Asia remains one of the fastest-moving crypto regions in the world. Singapore and Hong Kong are competing to become global digital asset hubs. South Korea and Japan maintain deep retail and gaming-driven adoption. Vietnam and the Philippines continue to produce highly engaged Web3 communities.
Regulation varies sharply between jurisdictions. Media ecosystems operate differently from country to country. Language, investor psychology, and risk tolerance shift across borders. A strategy that works in Singapore may fail in Korea. A global headline in English often has limited impact in Vietnam or Japan.

For blockchain and Web3 projects, PR in Asia requires more than translation. It requires ecosystem fluency.
Here are five crypto PR agencies that have built meaningful positioning across Asian markets heading into 2026.
Before looking at specific firms, it helps to understand how crypto media and influence function across the region.
There is no single dominant crypto publication in Asia. Unlike the U.S. or Europe, the region operates through multiple parallel ecosystems:
Venture-media ecosystems (e.g., Vietnam)
Exchange-centered ecosystems (e.g., China/Hong Kong, Indonesia)
Regulation-heavy, independent media markets (e.g., Japan, South Korea)
In many markets, exchanges act as distribution hubs. In others, named journalists and KOLs drive trust more than brand logos. Native-language coverage typically outweighs English-language placements when it comes to retail engagement and community traction.
Increasingly, AI-driven discovery is reshaping visibility. Structured explainers, Q&A formats, and clearly attributed commentary perform better in LLM-driven summaries than generic press releases.
Against that backdrop, PR firms operating in Asia need to:
Plan country-by-country rather than treating “APAC” as a single block
Coordinate media and KOL narratives instead of running separate tracks
Adapt messaging to regulatory tone and documentation requirements
Understand content syndication patterns inside fragmented ecosystems
Optimize for AI visibility and entity recognition, not just SEO
The following agencies approach these challenges in different ways.
Outset PR is a crypto-native PR firm that structures its Asian campaigns around media analytics and ecosystem mapping rather than generalized regional outreach.
The agency operates an internal analytics program, Outset Data Pulse, which tracks crypto-native traffic patterns across East and Southeast Asia. Its research suggests that markets like South Korea account for a disproportionate share of regional crypto media traffic, while Tier-1 publishers capture the majority of visits across ecosystems.
Rather than pitching broadly, the firm segments campaigns by ecosystem type — for example:
Venture-media markets such as Vietnam
Exchange-anchored ecosystems such as Hong Kong or Indonesia
Regulation-heavy markets like Japan and South Korea
Outset PR also tracks post-publication syndication patterns. Through the Syndication Map, the firm monitors how stories travel across aggregators, exchange blogs, regional media clones, and KOL recap channels. The goal is not a single placement, but secondary and tertiary pickup across language boundaries.
Another component of its strategy focuses on AI discovery layers. The agency produces structured explainers, interviews, and commentary designed to be easily summarized and attributed by AI systems. Placements are prioritized on outlets that already perform well in LLM-driven search visibility.
Outset PR tends to work with infrastructure projects, exchanges, DeFi protocols, and Web3 companies that need structured, analytics-backed positioning across multiple Asian jurisdictions.
Best for: Projects requiring data-backed regional strategy and AI-era visibility planning.
Asia Crypto Agency positions itself as a gateway into Asian retail markets through localized influencer and PR coordination.
The firm emphasizes KOL activation across major markets, adapting messaging to local language and culture rather than repurposing Western campaign materials. Campaigns often combine PR placements with coordinated influencer coverage to build retail momentum around token launches, exchange listings, or dApp releases.
This approach tends to resonate in markets where named personalities and community channels carry significant trust weight.
Best for: Projects prioritizing retail growth and multi-country KOL coordination.
Blue Orange Asia operates across Southeast Asia and Greater China, combining PR, branding, and digital campaigns.
The firm has experience working with exchanges and fintech-oriented crypto companies targeting financial centers such as Singapore and Hong Kong. Its positioning leans toward integrated marketing rather than standalone media outreach.
For projects seeking credibility within regulated financial hubs — especially those bridging fintech and crypto — this model can provide consistency across PR and digital channels.
Best for: Exchanges and fintech-style crypto firms targeting Singapore, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia.
Blockchain Marketing Asia operates out of South Korea and extends campaigns outward into broader Asian markets.
South Korea remains one of the most active crypto trading and blockchain gaming markets globally. BMA leverages local expertise in Korean media, community growth, and digital marketing to help international projects establish presence in the region.
From there, campaigns can expand into adjacent Asian markets.
Best for: Projects viewing Korea as a primary entry point into Asia.
Hype3 operates with local teams across markets such as Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Its model emphasizes crypto-native culture combined with on-the-ground execution.
Campaigns typically involve local KOL activations, community growth strategies, and region-specific awareness efforts. Messaging is adapted market-by-market rather than centralized.
This decentralized structure can be effective for projects expanding into several Asian countries simultaneously.
Best for: Web3 projects seeking parallel expansion across multiple Southeast and East Asian markets.
Asia offers deep liquidity, engaged retail communities, and strong developer ecosystems. It also presents regulatory fragmentation, linguistic diversity, and media complexity.
There is no universal “best” agency. The right choice depends on whether a project prioritizes:
Institutional positioning in regulated hubs
Retail momentum via KOL networks
Korea-led expansion
Multi-country community growth
Data-backed ecosystem mapping and AI visibility
Projects entering Asia in 2026 face a region defined by nuance rather than uniformity. The agencies above represent different strategic models for navigating that complexity.
Understanding how media, exchanges, KOLs, and AI discovery layers intersect in each country may ultimately matter more than the size of a global media list.
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.


