SEOUL, May 03 (AJP) -The ability to fall sound asleep — and stay that way no matter what — has quietly become a modern superpower in a world vibrating nonstop with alarms, scrolling feeds, office chats and late-night anxiety.
So when a giant banner reading “Don’t wake me unless you’re a prince” fluttered above rows of sleeping bags along the Han River on Saturday afternoon, few in Seoul found it strange.
At exactly 3 p.m., 170 contestants gathered at Mulbit Plaza in Yeouido Hangang Park for the third annual “2026 Han River Napping Championship,” a competition where the goal was neither speed nor strength, but the rarest luxury of all: deep, uninterrupted sleep.
Some arrived in pajamas. Others came armed with plush toys, neck pillows and blankets. One contestant wore a full Winnie the Pooh costume. Another drifted toward the starting line dressed as Snow White.
By the time the opening announcements ended, the riverside looked less like a competition venue than a giant outdoor bedroom assembled by an exhausted civilization.
Hosted by the Seoul Metropolitan Government, the championship has grown into one of the city’s quirkiest and most unexpectedly relatable events since debuting in 2024, tapping into a national epidemic of fatigue in one of the world’s most sleep-deprived societies.
This year’s applicants included a nurse surviving on fragmented sleep after high-stress shifts, a man in his 30s worn down from helping his insomnia-stricken wife sleep each night, and an engaged couple whose wedding preparations had apparently become a form of endurance training.
But sleeping peacefully beside the Han River was only the beginning.
Contestants were judged on “sleep concentration” — the ability to remain in deep sleep despite increasingly annoying disruptions engineered by organizers.
Officials crept among the sleepers armed with feathers, delicately tickling exposed hands and faces. Mosquito buzzing sounds echoed across the venue like a humid summer nightmare. Hosts wandered through the rows deliberately talking loudly, attempting to provoke reactions from competitors pretending to be asleep.
Some twitched. Others rolled over defensively. A few appeared so deeply unconscious they seemed to transcend earthly concerns altogether.
Heart-rate monitors tracked sleep quality and deep-sleep duration in real time, turning naps into biometric competition.
A “Best Dresser” contest rewarded the most creative pajama styling, with citizens voting for favorites among contestants dressed in cartoon onesies, fairy-tale outfits and elaborate sleepwear ensembles that looked more prepared for a costume parade than a nap.
In a hyperconnected country where people routinely sacrifice rest to work, commute, study and endlessly remain online, the act of truly switching off — phone silenced, eyes closed, mind blank — has become both rebellion and aspiration.
For a few hours beside the Han River, at least, exhaustion itself became a shared performance. And perhaps the only competition where losing consciousness was the ultimate sign of victory.
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