Each point is a rolling 30-day score ending on that date, sampled weekly. May differ from the window composite above.
Super Junior are a South Korean boy group formed by SM Entertainment, debuting on November 6, 2005 with the single "Twins (Knock Out)" from their first album. The group launched with twelve members, with Kyuhyun joining in 2006 to bring the total to thirteen, and was conceived as a rotating large-scale act. Their 2009 single "Sorry, Sorry" became a landmark second-generation hit across Asia, popularizing the point-dance choreography style and helping drive the early Korean Wave. Super Junior pioneered the subunit model within K-pop, spinning off groups such as Super Junior-M for the Chinese market, Super Junior-K.R.Y., and the dance-pop unit Super Junior-D&E. With hits including "Bonamana," "Mr. Simple," and "Devil," the group earned numerous year-end awards and a long-running reputation as one of the genre's foundational acts. Several members also built solo and acting careers, while the variety program "Super Junior" content helped extend the group's reach. They are frequently credited as pioneers who shaped the template, scale, and longevity model for later idol groups.