Box office In three days after its release in China, the film's box office reached 1.1 billion yuan, the first movie to reach 1 billion yuan (US$137 million) at the box office during the Chinese New Year in 2025. On the fourth day of release, the box office exceeded 2 billion yuan. On the fifth day of release, it exceeded 3 billion yuan. It exceeded 4 billion yuan on only the sixth day of release, breaking the record for the fastest to reach 4 billion yuan set by
Detective Chinatown 3 in 2021 (it took nine days and nine hours). The box office exceeded 5 billion (US$684 million) on the eighth day of release, breaking the record of 5 billion set by
The Battle at Lake Changjin, the box office champion in mainland China in 2021 (it took 19 days and 9 hours), and surpassed the total box office of the first
Ne Zha film, becoming the
highest grossing animated film in mainland China. The
Ne Zha film series also became the second film series to exceed 10 billion yuan (US$1.37 billion) with just two movies, and the box office exceeded 6 billion on the ninth day of release. As of 8 February 2025, the box office has exceeded 7.2 billion yuan, ranking first in the Chinese New Year period, surpassing
Wolf Warrior 2 (2017) and
The Battle at Lake Changjin (2021) to become the highest-grossing Chinese film of all time. On 8 February, the box office exceeded 7 billion yuan (US$958 million), becoming the 63rd film to cross the 7 billion yuan mark worldwide, and the first non-Hollywood film to do so. It also surpassed the
single territory box office record of US$936.7 million set by
Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), 11 days into its release. It became the
highest-grossing animated film, surpassing
Inside Out 2 (2024) in less than three weeks after its initial release. It marks the first non-American, non-English-language animated film to achieve this milestone and the second non-Disney animated film to be labeled as such after
Shrek 2 (2004).
Ne Zha 2 passed the $2 billion mark on 9 March 2025, becoming the first animated and non-American film to have done so, and the seventh overall. At its premiere in
Los Angeles on 12 February,
Grauman's Chinese Theatre sold out of tickets immediately upon release. The film grossed $7.2 million in its opening weekend in the United States, compared with its predecessor's $1.2 million opening weekend there. Released in
Singapore on 6 March, the film earned $300,000
Singapore dollars (US$225,000) on its first day. By the seventh day of release, the box office had surpassed $2.5 million Singapore dollars (US$1.875 million), breaking the records for the highest first-day and total box office earnings for a Chinese film in Singapore. On 29 March, the distributor, Clover Films, announced on social media that the total box office in Singapore had exceeded $6 million Singapore dollars (US$4.5 million).
Critical response China at the
Chengdu Hi-tech Zone.
Red Star News praised its special effects, script, and concept, and said that the film "uses a solid script and accurate expression of values, proving that 'respect for the audience' is the real box office password."
Shangguan News praised the film for continuing the style and rhythm of the previous film, and the further improvement of the battle and special effects scenes, but criticized the lack of suspense in the plot. The
Macau Post Daily published an interview with Harald Brüning about the film. He commented:
Western , earning it the "Certified Fresh" seal. Danae Stahlnecker of
Common Sense Media gave the film four stars out of five, saying: "stunning animated action adventure is an inspiring, heart-wrenching tale about how we all have the power to change our circumstances and make a better world." She praised the characters and story, and she concluded "Refreshingly, this sequel isn't just a franchise cash-grab. It's a thoughtful, well-crafted installment in an ongoing epic that deserves its global success."
Audience response Ne Zha 2 was widely praised by Chinese audiences.
Douban Movies scored the film 8.4/10, and the film also had an average rating of 9.7 out of 10 on
Maoyan and 9.8 out of 10 on
Taopiaopiao.
The Atlantic, quoting Jenny Zhang of
Slate, noted the wide range in reception from Chinese audiences.
Accolades ==Impact==