3 Jawaban2025-08-22 03:51:42
I get asked this a lot when I’m scrolling fan pics and wondering why my jeans suddenly look short — so here’s a practical take. If you use commonly listed heights for TXT members (Soobin 187 cm, Yeonjun 183 cm, Beomgyu 181 cm, Taehyun 179 cm, Huening Kai 178 cm), the math is straightforward: add them up (187 + 183 + 181 + 179 + 178 = 908) and divide by five. That gives an average of about 181.6 cm, which is roughly 5'11.9".
I always like to flag that K-pop heights are often rounded or updated when agencies release new profiles, and photos can deceive depending on shoes, camera angle, or stage platforms. Some sources list Yeonjun closer to 184–185 cm or Huening Kai at 179 cm, which nudges the average a hair up or down — for example, swapping Yeonjun to 185 cm yields an average near 181.8–182 cm. Still, either way, TXT averages just under or right around 182 cm, which is noticeably tall for a five-member group.
Bottom line: expect the average to be about 181.5–182 cm depending on your source. I usually say ~182 cm out loud when comparing lineups, because it’s easier to remember and it matches the vibe when you watch them on stage — lanky, long-limbed, and great at striking poses.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 09:51:51
I still grin every time I think about that first live show I saw where the lineup practically looked like a height chart — in the nicest way. From my view, the tallest member of TXT is Soobin; he's usually listed as the tallest in fan profiles and photo comparisons, commonly around 187 cm (give or take depending on the source). That lanky frame plus the leader energy makes him stand out in both group shots and onstage formations.
If you’re into the nitty-gritty, you'll notice the rest of the group fills out a nice gradient right after him: Yeonjun and Beomgyu often sit a hair shorter than Soobin (Yeonjun is frequently listed around the early 180s, Beomgyu around 181–182 cm), Hueningkai tends to be in the high 170s, and Taehyun the more compact presence at around the mid-to-high 170s. Official profiles, interviews, and variety show camera angles sometimes disagree, so fans love doing side-by-side comparisons to settle playful debates.
Honestly, those height differences are part of what makes their choreography and visuals so fun to watch. The taller vs. shorter silhouettes create dynamic lines in dance breaks, and when they pair up for stage moments you see a nice contrast. If you want the most accurate and updated numbers, I’d peek at recent official photos or their company’s profile page, but for casual fandom chatter, Soobin is the one everyone points to as the tallest — and yes, he wears that role very well.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 02:17:56
I've been following TXT since their debut and, watching live stages and fan cams, it always felt like the younger members went through the biggest growth spurts. From what I’ve pieced together through interviews, fan-compiled profiles, and variety appearances, Taehyun and Hueningkai seem to have changed the most in height since debut. They were the youngest when they debuted, so they had more growing left to do — that classic teenage stretch — and you can see it in older vs. newer group photos where their silhouettes get noticeably longer.
Beomgyu probably had a moderate increase too, but Yeonjun and Soobin look pretty stable in comparison; they already had a solid, tall frame when they debuted. I like checking updated heights on fan sites and watching behind-the-scenes clips; little things stand out, like Taehyun’s shoulders broadening or Hueningkai suddenly matching Beomgyu on stage when they used to look a touch shorter. It’s become a bit of a pastime for me — noting how line distributions and camera angles shift as members grow. If you want the most likely candidates for the biggest change: pick Taehyun first, Hueningkai second, with Beomgyu close behind, and Yeonjun/Soobin holding steady. It’s fun to watch them grow into their performance presence as much as their literal height.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 12:50:12
I get nerdy about little facts like this, so I dug through my mental archive and fan community habits: the first official height listings for Tomorrow X Together were published around their debut period in early March 2019, when the agency put out profiles for each member as part of the rookie rollout. That’s the baseline most people cite — the numbers that appeared on official profiles and press materials when TXT first launched.
That said, 'current' heights people discuss online often come from a mix of places after that debut — updated agency profiles, merchandise cards, event handouts, or even member comments on live streams. Agencies sometimes tweak profiles quietly, and fandom spreadsheets will pick up those subtler changes. If you want the single most reliable timestamp, check archived snapshots of BigHit Music (now HYBE Labels) or the official profiles on their site and Weverse Shop around March 2019 for the originals, and then compare to current pages to spot any official updates. I tend to bookmark the agency page and the fan club posts when members have birthday posts or comeback kits, because that’s when minor profile tweaks often appear.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 11:16:52
Watching TXT perform live, it's obvious that height plays a role — but it's just one ingredient in a much bigger recipe. From my seat at a few concerts and after obsessively rewatching stages on loop, taller members often get placed toward the back or in supporting lines so they don't block sightlines, while mid-height members anchor the center where the cameras and audience expect to focus. That said, production teams are clever: tiered platforms, staggered steps, and camera angles flatten perceived differences so the formation reads smooth on both big screens and TV broadcasts.
