Joy
Tier BSooyoung Park · Red Velvet member

박수영
Photo: Wikimedia Commons (CC)
- Group
- Red Velvet
- Real name
- Sooyoung Park
- Position
- Lead Vocalist
- Born
- 1996
- Agency
- SM
- Status
- Active
About Joy
Joy (real name Sooyoung Park) / 박수영 is a member of Red Velvet, a k-pop group debuted in 2014 under SM, born in 1996. Their position in the group is lead vocalist, a role that typically shapes how their photocards and stage presence are framed across album promotions.
As part of Red Velvet, Joy has been featured across the act's 12 years of release history, with member-specific photocards and concept visuals issued for each comeback. ReVeluv 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.
Joy is currently primarily known for group activities; solo or sub-unit work has not been indexed here at this time.
Joy photocard collector context
Building a Joy 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 Red Velvet 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 Joy cards specifically, the most important variable is per-era visual identity. Red Velvet'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 Joy 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, Joy 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.
Gallery3
Public domain & CC images via Wikimedia Commons

Joy Red Velvet in 2019
Wikimedia Commons (CC)

Red Velvet Joy in June 2019
Wikimedia Commons (CC)

Red Velvet's Joy in August 2022
Wikimedia Commons (CC)
Joy photocard collecting guide
Joy's photocards are produced across the same four-channel structure as the rest of Red Velvet: 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 Joy 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 Joy 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 Joy
- What is Joy's real name?
- Joy's real name is Sooyoung Park (박수영).
- What is Joy's position in Red Velvet?
- Joy's position in Red Velvet is Lead Vocalist.
- When was Joy born?
- Joy was born in 1996.
- Which group is Joy in?
- Joy is a member of Red Velvet, managed by SM.
- Where can I buy Joy photocards?
- Joy photocards are sold through standard Red Velvet 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 Joy's photocards different across album versions?
- Yes. Each album version of Red Velvet typically contains a different photocard for Joy, and each retailer adds its own exclusive POB. To complete a full Joy set for one comeback, collectors usually need to buy multiple versions and at least 2–3 retailer POBs.
- Is Joy currently active with Red Velvet?
- Yes — Joy is currently active with Red Velvet. Track upcoming comebacks and tour dates from the group page or our release calendar.