Balenciaga takes Normcore to the Next Level with Alipay Collab T-shirt

In a major event signalling strategic expansion into the Asian market, Balenciaga unveiled its Spring 2025 collection in Shanghai last week on May 30. But as the dust settles on the debut showcase in China for artistic director Demna Gvasalia, one piece from the show is continuing to generate chatter online: a oversized black t-shirt featuring Balenciaga’s logo alongside that of digital payment platform Alipay.


Coming with a price tag of approximately 650 USD, this venture into the fashion world by Alipay (operated by Ant Group, an affiliate of Alibaba Group) has garnered mixed reactions on Chinese social media. Weibo and Xiaohongshu users dubbed the t-shirt as “the most expensive corporate uniform,” while Chinese Instagram users criticized the design. Yet despite the online backlash, the limited edition t-shirt, available only in the Chinese mainland, quickly sold out, with all of the 500 shirts up for sale getting snapped up. Naturally, Alipay and its digital credit card Huabei were offered as payment options.


Alipay Oversized T-Shirt are already sold out, photo via Balenciaga

Alipay Oversized T-Shirt are already sold out, photo via Balenciaga


Despite the controversy, sightings of individuals wearing the coveted t-shirt have begun to surface on Xiaohongshu, particularly in Shanghai and Shenzhen. As a ubiquitous part of daily life in China, Alipay hardly needs the extra attention, but it seems like some Chinese influencers are enjoying adding tech world swag to their outfits.


Banner image via Xiaohongshu.

Shanghai’s Arc’teryx “Museum” Shows the Continuing Appeal of Outdoor Chic in China

At the beginning of the year Canadian outdoor brand Arc’teryx opened its first ever “museum store” on West Nanjing Road in Shanghai, not far from Jing’an Temple in one of the city’s most bustling retail areas. Still going strong six months on, the store illustrates both the importance of the Chinese market to Arc’teryx, and how the brand is reshaping fashion sensibilities in the country, from the closets of white-collar workers, to the outfits of the hippest streetwear fashionistas.


The 2,400 square meter store is organized into four sections across four levels, offering a product range spanning from skiing and hiking essentials to its high-end Veilance line. It features a repair space called ReBIRD™ for garment restoration, an Arc’teryx academy, and an interactive exhibition space. The museum’s debut exhibition highlighted Arc’teryx’s most iconic product: the hard shell Alpha SV jacket. The exhibition included an interactive experience which allowed visitors to experience simulated hiking conditions of rain and wind while wearing the jacket.


The brand’s decision to establish its first “museum store” in China reflects its both its ownership structure and its burgeoning market performance in the country. After Arc’teryx’s parent company, Finland’s Amer Sports, was acquired by Chinese brand Anta in 2019, Xu Yang, formerly an advertising professional, assumed the role of General Manager for Arc’teryx Greater China. Xu proposed the concept of positioning Arc’teryx as “athletic luxury.” The opening of what was then the brand’s largest store in the world in September 2020, spanning 736 square meters in Shanghai’s Huaihai Road Alpha Center, yielded significant advertising returns as desired by Xu, catapulting Arc’teryx to prominence in the Chinese market. Over time, Arc’teryx’s premium pricing (for example 3000 RMB for a hard shell jacket) found acceptance among Chinese consumers: not only hiking enthusiasts and employees in the business and tech worlds, but also streetwear connoisseurs, who are styling their merchandise for the perfect “gorpcore” look, drawing technical outdoor equipment into the fashion world.


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The opening runaway show for the Alpha SV exhibition. Photo via Arc’teryx.


By now, Arc’teryx has achieved such a level of success that it’s referred to as one of the “Three Treasures of the Middle Class” (中产三宝, zhōngchǎn sānbǎo), along with Lululemon and fellow Anta brand Salomon. As for Xu Yang, he is now Anta’s CEO.


One thing that sets Arc’teryx apart from some of its counterparts is a comparative focus on male consumers. Looking at the brand’s official Chinese e-commerce store, the 20 best-selling apparel products are all menswear, despite women’s styles also being available. As such, part of the appeal of the West Nanjing Road “museum store” may be how it provides an interactive retail experience for male consumers building identity through sportswear. For the time being the social significance of Arc’teryx apparel in China seems set, but whether or not the company can maintain its stature may depend on if it can maintain the functionality and quality of its products.



Banner Image via Wallpaper.

