@American Fan Detective Service: Tsk tsk, "seven years"? You're waaaay off. Well, I was with my first hubbie for seven years, so maybe that's why you got confused. Registered partnerships entered German law in August 2001. Same-sex marriage entered into force in October 2017, with the elective option of being retroactive to the date of the registered partnership. (I hope this doesn't make me sound old.)
Also @American Fan: I did, in fact, post about "Boys Be Brave" at the end of May (below). I also thought Ki Sub was an adorably cute slacker. (My exact words were "wacky and impulsive yet sweet and endearing. slacker".) Pitter patter goes my heart.
p43425:
I don't think I've seen anything posted here about "Boys Be Brave" since Angeliviki's note almost four weeks ago, and I don't recall seeing anything at all about "Blossom Campus" since it aired, so here's my two cents on these two recent KBLs:
"Boys Be Brave" (Viki, 8 episodes, almost four hours) is a nice, quirky rom-com with just enough psychology, character development and story depth/backstory to make it interesting. It's one of those opposites-attract kind of romances, with a rather wacky and impulsive yet sweet and endearing slacker who pursues an introverted and inhibited nerdy guy. The secondary couple was also quite attractive and engaging, although (as often the case with secondary couples) their story could have been better developed. Overall, I really liked this series!
"Blossom Campus" (Gaga, 6 short episodes, total runtime approx. 2 hours excluding cast interviews at end) was watchable but not great. Somehow I expected more from Strongberry, and I suspect this is the main reason for the many negative reviews I see. That being said, I rather liked the protagonists and the trope of the cute, quiet and charming but also rather child-like jock pursuing the ultra-serious student. The entry of the love rival, however, felt rather forced for the sake of creating a storyline. There was also one particularly glaring production weakness, namely the complete lack of any background students on a busy university campus.