Overview | Seating Guide | Tickets | Food Nearby | Cheering Culture | Getting There
Overview
The Kiwoom Heroes are a KBO League team based in Seoul. Their home stadium, Gocheok Sky Dome, is Korea’s only domed baseball stadium, seating about 16,744 across 2 basement and 4 above-ground floors.
Seating Guide
Below is a seating zone guide for Gocheok Sky Dome. For the exact seating layout and pricing, please check the official team website.
Tickets
- Royal Diamond Seats (Dark Burgundy, premium): front row, frequently shown on TV broadcasts
- Burgundy Seats: close to the cheer section
- Yogiyo R.d-club/LEXUS 1F/NAVER 2F table seats: branded table seating
- 3F/4F reserved seats: general seating
- Infield/outfield couple seats: mini-table standing-chair seats
- Outfield reserved/family/parent-child seats: outfield zones
This site is Korean-only — here's how to get through it
- On the ticket site, click your desired game date.
- Choose a seating zone — see the price table above for each zone.
- Sign up or log in (many sites accept your passport name in English).
- Pick your seat and complete the payment.
- Phone verification (SMS) may not accept foreign numbers — if so, most stadiums still sell same-day tickets at the box office, as long as the game isn't sold out.
Tip: in Chrome, right-click the page and choose "Translate to English" to read button labels instantly.
Food Nearby
Inside the stadium: on the 2nd infield floor, Shrimp Chef (cream shrimp, spicy shrimp) and Oltteok (tteokbokki, sundae, fried snacks); on the 4th floor, Mom’s Touch, BBQ Chicken, and Hyu-ondam (chicken skewers, takoyaki).
Outside food is allowed, and takeout/delivery from nearby fried-chicken shops (Nene, Kyochon) is common. Delivery is usually picked up at the front gate of Dongyang Mirae University nearby.
Cheering Culture
The signature cheer song “Hero March” was written by the band Crying Nut and has been sung since the club’s 2008 rebirth as Heroes. It remains a beloved song even among rival fans, and the cheerleaders have a dedicated choreography just for this song.
Cheerleader uniforms have carried the Korean characters for “certain victory” on the back since 2012. Known for running on a smaller budget than other clubs, the team often recruits new cheerleaders from basketball or volleyball rather than poaching established names from other baseball teams.