Chapter 345: United States Detonation
City 2, Atlanta,
Atlanta ca next because Atlanta always understood rhythm.
Atlanta did not need to be convinced that a movent was real. Atlanta only needed to see if you could keep the energy consistent once the emotional return was over.
rcedes Benz Stadium.
Seventy thousand plus.
Sold out.
The crowd was younger in vibe, louder in a different way. Less tears at the beginning, more swagger, more bounce, more hands up like it was a festival. People brought signs that were half jokes, half threats.
"WE FORGIVE YOU, BUT DROP AN ENGLISH ALBUM NEXT."
"WELCO BACK, DO NOT DISAPPEAR AGAIN."
The chants this ti were sharper too.
"ONE MORE SONG."
"RUN IT BACK."
He gave them what they wanted, and Atlanta gave him sothing back.
Precision.
The stadium sang the hooks like a choir. When he switched into Korean again, it did not die. It shifted. People did not know every word, but they knew the mont. They knew the attitude. They knew the cadence. They carried the beat with their bodies and shouted the parts they could catch, then scread louder for the parts they could not.
And the numbers rose.
Not a little.
A lot.
The physical stands moved like a machine, because Atlanta fans ca prepared. They already had the old album in their mories, but this ti they wanted it in their hands again, like they were rebuilding a shelf they thought had been burned.
Old album physical in Atlanta, three hundred and ninety thousand.
New Korean album physical in Atlanta, two hundred and thirty thousand.
Total physical moved in Atlanta on show day, six hundred and twenty thousand.
The next morning, the headlines did not even try to be subtle.
Rolling Fra wrote: "Dayo’s U.S leg begins like a national event."
SoundHaven Magazine wrote: "Old music reborn, new music respected, and the crowd refuses to stop."
A morning show clip went viral because the host said, half laughing, half confused, "This man went abroad and ca back with trophies, and now Arica is acting like he returned from war."
The fans had their own caption though.
They were not calling it a tour anymore.
They were calling it a reunion.
****
City 3, Houston,
Houston was chosen because Houston was a test.
It was not just a music city. It was a size city. A logistics city. A venue city. If you could dominate Houston, you were not just hot, you were structurally unstoppable.
NRG Stadium.
Seventy two thousand.
Sold out again.
By now, the industry had started moving weird.
Not in public. Not with announcents.
Quietly.
Release dates sliding.
Albums delayed.
Movie premieres pushed back another week.
Artists pretending they were "taking a break" when really they just did not want to open their mouths in the sa month Dayo’s na was taking oxygen.
Valerie said it plainly in the car ride over.
"They’re scared to compete with you."
Dayo did not answer.
He did not look proud.
He looked tired.
Like he did not ask for the fear, but he would still walk through it.
Houston’s crowd was intense in a way that felt almost protective. Like the fan base had matured into guardians. They cheered harder when the Korean tracks ca on, like they were trying to prove sothing to the world.
No language wall.
No excuses.
Just energy.
That night, the guest appearances hit different too. It was not just JD roster anymore. It was industry people. People who wanted to be seen on the right side of history. Artists showing up not to help him, but to align with him.
One of JD’s U.S heavy hitters ca out for a verse, and the stadium lost its mind.
Then Yuri stepped out for her mont, and the reaction flipped.
A wave of screams that sounded almost proud, like the Arican crowd was celebrating the fact that the world had given Dayo new voices to bring ho.
She sang, nervous at first, then she steadied, and by the second hook the stadium was singing with her even without knowing every word, because the lody did not care what country you were from.
After the show, the numbers landed like a punch.
Old album physical in Houston, four hundred and fifty thousand.
New Korean album physical in Houston, two hundred and sixty thousand.
Total physical moved in Houston on show day, seven hundred and ten thousand.
That was when the panic beca visible.
Not fans.
Executives.
Forums lit up with insiders trying to explain it.
