Festival food is no longer just a pit stop between sets, it’s becoming part of the main event. And, at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival 2026, one brand turned up the temperature in a way that had fans lining up, filming, and, in some cases, laughing as they desperately reached for water.
Samyang Foods, the South Korean company behind the internet-famous Buldak noodles, returned to the desert this year as the Official Ramen and Hot Sauce Partner, marking its second consecutive year at Coachella. But Samyang Foods is reporting they made history as the first Korean brand to ever sponsor the iconic festival—showing how global food brands are changing up their game at big U.S. events.
And in true Buldak fashion, they didn’t come quietly.
Instead of a single booth or activation, Samyang created what it calls its “spiciest Coachella yet,” anchored by an immersive, multi-stop food experience known as the “Buldak Crawl.” The concept flips traditional festival dining on its head, encouraging attendees to move across the grounds, sampling exclusive dishes and documenting their reactions in real time.
The crawl unfolded across both festival weekends April 10–12 and April 17–19th, turning the entire venue into a spicy playground.
At each stop, fans encountered limited-edition menu items created in collaboration with some of the festival’s most popular food vendors. Fans hit up stops featuring limited-edition items cooked up with top festival food spots. Prince Street Pizza had their Spicy Buldak “Not Ranch” slice, plus other vendors throwing in wild Buldak spins with heat and cool twists. Even desserts got spicy—Sidekicks pulled crowds with Buldak Spicy Banana Funnel Cake, that perfect sweet-spicy mix screaming for Instagram.
Participation was simple and intentionally viral. Festival-goers who completed the crawl and shared their reactions using #buldakcrawlsweepstakes were entered for a chance to win prizes, turning every bite into content and every reaction into potential reach.
But beneath the spectacle lies a deeper strategy.
Buldak’s rise has been fueled by its ability to turn eating into entertainment. From the global Fire Noodle Challenge to the explosion of mukbang and reaction videos across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, the brand has built a fiercely loyal following by leaning into participation rather than passive consumption.
“The core of Buldak is its flavor identity and that uniquely addictive heat,” said Youngsik Shin, CEO of Samyang America. “But just as important is respecting the culture of the young consumers who love Buldak. They don’t just eat it, they experience it, share it, remix it and make it their own. We follow that energy.”
That philosophy is evident in every aspect of the Coachella activation. The Buldak Crawl wasn’t designed to keep people in one place, it was built to mirror how festivalgoers actually move: from stage to stage, from food stand to food stand, constantly exploring. The result is an experience that feels organic to the environment while still delivering a clear brand moment.
It also reflects a broader shift in how brands are engaging with Gen Z and Gen Alpha audiences, who increasingly expect interactivity, customization, and cultural relevance. For them, food isn’t just about taste, it’s about the story, the challenge, and the shareability.
At the same time, Samyang is using the moment to expand beyond its core product. While Buldak noodles remain the centerpiece, the company has been steadily growing its sauce portfolio and experimenting with new formats tailored to U.S. consumers. That includes tapping into the “swicy” trend, the combination of sweet and spicy flavors, and incorporating familiar formats like pizza, tacos, and fries to introduce the brand in a more accessible way.
The strategy appears to be working.
The company reports that, with significant revenue and distribution across 30,000 locations, Samyang has established a strong foothold in the U.S. market. The company has also rapidly scaled its team, growing from just 18 employees to around 100 in three years, with plans to continue hiring as demand accelerates.
Festival food’s turning into its own cultural thing these days, and Buldak at Coachella shows how brands are using big events to pull people into experiences that live way past the weekend. Fans can keep up on Instagram and TikTok.
At Coachella 2026, that meant taking food to new levels—not just taste, but how everyone gets into it.
Because this year, it wasn’t just about what you eat in the desert.
It was about whether you could handle the heat.
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