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The WONDERfools korean drama review
Completed
The WONDERfools
0 people found this review helpful
by Jewels
2 hours ago
8 of 8 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Comedy Done Right, Stakes were questionable

Cha Eun-woo had me swooning every time he appeared on screen. What I didn't expect was to come away talking about his performance more than his face. As Lee Un-jeong, he brought a lot of charm and warmth to the role and proved that he's capable of much more than simply looking good on screen. Three women catching feelings for him in only eight episodes? Honestly, believable.

This was also my first time watching a drama starring Park Eun-bin. When the casting was first announced, I wasn’t exactly sold on her and Cha Eun-woo as a pairing. Thankfully, the show wasn’t heavily focused on romance, which worked in its favor. Still, they weren’t bad together at all. I guess the whole “polar opposites attract” trope rarely fails.

That said, I low-key shipped him more with the hot villain girl. They barely had any scenes together, but every interaction was electric. Then they killed her off, and I took that personally.

Speaking of characters who deserved better, I was genuinely upset about all the Wunderkinder kids dying. The evil scientists and that creepy sponsor grandpa absolutely deserved whatever came to them, but the kids? They were victims too. They deserved a chance at redemption instead of being treated as collateral damage.

I do have a few questions, though. The Wonderfools were constantly referred to as “defected pieces,” but apart from not fully understanding or controlling their powers, they didn’t seem to suffer any major side effects. Meanwhile, the Wunderkinder kids were considered the “successful” experiments, yet they were the ones experiencing severe side effects. Am I missing something here, or does that logic feel backwards?

Another thing: why was Grandma unable to do more for Chae-ni? She was portrayed as incredibly resourceful, had connections and seemed to know far more than everyone else. Yet somehow she was always arriving just a little too late to actually save anyone.

One aspect that annoyed me was the repetitive cycle involving 3792 and the villains. Every confrontation played out the same way: he’d be on the verge of death, emotions would run high, dramatic music would swell, and then... he’d survive anyway. After a while, it became predictable. The stakes stopped feeling real because you knew he wasn’t actually in danger. Not that I wanted him to die, but if you keep building up these emotional near-death moments only to undo them every time, the impact starts to disappear.

The comedy, however, was flawless. A solid 10/10. Every joke landed for me. The goofy humor, exaggerated reactions, and comic-book-inspired style were absolutely hilarious. The Wonderfools themselves were delightfully chaotic, and that’s exactly why I loved them. They were weird, messy, and completely entertaining to watch.

Overall, despite a few frustrations with the plot, I had a great time with this show.
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