This Robot Can Give a Better Chinese Massage Than a Human, Apparently

Robotic arms are already common in the fields of manufacturing, food services and even art installations, but it turns out that they can also give you a nice massage. At BEYOND Expo 2024, Shenzhen-based DeyeeMed showed off its Thermal King AI Physiotherapy Robot. While it’s not the first robotic arm masseur, it’s one of the first to apply principles from traditional Chinese medicine (TCM).


Specifically, this robot can be equipped with a pebble probe for deep-tissue hot stone therapy, which helps with body firming as well as blood circulation and body detox. There’s also a metallic probe for radiofrequency treatment. Both probes also offer red light therapy for skincare, and electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) for improving blood circulation and soothing soreness.


The pebble probe on DeyeeMed's Thermal King AI Physiotherapy Robot.


“Our robotic arm directly contacts the skin and uses Chinese-style massage techniques, including pressing and kneading, mimicking the process of human hand massage to match the softness and strength of human touch as closely as possible,” DeyeeMed representative Lily Liu explained.


Apart from earning bragging rights, getting a massage from a robot has more benefits, apparently. DeyeeMed claims that its machines can dig deeper into tissue, and are therefore better at effectively regulating internal circulation over a shorter session. Human massage therapists, however, may struggle to replicate this level of performance, let alone maintain consistency.


This author, along with another colleague, took up an offer for a quick 10-minute robotic back massage each, and the experience was just as good, if not better, than a session with a human massage therapist. If we had time, I would have totally gone for the recommended 45-minute full session, even if it meant some bystanders would get an unexpected glimpse of my butt crack!


The user interface on the DeyeeMed Thermal King AI Physiotherapy Robot.


DeyeeMed believes that the simplicity of operating its robots — just a few taps on a smart tablet-like interface — will help clinics and other businesses deploy them with ease. “Essentially, one or two people can manage three to five machines in a store for efficient deployment,” Liu added.


Better yet, with the power of AI, DeyeeMed can leverage its growing database to train and optimize its massage programs. The improved algorithms can then be remotely deployed to the massage robots at the clinics.


DeyeeMed has been developing a range of massage therapy and facial treatment robots since 2019, with a mission to address the shortage of personnel in the clinical industry. This is especially the case for traditional Chinese medical practices, especially outside of China. As such, the company has set up an office in Spain, and earlier this year it attended Dubai’s Arab Health 2024 expo.


The pebble probe on DeyeeMed's Thermal King AI Physiotherapy Robot.


For now, DeyeeMed’s massage robots can be found in key regions in China, including Guangdong, Shanghai, Liaoning, Sichuan, Chongqing, and Northeast China. If you’re lucky, you may also spot some in Singapore and Taiwan.


All images by Wayne Hon.

A Hongkonger Sets Ambition to Bring Motion Gaming Back into Households

The gaming console industry is dominated by Sony’s PlayStation, Nintendo, and Microsoft’s Xbox, but a startup thinks it can grab a piece of this lucrative pie. The Nex Playground is a palm-sized cube with a built-in camera for motion tracking — currently up to four players simultaneously. It’s basically picking up where the Xbox Kinect left off years ago, but with a simpler setup thanks to the advancement of AI.

Nex Playground’s party games include silly games like whack-a-mole and Fruit Ninja, as well as more sporty ones based on football, basketball, tennis, hula hooping, ice hockey, and dancing. Some of these titles even let you play as beloved characters from Peppa Pig, Hungry Hungry Hippos, Sesame Street and more. Indeed, the Nex booth at BEYOND Expo 2024 proved to be a popular attraction for young students.

Nex Playground motion gaming console

Nex co-founder and CEO David Lee never thought he would end up developing a gaming console. Before his current venture, Lee had another startup which got acquired by Apple in 2009. Lee, along with a few colleagues, eventually left Apple to form Nex.

Lee’s new company achieved its first success with HomeCourt, a basketball training app powered by computer vision and AI. It came out at just the right time.

“In the pandemic, millions of people downloaded it and [were] basically not using it to track their basketball shots, but to play the interactive training games in it,” Lee explained.

HomeCourt has since been endorsed by the NBA, and its star-studded investor lineup now include Jeremy Lin, Steve Nash, Will Smith, Mark Cuban, and more.

Nex Playground gaming console

With the rising popularity of HomeCourt, the Nex team realized that they could apply a similar idea to a standalone platform. Eventually, they gathered enough know-how to pivot to creating a gaming console, with the bonus being securing powerful IPs from the likes of Hasbro and Sesame Workshop. The result was the 200 USD Nex Playground.