Entertainnt pages started writing sentences they usually reserved for legends.
"Dayo is not charting, he is swallowing."
"Every tric is bending around him."
And then, a clip circulated of a backstage conversation, not ant for public, where soone laughed and said, "If he drops anything else this month, we all die."
It was ant as a joke.
It did not sound like one.
****
City 4, Los Angeles,
Los Angeles was last because Los Angeles was the stage that liked to pretend it was above fandom, until it was not.
Los Angeles did not scream first.
Los Angeles watched.
Then decided.
SoFi Stadium.
Over seventy thousand.
Sold out.
But the outside was worse than inside.
Because people who could not get tickets still showed up, like they thought being close to the building was still being part of the event. Screens were set up outside again, giant projections, the kind you only do when you know the crowd will gather anyway and you would rather guide the chaos than fight it.
Inside, the light show looked like a movie premiere.
Because Los Angeles needed that.
The show started and Dayo did not ease them into it. He went straight for the throat.
Hit.
Hit.
Hit.
Old album anthem.
Crowd erupts.
New album cut.
Crowd bounces.
Korean track.
Crowd screams anyway.
Then he did sothing that turned the whole stadium into a single organism.
He stopped the band.
He looked into the crowd and said, calm, "I want to hear you."
The stadium started chanting his na.
Not a few sections.
All of it.
"DAY O, DAY O, DAY O."
The chant kept going until it was no longer a chant.
It was a demand.
It was worship.
It was pressure.
And in that mont, even the caras felt like they were shaking.
dia headlines started dropping before the show even finished, because journalists had already accepted the story they were watching.
WestLine Daily wrote: "Dayo ends his U.S run like a coronation."
CinemaPulse wrote: "Train to Busan is still printing money, and now the soundtrack has beco a stadium religion."
SoundHaven wrote: "Old album becos a monster again, new album holds steady, and the language barrier cannot stop the movent."
After the show, he did the signing again, even though his wrist had already been punished in Asia.
The line was obscene.
People holding both albums like they were holding a past and a future together.
People asking him to sign old covers, new covers, ticket stubs, shirts, even folded paper with ssy handwriting that said things like "THANK YOU FOR COMING BACK."
Security tried to shorten it.
He refused.
He signed until his hand cramped.
He signed until the staff started looking scared for him.
He signed until it felt like the last thing he could give before the world asked him for sothing new again.
When the Los Angeles report ca in, nobody talked for a while.
Old album physical in Los Angeles, five hundred and twenty thousand.
New Korean album physical in Los Angeles, two hundred and eighty thousand.
Total physical moved in Los Angeles on show day, eight hundred thousand.
Eight hundred thousand.
One city.
One night.
And the detail that made Wayne’s eyes tighten was the breakdown note at the bottom.
Old album outsold projections by a ridiculous margin, because the U.S crowd was buying nostalgia like it was oxygen.
New album remained strong, but it was not dominant for one simple reason everyone could admit without insulting the work.
Language still mattered.
Not enough to stop love.
Not enough to stop the tour.
But enough to make the old album feel easier to carry.
Dayo read the report, then leaned back in the chair like his bones finally rembered they were human.
Valerie looked at him and said softly, almost like she was speaking to a friend and not a boss.
"You gave them what they begged for."
Min Jae nodded once, the smallest approval.
Jang Wook rubbed his face and laughed without humor.
"This is not a tour. This is... I don’t even know what to call it anymore."
Wayne only said one thing.
"Now they’ll expect the next impossible."
Dayo stared at the table for a long mont, then he stood up slowly, like the weight of all those cities was in his shoulders, and his voice ca out steady, almost quiet.
"Let them."
Outside, Los Angeles still scread even after the lights went down.
People were still chanting his na in the parking lots, on the sidewalks, on their phones, in comnt sections, in videos, in captions.
The United States had not just welcod him back.
It had detonated.
And now the world had to live with the echo.
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