Released at 1 p.m., the music video for the title track “Swim” surpassed 5 million views within 50 minutes, while the song quickly topped domestic charts including Melon and Bugs, followed by “Body to Body.”
Despite months of anticipation — fueled in part by the group’s high-profile comeback performance at Gwanghwamun scheduled for Saturday — initial reactions suggest a gap between hype and immediate impact.
“I heard all 14 tracks. Nothing stuck,” one user wrote on the Bugs Music platform, reflecting a broader sentiment among some domestic listeners.
Others pointed to a perceived mismatch between the album’s title and its content, expressing disappointment over the absence of Korean-language tracks or overt references to traditional themes implied by ARIRANG.
International fans, by contrast, struck a more enthusiastic tone.
“Bighit really dropped a 10/10 masterpiece and told me to #KEEPSWIMMING but I’m actually drowning in my own tears,” one fan wrote on X.
Critics suggest the subdued reception may be partly intentional.
Pop culture critic Ha Jae-geun described “Swim” as “relatively restrained and subdued,” noting that its departure from BTS’ traditionally performance-driven, high-energy sound may feel unfamiliar to longtime listeners.
“That sense of flatness could be deliberate,” he said, pointing to the group’s evolving artistic direction and maturity.
The shift marks a notable turn in BTS’ 13-year trajectory.
ARIRANG, however, signals less an extension of that outward expansion than a recalibration — a pivot inward toward identity and introspection.
The album follows nearly four years of staggered military service, during which each member developed a distinct artistic identity.
Jin reinforced the group’s emotional core through vocal-driven releases, Suga broadened his reach as a producer, and J-Hope sharpened his role as a performance leader. RM deepened the group’s narrative direction through introspective work, while Jimin, V and Jungkook each carved out distinct sonic and stylistic lanes.
Music critic Kim Do-heon urged caution in early assessments, noting that “it has only been a few hours since release, making a full album-level evaluation difficult.”
Still, he characterized the album’s tone as notably different.
“Rather than simply soft, it conveys fatigue, exhaustion and a desire to escape,” he said. “If you look at ‘Swim,’ it’s less about moving forward and more about wanting to sink.”
Kim added that the album presents “a different way of showing Korea,” reflecting a more contemporary emotional landscape shaped by pressure rather than the group’s earlier themes of unity and identity.
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