“It’s not really a device designed for core gamers. We designed this device really for families, especially the younger kids who don’t know how to use controllers yet,” Lee added. “So we have kids as young as 3, we also have grandparents as old as 90 years old.“

Nex Playground gaming console

The Nex team is currently split between San Jose and Hong Kong, with the latter being the hometown of all three co-founders. Lee explained that setting up these two bases allows his company to tap into the talent pool on both sides of the world, not to mention easier access to key hardware partners.

“When we go into consumer electronics, basically building actual hardware, it would be great to have an office that is so close to our factory in Shenzhen,” Lee added. “And also we have an office in the Bay Area that’s only ten minutes away from our silicon partner, who designed the chip inside Nex Playground.”

It’s still early days for the Nex Playground, but from an entrepreneurship point of view, it’s certainly an inspiring example of taking up new challenges, while getting the best out of both sides of the world.

All images by Richard Lai.

Meet the Feminist Stand-ups Redefining Chinese Comedy, Overseas

In a hidden part of Pasadena, Southern California, a dim and slightly cramped space comes alive: one performer, one mic, and a soapbox. Laughter constantly bursts out of the crowd. Here are no rules, but one: no cisgender men allowed on stage. Welcome to America’s Chinese-speaking feminist comedy scene.


As part of the West Coast’s vibrant cultural landscape where art and activism intersect, a group of Chinese women take the mic, using humor as a powerful tool to confront gender microaggressions and champion other women and non-binary people to build a safe community abroad.


Comedy Writing Workshop

A writing workshop for Chinese feminist comedians in Pasadena, CA. Image courtesy Alex Hwang.


Stand-up comedy only really began to blossom in China in 2016, when an online comedy show, Roast!, captivated viewers and gained over two billion views in its first season.


Since then, stand-up comedy has steadily grown in popularity, providing a kind of “third space” for relatively well-to-do young urbanites, who enjoy relaxing at shows or even take to the stage to vent about the challenges of daily life. Despite some hiccups along the way, comedy promotion companies like XiaoGuo have drawn fans to their performance venues and social media pages. Many showgoers and viewers have been sold on the idea that “anyone can be a comedian for five minutes.”


But in reality, this isn’t really the case for women.


China, like many East Asian countries, is a traditionally patriarchal society. Openly criticizing powerful men would result in serious backlash. In other words, aspiring female comedians risk being accused of “inciting gender conflict” or being labeled as “sexist.”

A trailblazer goes quiet

The irony isn’t lost here. Yang Li, a stand-up comedian, rose to fame in 2021 with a sassy punchline: “How can he be so average, yet so full of confidence?” The statement hurt the egos of many male online viewers, which led to a wave of criticism against Yang, who was called a “man-hater.” Some even reported her to China’s top media regulator, the National Radio and Television Administration, for promoting “sexist” speech. In the end there was no government response to the case, but Yang stayed out of the public eye for a while.


Though Yang has never directly stated her stance on feminism, many young women in China see her as a role model when it comes to speaking up against misogynistic culture. “She is a trailblazer,” says Alex Hwang, a queer comedian based in Los Angeles and co-organizer of the comedy show mentioned above. “She doesn’t have to be a feminist to act on it. And it’s so precious to see that it’s possible to openly make fun of men.”


Crossing the boundaries of language, culture, and gender, Hwang often reflects on her complicated identities and tries to make lemonade out of lemons. She believes that there are deep issues buried beneath the humor of stand-up comedy.


“Comedy shows are an art of insult,” Hwang says, referring to the men who walked out in the middle of the first show she organized with her collaborators, which had immediately sold out. “If [the men] can’t take the joke, just leave. They basically paid to be roasted, so they should come prepared.” For Hwang, it’s a fair game, she says: “The outside world is full of men in power. What we’re doing here is trying to create a comfortable space for women and non-binary people.”


Hwang began to recognize the need for this safe space when she was young: in China, many profanities use gendered language (for example, some offensive characters contain female-coded radicals) and unspoken social norms criticize women for their body shapes, the way they wear makeup, and how they dress. Gaining perspective on this led her to purposefully try to use more women-friendly and gender-neutral terms in Chinese.


“We have to invent vocabulary to fill the void,” says Hwang, “It only empowers us by using the native language, especially during the time we are abroad.”

West Coast to East Coast, and beyond

Hwang is not alone. In 2022, a group of women in New York City founded NZZY or Nvzizhuyi, the first Chinese diaspora feminist support group. That same year, they hosted their first comedy show, and since then they’ve been working with similar organizations in Los Angeles and the United Kingdom to help them organize their own stand-up nights.

