Concert Tour Name: | Synk: Parallel Line |
Type: | World |
Artist: | Aespa |
Number Of Legs: | 3 |
Number Of Shows: | 41 |
Last Tour: | (2023) |
This Tour: | Synk: Parallel Line (2024–2025) |
Synk: Parallel Line is the ongoing second worldwide concert tour by South Korean girl group Aespa, in support of their first studio album Armageddon (2024). The tour began on June 29, 2024, in Seoul, South Korea and will conclude on March 12, 2025, in Madrid, Spain. The tour consists of 41 concerts around Asia, Oceania, North America and Europe.
On February 19, 2024, Aespa officially announced via X (formerly Twitter) and Weverse the first dates of their upcoming world tour, with more dates to come.[1] On April 11, Aespa announced via their Japan fanclub two additional shows on August 17 and 18, 2024, held at Tokyo Dome, as a "Special Edition" of the concert.[2] Full event and ticketing information for the initial legs was announced May 1, via their Weverse fanclub page.[3] On May 10, an additional show was announced for Sydney due to demand.[4]
On May 11, Aespa announced that a concert scheduled for July 7 in Fukuoka, Japan, would be postponed due to feedback on social media regarding the date coinciding with a Chinese national day of mourning for the Marco Polo Bridge incident.[5] [6] The show later rescheduled to July 30 and a new show added on July 31.[7]
The following set list is from the concert on June 29, 2024, in Seoul, South Korea, and is not intended to represent all shows throughout the tour.
Encore
Date (2024) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
June 29 | Seoul | South Korea | Jamsil Indoor Stadium | 12,600 / 12,600 | $1,324,742 |
June 30 | |||||
July 6 | Fukuoka | Japan | Marine Messe Fukuoka | 10,293 / 10,293 | $758,350 |
July 10 | Nagoya | Aichi Sky Expo | 15,997 / 15,997 | $1,176,471 | |
July 11 | |||||
July 14 | Saitama | Saitama Super Arena | 38,281 / 38,281 | $2,872,221 | |
July 15 | |||||
July 20 | Singapore | Singapore Indoor Stadium | 8,500[10] | — | |
July 27 | Osaka | Japan | Asue Arena Osaka | 25,872 / 25,872 | $1,992,083 |
July 28 | |||||
July 30 | Fukuoka | Marine Messe Fukuoka | 12,155 / 12,155 | $936,508 | |
July 31 | |||||
August 3 | Hong Kong | China | AsiaWorld–Expo, Hall 10 | — | — |
August 4 | |||||
August 9 | Taipei | Taiwan | NTSU Arena | 27,000[11] | — |
August 10 | |||||
August 11 | |||||
August 17 | Tokyo | Japan | Tokyo Dome | 93,639 / 93,639 | $7,480,884 |
August 18 | |||||
August 24 | Jakarta | Indonesia | Beach City International Stadium | — | — |
August 30 | Sydney | Australia | Qudos Bank Arena | 20,053 / 21,672 | $2,542,330 |
August 31 | |||||
September 2 | Melbourne | Rod Laver Arena | 15,000 | — | |
September 21 | Macau | China | Macau Studio City Event Centre | — | — |
September 22 | |||||
September 28 | Bangkok | Thailand | Impact Arena | 20,000[12] | — |
September 29 | |||||
Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Attendance | Revenue | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
January 28 | Kent | United States | accesso ShoWare Center | — | — | |
January 30 | Oakland | Oakland Arena | — | — | ||
February 1 | Inglewood | Kia Forum | — | — | ||
February 4 | Mexico City | Mexico | Palacio de los Deportes | — | — | |
February 6 | Orlando | United States | Kia Center | — | — | |
February 8 | Charlotte | Spectrum Center | — | — | ||
February 11 | Newark | Prudential Center | — | — | ||
February 13 | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | — | — | |
February 15 | Chicago | United States | United Center | — | — | |
March 2 | London | England | OVO Arena Wembley | — | — | |
March 4 | Paris | France | Zénith Paris | — | — | |
March 6 | Amsterdam | Netherlands | AFAS Live | — | — | |
March 9 | Frankfurt | Germany | myticket Jahrhunderthalle | — | — | |
March 12 | Madrid | Spain | WiZink Center | — | — | |
Total | 228,890 / 230,509 (99,30%) | $19,083,589 |