TOM HAINES writer & director

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Gaming is a massive part of Indonesian youth culture, with many young people competing in online games like Mobile Legends, PUBG, and Free Fire. The growth of esports has created new opportunities for young gamers to compete professionally, with Indonesia hosting several major gaming tournaments and events.

There has been a massive surge in youth entering the stock market, mutual funds, and crypto platforms via local user-friendly fintech apps. Financial literacy, micro-investing, and discussing investment portfolios have become standard topics of conversation among twenty-somethings. A Bold, Hybrid Future

From youth-led beach cleanups (popularized by groups like Pandawara Group) to campaigns against deforestation in Kalimantan and Papua, Gen Z Indonesians are hyper-aware of environmental issues. They are increasingly voting with their wallets, supporting local, eco-conscious, and sustainable brands. Gaming is a massive part of Indonesian youth

South Korean pop culture (K-pop, K-dramas, and K-beauty) remains a dominant cultural force. Indonesian youth are not just passive fans; they form highly organized digital communities capable of driving global trending topics and organizing massive charity drives in honor of their idols.

Derived from the word "scene," skena refers to alternative, indie music-loving youth characterized by oversized band t-shirts, Doc Martens, and vintage spectacles. South Korean pop culture (K-pop, K-dramas, and K-beauty)

: Youth treat platforms as shared living spaces to create and transact.

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The Digital Renaissance: Hyper-Connectivity and Hyper-Localization

A subculture often teased but widely embraced is the Anak Senja (Twilight Kids). This refers to youth who enjoy listening to indie-folk music, drinking black coffee, and romanticizing the sunset, reflecting a poetic, melancholic streak in urban youth. 5. Social Conscience: Mental Health and Sustainability

Indonesian youth culture is a vibrant, restless, and rapidly evolving laboratory of the future. It is defined by a profound ability to hold contradictions together: global and local, religious and modern, individualistic and communal. As they navigate the post-pandemic world, these young digital natives are not waiting for permission from their elders. They are building new economies through their screens, reinterpreting faith as a lifestyle, and demanding a cleaner, fairer nation. Their energy is Indonesia’s greatest asset, but also its greatest challenge. Whether the country can provide the infrastructure, education, and inclusive economic opportunities to match their ambitions will determine not just the future of youth culture, but the future of Indonesia itself. One thing is certain: the rest of the world would do well to stop seeing Indonesia as a passive market and start seeing its youth as active architects of a new Asian modernity.

Contrary to the assumption that young people are abandoning tradition, Indonesian youth are actively reviving local culture — often with a modern, digital twist. The “FYP in Kebaya” trend on TikTok has inspired countless young people to wear kebaya (traditional blouse) for graduation, casual outings, and creative social media content. Traditional music genres such as dangdut koplo , once dismissed as old-fashioned, have roared back to life — now heard at parties and across TikTok feeds. Even culinary habits reflect this blend: eating with chopsticks (originally associated with East Asian cultures) has become a popular trend, while Korean-style corn dogs and croffles (croissant-waffle hybrids) have gone viral on social media platforms. This is not a generation abandoning its heritage; it is a generation reinterpreting it for a globalized world.