Heroes Next Door Season 1 Episode 4 Drops This Week: Exact Release Time And Where To Watch
Heroes Next Door returns Monday, November 25, 2025, with Season 1 Episode 4 hitting ENA at 10:00 PM KST. Stream it on Coupang Play and Genie TV in South Korea and worldwide, from writer Kim Sang-Yoon and director Jo Woong.
Heads up if you are following ENA's neighborhood-spy thriller: Episode 4 of Heroes Next Door lands this week, and the show is clearly cranking up the conspiracy angle. Here is when and where to watch it, plus a quick refresher on the very messy fallout from Episode 3.
When and where to watch
- Air date and time: Tuesday, November 25, 2025 at 10:00 PM KST on ENA (yes, Tuesday — an earlier mention of Monday was a typo)
- Streaming: Available shortly after broadcast on Coupang Play and Genie TV
- Region notes: South Korea — Coupang Play; United States — Genie TV; Japan — Genie TV; India — no dedicated platform announced yet
- Episode: Season 1, Episode 4 (approx. 70 minutes)
- Availability timing can vary by region
The show, in case you are catching up
Created by writer Kim Sang-Yoon and director Jo Woong, Heroes Next Door follows a group of ex-intelligence agents who quietly reunite to keep their own block from getting steamrolled by some very bad, very unseen actors. The ensemble includes Yoon Kye-Sang, Jin Sun-Kyu, Kim Ji-Hyun, Ko Kyu-Pil, and Lee Jung-Ha.
Previously on Episode 3: the fallout
Episode 3 was rough. A bus explosion ripped through the Changri neighborhood, killing Myung-Ho — a close friend of Park Jung-Hwan — and rattling everyone. Jung-Hwan is gutted, and the shock waves hit the entire community.
Meanwhile, Choi Kang keeps digging into both the bus blast and an earlier car explosion. His probe turns up odd inconsistencies, the kind that make you wonder if these are two sides of the same operation.
On another front, Byeong-Nam and Lee Yong-Hui keep poking at that strange computer rig they seized from the American guy back in Episode 2. The more they peel it back, the more it looks like part of a bigger, hidden network — and, creepily, it seems the same system has been watching them.
The bunny clue that will not go away
There is one detail the show keeps circling: a bunny toy. Moments before the bus detonated, Myung-Ho sent Jung-Hwan photos and video of a distinctive bunny left on a seat. It matches the bunny Byeong-Nam fished out of the trash earlier — and the one the team found in that apartment. It is an odd breadcrumb, but at this point it looks like a calling card.
Jung-Hwan draws a line
When Choi Kang, Byeong-Nam, and Lee Yong-Hui ask for Myung-Ho's footage, Jung-Hwan refuses to hand it over until they stop keeping him in the dark. He wants the full story and to be involved, not managed. Given what he just lost, hard to argue.
Politics enters the chat
The hour closes with National Assembly member Na Eun-Jae swooping in to calm residents and fast-track a rollout of CCTV across Changri — a move pitched as restoring trust and safety. Helpful, sure, but it also feels like someone is very eager to control the narrative.
What to expect going into Episode 4
With Jung-Hwan holding critical evidence and the team tracking a surveillance system that might be watching them back, Episode 4 is set to connect more dots — especially around those twin explosions and that too-conspicuous bunny motif. If the show keeps its pace, expect more answers, and probably more questions, by the end of the hour.