I also notice that choreography compensates for height differences. When two members are paired for a duet or a synchronized move, directors will adjust arm levels, foot placement, and even the way hair and costumes flow to keep the silhouette consistent. Shoes are a big secret weapon—platforms, hidden wedges, or dress flats can subtly nudge someone taller down or shorter up, changing how a line looks without anyone overtly noticing.
At the end of the day, TXT's concept, song energy, and who needs to be 'center' for a key moment matter way more than raw centimeters. The band’s visual balance is a collaboration between choreography, styling, camera work, and the members' own spatial awareness. I love picking apart formations because it reveals that every little choice is meant to make the performance feel intentional and seamless — and it makes me appreciate the craft behind the spectacle even more.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 16:02:06
I get weirdly particular about tiny details like member heights — it’s one of those silly things that makes me feel extra connected when I’m shopping for clothes or deciding which fan-made keychain will look right in a group photo. If you want official verification, start at the label: HYBE (Big Hit’s current label pages) lists artist profiles on its official site and often includes heights. That’s the most direct place because the company supplies those numbers to the public.
Beyond the label page, I always cross-check the band’s official Weverse profile and posts on their verified social accounts (YouTube, X, Instagram). Agencies will sometimes post profile cards around comebacks, or include a stats sheet in comeback materials and press kits — those are essentially the same info the label provides, just repackaged for fans and media. Music show profiles like Mnet’s pages, KBS, or SBS program sites will list heights too, since those programs request official info when artists register to promote; I’ve caught differences there before, so I keep a couple of sources open.
A couple of practical tips from my own experience: screenshots with timestamps are great because agencies occasionally change numbers (or round up/down). Photobooks, concert programs, and official goods sometimes print member profiles too — those count as official sources if produced by the label. And remember: measurements can vary (shoes on, shoes off, rounding), so if the exact number matters for something you’re doing, verify across two or three official places and assume a little wiggle room.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 01:31:54
On stage, height is one of those little details that totally changes the group's silhouette, and with TXT it’s pretty obvious — they generally read as taller than many of their peers. I’ve stood in crowds and watched fancams where the lineup just looks... elongated in a good way. Several members are consistently described by fans as being above 180 cm, so when you see them next to groups whose members cluster in the mid-170s, TXT tends to pop visually.
That taller presence affects more than just visuals. Choreography tends to emphasize broad lines and sweeping movements; their suits and streetwear also fall differently, which is why they look so sleek in concept photos. If you compare them to groups where heights are more even or shorter on average, TXT gives off a runway-ready vibe — taller members can anchor center formations and create that dramatic contrast when the shorter members take the front for certain parts.
If you’re curious in a practical sense, watch live performances or fancams and compare how they appear next to other boy groups in collabs or award stages. It’s a subtle science of camera angles, shoe lifts, and posture, but personally I love how their height mix helps the visuals feel cinematic rather than crowded.
3 Jawaban2025-08-22 05:27:26
I still get sucked into checking fan sites at odd hours, and heights are one of those tiny rabbit holes that never ends. From my experience, the height listings for TXT members on fan-run pages are usually a decent ballpark, but rarely perfect. A lot of the numbers come from a mix of official profiles, translated press releases, and longtime fans comparing photos — and those sources each have their own quirks. Agencies sometimes list a rounded or slightly boosted figure, translations can convert cm to inches awkwardly, and fans might report a measurement seen on a Japanese profile that was never updated. So you end up with the same five numbers repeated everywhere.
Another thing I always keep in mind is stage reality versus profile reality. Performance shoes add height (sometimes several centimeters), camera angles and posture can make members look taller or shorter, and even hair styles affect perceived height in group photos. If you want the most reliable single source, check the agency’s official profile or recent press kits; if you want cross-checks, look at multiple reputable outlets and photo lineups where members are barefoot or in flats. For a fun sleuthing project, I’ll line up full-body shots from a comeback stage and compare head counts — it’s imperfect but gives you a sense of relative differences. Bottom line: treat fan site heights as useful estimates, not precise measurements, and enjoy the debate — it’s part of being a fan.