The topics for jokes at NZZY’s events are as broad as the deeper problems they address: from laughs about horrible dating experiences with men to a comprehensive TED Talk-type lecture on one performer’s on sex life. “We received a lot of feedback saying the show was eye-opening and full of delicate emotions,” says Gigi, co-organizer of NZZY, “because here the audience can validate and resonate with the artists face-to-face.”


So how come Chinese comedy is emerging now, rather than during earlier waves of migration? “There are more middle-class international students immigrating to the U.S.,” Gigi reflects, “and this generation of young immigrants truly cares about China’s agenda.”


Since the pandemic, “there’s been a fear among people living abroad,” notes Gigi, who like Hwang was overseas during the lockdown. “And these women are trying to use their humor to defy that fear,” Gigi comments.


The fear, they mention, is not just about being on your own as an Asian woman and a queer person in a foreign country where Asian hate crimes surged 339% in 2021, but also about rapid changes back home.


The Beijing LGBTQ Center, a nonprofit group that provided healthcare and resources to queer people in China, closed in 2023 after 15 years of operation. Many WeChat accounts that advocated for the LGBTQ community, such as ColorsWorld (a student club from Peking University) and “purple” from Tsinghua University, were also shut down, forcing young queer people to search for other ways to build communities.


With all this happening back home, people overseas have been galvanized. In New York, NZZY has held a total of 18 open mic events, not to mention other programs including scriptwriting workshops, debates and public film screenings. All have sold out within minutes of tickets going on sale.


It’s been a decade-long effort. Since Hollywood’s #MeToo movement, which spread to China in 2017, more women have become aware of sexist microaggressions in everyday life, such as mansplaining, non-consensual harassment, and the abuse of power. Then the pandemic accelerated progress. Many grassroots groups of Chinese feminists have popped up in other countries, including the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, and Italy.


“It’s all very natural,” Hwang says of her role as an event organizer. “We want to protect everyone’s boundaries so that we can find peace and safety here.”


Banner image by Haedi Yue.

A Shenzhen Company Has Made the World’s First Transparent Smart Ring

Fitness trackers have come a long way since Fitbit and Xiaomi first popularized this category. Over time, these have evolved into two product types: smartwatches and smart rings. It remains a mystery as to why no major brand has entered the smart ring market — not even Samsung, whose Galaxy Ring won’t be launching until later in 2024.


Meanwhile, a Chinese firm recently stole the limelight by unveiling the world’s first transparent smart ring, the Omate Crystal, at BEYOND Expo 2024. This is made with scratch-resistant sapphire, which has a much lower yield and is more difficult to craft, hence its limited production.


“We’re not sure how to price it yet,” Omate founder and CEO Laurent Le Pen said. “We can only make around 1,000 units per month.”


Omate Ice Ring


The Omate Crystal is otherwise largely identical to the company’s Ice Ring (branded by France’s Ice Watch), which launched in October 2023 for 199 EUR, and it comes in black, gold and silver. The battery can last for up to six days on normal usage, and it can be recharged via a magnetic cradle. In addition to scratch resistance, this sapphire ring also has IP68 dust and water resistance. As a bonus, it comes in eight sizes — two more than the Ice Ring.


The ring’s unobtrusive design means you can wear it for sleep monitoring without too much discomfort. “Many people cannot sleep with their watch, and many people don’t want to sleep also with their smartwatch, so [our smart ring] is an amazing device for sleep monitoring and for all your health biometric tracking,” Le Pen added.


Much like other wearables, Omate’s smart rings can track all four sleep stages: deep sleep (restful), light sleep, REM (rapid eye movement, or dreaming) and awake. This may help the user better understand how to improve sleep quality, especially when visualized in the Ice Ring smartphone app (synced over Bluetooth).


Omate Crystal


In addition to activity tracking, blood oxygen tracking and stress monitoring, the Omate Crystal is also made for continuous heart rate monitoring. When necessary, you can share your relevant health data to third-party medical services from the app.


For Le Pen, his smart ring launch is very much like his smartwatch adventure all over again. It took years for consumers to finally understand the value of smartwatches, and also for him to pivot his smartwatch business from consumer-oriented to a focus on insurance and security, that is, elderly care and child tracking. With smart rings, Le Pen is hoping to leverage existing brands and quirky designs to target consumers once again.


All images by Richard Lai.