba Group, is China's third major streaming platform. It integrates with Alibaba's e-commerce ecosystem, enabling product purchases directly from content. Youku focuses on variety shows (This Is Hip-Hop, The Singer) and youth-oriented dramas. Subscription starts at ¥15/month. Youku is bundled with Taobao 88VIP membership, giving it access to Alibaba's 900M+ user base.
Bilibili (哔哩哔哩)
Bilibili is China's leading youth-oriented video community. Unlike traditional streaming services, it's built on user-generated content (UGC) and anime/gaming culture. Key features: bullet comments (弹幕), creator community (130M+ monthly active creators), and premium anime licensing. Bilibili is expanding into documentaries, lifestyle content, and livestreaming. Average daily time spent is 97 minutes — among the highest of any Chinese app.
China's Streaming Market
China's online video market exceeded ¥150 billion ($21B) in 2024. The market is dominated by subscription VOD (55%), advertising (25%), and content distribution (15%). Key trends: (1) Short-form content (Douyin, Kuaishou) competes for attention, (2) Content costs are declining as platforms shift from expensive licenses to originals, (3) Bundled subscriptions (88VIP, Tencent VIP) are becoming the norm, (4) Interactive content and VR are emerging differentiators.
Chinese Streaming Platform Comparison
| Platform | MAU | Monthly Price | Content Strength | Owner |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tencent Video | 1.15B | ¥25-50 | IP adaptations, variety | Tencent |
| iQIYI | 500M | ¥15-68 | Original dramas, suspense | Baidu |
| Youku | 400M | ¥15-35 | Youth drama, variety | Alibaba |
| Bilibili | 340M | ¥15-148 | Anime, UGC, gaming | Public (BILI) |
| Mango TV | 300M | ¥18-30 | Variety shows, idol content | Hunan TV |
| Phoenix TV | 150M | Free/¥10 | News, documentaries | Phoenix Satellite |
Frequently Asked Questions
Individual subscriptions range from ¥15-68/month ($2-10). Bundled memberships offer better value: Tencent VIP (video+music+reading) costs ¥20-50/month, Alibaba 88VIP (Youku+Taobao benefits) costs ¥88/year. Family plans are limited but emerging. Free ad-supported tiers exist on most platforms.
Most platforms geo-restrict content due to licensing. WeTV (Tencent's international version) is available in Southeast Asia. Viki and Netflix license some Chinese dramas for international audiences. VPNs are technically required but may violate terms of service.
It depends on preferences: iQIYI leads in suspense/crime dramas, Tencent Video excels in fantasy and variety shows, Youku is strong in youth-oriented content, Bilibili dominates anime/gaming/creator content, and Mango TV is known for variety shows and idol programming.
VIP subscribers get ad-free viewing on iQIYI, Tencent Video, and Youku. Free tiers include pre-roll and mid-roll ads. Bilibili has fewer ads due to its UGC model. Even VIP users may see 'creative ads' and brand integration within content.
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