Young K
Tier BYounghyun Kang · Day6 member
강영현
Photo: Spotify (editorial)
- Group
- Day6
- Real name
- Younghyun Kang
- Position
- Vocalist · Bass
- Born
- 1993
- Agency
- JYP
- Status
- Active
About Young K
Young K (real name Younghyun Kang) / 강영현 is a member of Day6, a k-pop group debuted in 2015 under JYP, born in 1993. Their position in the group is vocalist · bass, a role that typically shapes how their photocards and stage presence are framed across album promotions.
As part of Day6, Young K has been featured across the act's 11 years of release history, with member-specific photocards and concept visuals issued for each comeback. MyDay typically collect across multiple album versions to complete a single member's photocard set, since each retailer (Ktown4u, Music Plant, Weverse Shop, Korean shop POBs) usually offers a distinct exclusive card per release cycle.
Young K is currently primarily known for group activities; solo or sub-unit work has not been indexed here at this time.
Young K photocard collector context
Building a Young K photocard collection at any meaningful scale requires understanding two things at once: the structural rarity of K-pop photocards in general, and the specific market dynamics around Day6 as an act that is an established act with a steady release cadence and a loyal core fandom. The structural side is the same for every K-pop collector — standard cards (one per album opening, member assignment varies by version), retailer pre-order benefit cards (POBs from Ktown4u, Music Plant, Weverse Shop, Soundwave, Apple Music, plus rotating Korean partners), Korea-only Lucky Draw cards (sealed-box randomized pulls at Korean offline shops), and event-driven cards (fansign attendance, pop-up store exclusives, broadcast event cards). The act-specific side, however, is where the real collector knowledge lives.
For Young K cards specifically, the most important variable is per-era visual identity. Day6's comeback eras typically split visual concepts across members so that each member has a "concept lane" within an album — a specific styling, hairstyle, color palette, and photo direction. Cards that align with the most photographed or most on-brand era for Young K tend to retain the highest secondary-market value over time, while cards from transitional or off-concept eras often trade at significant discounts to peak-era equivalents. Watching the music video for an album you are considering buying is the fastest way to gauge which version's photocards will most appeal to your collecting taste.
From a market-mechanics standpoint, Young K cards trade on a few key signals: era significance (debut-era and Lucky Draw cards typically command the highest premiums), card type (fansign and event-exclusive cards are rarer than standard or POB cards), and member visibility within the comeback (cover-card members and music-video-centered members typically hold higher prices than members who were rotated to backline positions for that particular era). For collectors playing a longer game, the most asymmetric value historically comes from buying mint-condition early-era cards before the act's tier-level visibility increases — once a group ascends from Tier B to Tier A or from Tier A to Tier S, the entire back catalog gets re-priced upward, and the cards bought during the lower-tier window become disproportionately valuable.
Gallery2
Public domain & CC images via Wikimedia Commons
Young K 姜永晛
Wikimedia Commons (CC)

2017 Young K Taiwan
Wikimedia Commons (CC)
Young K photocard collecting guide
Young K's photocards are produced across the same four-channel structure as the rest of Day6: standard album versions (one card per opening, member assignment varies by version), retailer-exclusive POBs (Ktown4u, Music Plant, Weverse Shop, Soundwave, Apple Music, plus rotating partners), Korea-only fansign and lucky-draw cards, and event-specific cards from showcases or pop-ups. The completionist target for a single member set in any given comeback typically falls between 8 and 30 distinct cards depending on how many retailers carried that release.
Secondary market value for Young K cards is driven by three factors: (1) which era the card is from — debut-era cards and Lucky Draw cards tend to hold the highest premiums, (2) rarity within the print run — fansign cards and event cards are typically rarer than standard POBs, and (3) condition — high-grade (mint, no edge wear, no surface marks) examples can command 3–10× the price of moderately played copies. When buying Young K cards on the secondary market, always insist on clear back-side photos, edge close-ups, and a held-card video before payment.
Frequently asked questions about Young K
- What is Young K's real name?
- Young K's real name is Younghyun Kang (강영현).
- What is Young K's position in Day6?
- Young K's position in Day6 is Vocalist · Bass.
- When was Young K born?
- Young K was born in 1993.
- Which group is Young K in?
- Young K is a member of Day6, managed by JYP.
- Where can I buy Young K photocards?
- Young K photocards are sold through standard Day6 album purchases (Ktown4u, Music Plant, Weverse Shop), retailer-exclusive pre-order benefit cards, Korea-only fansign and lucky-draw events, and the secondary market (Mercari, Bunjang). Verify authenticity before any high-value purchase — reprints are widespread.
- Are Young K's photocards different across album versions?
- Yes. Each album version of Day6 typically contains a different photocard for Young K, and each retailer adds its own exclusive POB. To complete a full Young K set for one comeback, collectors usually need to buy multiple versions and at least 2–3 retailer POBs.
- Is Young K currently active with Day6?
- Yes — Young K is currently active with Day6. Track upcoming comebacks and tour dates from the group page or our release calendar.