For basketball fans across Asia, 2026 is shaping up as another packed year of NBA drama. The 2025-26 season runs through April 2026 before the playoffs and Finals tip off, and interest in the league around the region has never been higher. Recent league data shows that NBA League Pass viewership in Asia-Pacific jumped by more than 50% year on year, with the Philippines ranking among the top markets worldwide for both streaming and social engagement.
The defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder, the star-studded Houston Rockets, and rising powers like the Minnesota Timberwolves and Indiana Pacers are all part of a landscape where almost every week features a broadcast that feels global. In the Philippines and much of Southeast Asia, fans follow games live or on delay through the NBA App, NBA League Pass, local channels, and platforms like Amazon Prime Video and Pilipinas Live.
1. The 2026 NBA All-Star Game in Los Angeles
The biggest single event on the 2026 calendar is the NBA All-Star Game on February 15, 2026, at the new Intuit Dome in Inglewood, just outside Los Angeles. The league is rolling out a revamped “USA vs. World” concept, with top American stars facing a stacked international squad featuring Giannis Antetokounmpo, Nikola Jokić, and Luka Dončić.
Because tipoff is scheduled for a U.S. afternoon broadcast on NBC and Peacock, many Asian viewers will be able to watch in the early morning or evening, a friendlier window than the usual middle-of-the-night games. Filipino fans in particular tend to treat All-Star Weekend as a three-day festival, tracking every contest, sneaker drop, and social clip across Facebook, TikTok, and X. With the new format promising more competitiveness than recent exhibitions, this All-Star Game is one of the most anticipated 2026 broadcasts anywhere in the basketball world.
2. MLK Day 2026: A Global Day of Hoops
Another highlight comes a month earlier on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, January 19, 2026. The NBA has scheduled a four-game national TV slate headlined by Bucks-Hawks, Thunder-Cavaliers, Mavericks-Knicks, and Celtics-Pistons. For Asian viewers, these games fall across the local Tuesday morning and midday hours, making them easy to follow before work or school.
The defending champion Thunder, built around MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and shot-blocking phenom Chet Holmgren, draw particular attention in their road test against Cleveland. Dallas, now built around top draft pick Cooper Flagg after the blockbuster trade that sent Luka Dončić to the Lakers, will showcase its new era under the lights of Madison Square Garden. For many Asian fans, MLK Day has quietly become a mini-holiday: a dense schedule of games they can actually watch live without losing a night’s sleep.
3. Thunder vs. Nuggets: Western Heavyweights Collide
Regular-season meetings between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Denver Nuggets have turned into appointment viewing after their battles near the top of the Western Conference. In March 2025, Oklahoma City blew out Denver 127-103 in a showdown of conference leaders, with Gilgeous-Alexander dropping 40 points and Jokić nearly posting a triple-double.
The 2025-26 schedule brings more of the same, including a nationally televised clash in Oklahoma City in March 2026, listed on league and TV schedule pages as a key late-season game. With the Nuggets still built around three-time MVP Nikola Jokić and the Thunder entering 2026 as defending champions, every meeting between these two has genuine playoff seeding stakes and huge appeal for Asian fans who have adopted both teams as League Pass favorites.
4. Nuggets vs. Timberwolves: Power Forward Rivalry
Another Western rivalry that will headline 2026 is Denver vs. Minnesota. The 2025 playoffs and regular season cemented the Nuggets-Timberwolves matchup as one of the league’s most physical and tactically interesting series, featuring Jokić and Jamal Murray against Anthony Edwards, Karl-Anthony Towns, and Rudy Gobert.
On March 1, 2026, Denver hosts Minnesota in an afternoon tipoff that sits in a national TV window in the United States and an ideal nighttime slot across much of Asia. For Filipino and Southeast Asian fans, this kind of broadcast is perfect: a heavyweight Western game at a watchable hour, packed with stars whose jerseys are easy to spot in local gyms and outdoor courts.
5. Macao and the NBA’s Return to China in 2026
While most of the biggest 2026 games happen in North America, one of the year’s most meaningful events for Asian fans will be closer to home. The NBA has already announced that the NBA China Games 2026 will bring a preseason mini-series between the Brooklyn Nets and Phoenix Suns to Macao’s Venetian Arena on October 10 and 12, 2026.
These games follow the successful 2025 China Games in the same city and represent the league’s deliberate effort to reconnect with Chinese audiences after several years without official games there. For fans around Asia, including Filipinos who travel for big sporting events, the chance to see NBA stars live in a nearby time zone is a major draw. The Macao games also tend to generate strong streaming numbers among viewers at home, turning what used to be “just preseason” into a marquee moment on the calendar.
Streaming, Social Media, and Friendly Predictions
Across Asia, most NBA fans now experience these games through a combination of streaming, second-screen apps, and social media. League content is available via the NBA App and NBA League Pass, while countries like the Philippines also have access through partners such as Amazon Prime Video, Cignal, and other local carriers. During big matchups, timelines on Facebook, TikTok, and X fill with live reactions, highlight edits, and running debates about officiating and coaching decisions.
Many Asian fans go a step further by turning game nights into interactive prediction sessions. Some check advanced stats and then compare their picks with the lines on regulated platforms that list NBA betting markets, using small, pre-planned stakes or purely social prediction games in group chats. For this segment of the audience, the point is not high-risk wagering but adding a competitive layer to watching Thunder-Nuggets, All-Star, or the Macao showcase alongside friends.
Part of a Broader Digital Entertainment Habit
Basketball nights also sit inside a wider ecosystem of online entertainment. After a marquee game ends or during long halftime breaks, some viewers pivot to other digital activities, including short gaming sessions on platforms that stream live casino games with real dealers. These sessions are often squeezed between work, commuting, and late-night sports viewing, reflecting how seamlessly gaming and live sports fit together on the same phone or tablet. Fans who adopt this pattern typically treat it as a way to wind down after an intense game, rather than a replacement for the basketball itself.
Mobile-First Lifestyle and Philippine Digital Habits
In the Philippines, especially, a mobile-first lifestyle means that sports, gaming, and social apps all live side by side. A fan might watch the Thunder on the TV in the sala, track box scores on the NBA App, and then spin through a few quick-play titles on a Philippine online casino platform before bed. As long as this remains budgeted and moderate, it forms part of a broader digital routine built around the NBA season.
Why 2026 Matters for Asian NBA Fans
From a historic All-Star Game in Los Angeles to rivalry rematches in Denver and Oklahoma City and a high-profile return to Macao, the 2026 calendar offers Asian fans more must-watch NBA dates than ever. Add in record growth for League Pass across Asia-Pacific and particularly strong engagement from the Philippines, and it’s clear that the region is now central to the league’s global story.
For fans in Manila, Jakarta, Shanghai, Seoul, or Kuala Lumpur, these games are more than just late-night background noise. They are shared rituals, watched live, clipped on social media, argued about in group chats, and sometimes accompanied by prediction games or quick sessions on entertainment apps. As 2026 unfolds, the NBA’s biggest nights will continue to feel like truly global events, with Asia and the Philippines right at the heart of the conversation.


































