© Chris Leong 2010

Saturday, July 26, 2025

“Meteor Rain” Returns: F4’s Surprise Mayday Reunion

On July 12, 2025, Taiwanese boyband F4 — Jerry Yan, Vanness Wu, Ken Chu and Vic Chou — reunited on stage for the first time since 2013, during Mayday’s concert at Taipei Dome. They performed “Meteor Rain” and later joined Mayday for “The Song of Laughter and Forgetting.” Mayday’s Ashin revealed the reunion took two years to plan. The performance was filled with nostalgia, humor and strong fan reaction. A 25th-anniversary tour is rumored for 2026 but not yet confirmed.


Disclaimer This post is based on public reports. While factual, quotes and behind‑the‑scenes details reflect reported content and have not been independently confirmed by F4 or Mayday.


🌧️ “Meteor Rain” Falls Again After 12 Years: F4 Reunites in 2025 🌟


On July 12, 2025, fans were treated to the ultimate surprise during the final night of Mayday’s “#5525 +1 Back to That Day” tour in Taipei — a long-awaited reunion of legendary boyband F4.

Jerry Yan, Vanness Wu, Ken Chu and Vic Chou shared the stage once more, performing their iconic debut hit “Meteor Rain”, sending the entire Taipei Dome into nostalgic euphoria. It marked the first time all four had appeared together in 12 years, with their last public performance dating back to 2013.

🎤 The night didn’t end with one song — F4 also joined Mayday in a powerful performance of “The Song of Laughter and Forgetting”, a fitting title for a night that bridged the past and present.

💬 According to Mayday’s frontman Ashin, the reunion was two years in the making, secretly coordinated behind the scenes to align schedules and labels. And it was worth every second.

Ken Chu broke the ice with a trademark joke: “Relieved to be here… now I don’t have to keep pretending we’re not close!”

Vanness Wu brought his high-octane energy, Jerry Yan proved once again that time has no effect on good genes and Vic Chou — calm and understated — carried the kind of presence that doesn’t need words.

What stood out most was the sincerity. These weren’t four men reuniting for show — they were revisiting a bond that shaped an entire generation of pop culture in Asia.


🌠 Conclusion

This wasn’t just a reunion — it was a reminder. That youthful dreams, no matter how long tucked away, can be brought back to life under the right lights. “Meteor Rain” wasn’t just a song that night — it was a shared memory reborn.

Rumor has it, this may be just the beginning: a 25th-anniversary tour could be in the works for 2026. And if the cheers in Taipei were anything to go by, the world is more than ready.




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