Well, like Season 1, this was quite the ride! I very much enjoyed it.Unlike some of the things I've read people…
I didn't care much for the last few interactions of Fan Xian and Wan'er, with her finding out Wu Zhu killed her brother and all. To me, Wan'er feels like a character with a strong moral compass based on how she's portrayed, and someone with compassion, intuition, and sense. Someone like her would be able to see that her brother, for all his kindness to her, was kind of a messed up dude to other people and just in general. That should have allowed her to get over this whole thing after some time to pause and collect herself without putting Fan Xian in the middle of two of the people he trusts and loves most in the world. He NEEDS you Wan'er; badly done! 😠 (And c'mon, your hubby even saved your dad AND took in your brother who everyone else avoided--can't you see he had his reasons!? 😭).
And I KNEW Wu Zhu was some kind of robot/cyborg! I loved the way he went into robot-defend-his-person mode when the Divine Temple emissary mentioned killing Fan Xian--ooh, the Mama Bear really kicked in then. No one messes with Wu Zhu's boy! 😂🥰 I was honestly bummed there was so little of him in this season; the middle portion of Season 1 with him and Fan Xian teaming up were some of my favorite episodes out of all two seasons!
Well, like Season 1, this was quite the ride! I very much enjoyed it.
Unlike some of the things I've read people say about this, I don't think it was that different from Season 1. I thought it was a bit more confusing at points, for sure (and some characters, if possible, became even more ambiguous and confusing, but it also felt intentional), but I thought it continued to show Fan Xian as smart, capable, compassionate, a person of integrity, and ever the optimist with a seemingly endless supply of hope.
Fan Xian does realize he's more of a pawn in this season (we see it, too, and boy is it frustrating; it maybe makes him feel less smart and almost more naive than in Season 1, but even in that season at the end he realized he was played the whole time, too), and I can't to wait to see what he does once he's had enough. Cause CPP and the Emperor can only keep up their shenanigans for so long before this kiddo snaps.
I'm wondering if so far Fan Xian hasn't been able to break out of pawn status and anticipate the Emperor and CPP's plots because their true intentions and goals are hidden. Because he doesn't know what they want to achieve or what they want, he can't anticipate their moves. On the other hand, the reason they've been able to play Fan Xian so easily is because he is an open book. What he wants and who he is is there for all to see--and exploit. I love that about him, though. His good-hearted sincerity makes him a character you can't help but root for and love.
This season does have considerably less action, and more court/city politics, and I missed the pacing of the action breaking up the politics like in Season 1, but it was still solid in its own way and explored some new facets of Qing that we haven't seen before. And there are even more lovable characters added to Team Fan Xian this season, as well!
A very good drama, and I look forward to seeing what season 3 has in store--I honestly don't know how one season will be enough to wrap this up!
ya never truly got wt jol was about , sry to say but fan xian was never op he just knows how to adapt nd was trying…
In Season 2, I'm a bit confused why Fan Xian keeps going along with their schemes and playing into their grand plans even though he knows he's a pawn? The reality of this started revealing itself at the end of Season 1, and has continued to be made clear in Season 2 several times.
I'm at Episode 20 so far, and it just seems like CPP keeps talking him into doing the troublemaking thing that gets CPP and the Emperor what they want but ends up leaving Fan Xian in a lurch. At this point, if I was him, I'd just want to derail their plot if I was him (he has the brains for it!)! 😅 He's too optimistic and kindhearted for his own good. 😟
And the Emperor makes even less sense in this season than Season 1. In Season 1 it seemed like he genuinely liked Fan Xian and approved of what he did. In this season, the Emperor is just hardcore messing with him and doesn't seem to give a darn.
I enjoyed this series, I was search for the romcom, but can't say this drama was romantic in the first place.…
I'd suggest the K2! It has kind of a ridiculously over-the-top plot, but also addictingly fun and Ji Chang Wook is at his best in it (I think) outside of Healer, which he also shines in. :)
Weird thing I've noticed is that if you go to the stats tab the Score Statistics tells us 33% of voters are in…
That seems like the age range that would start a bandwagon tirade against a drama that they've never seen and only downvote because people they follow/like are telling them to. Though I expect that behavior of teenagers; when adults do it it's profoundly disappointing, and far more concerning.
I have been wondering the same thing! Up to where I am at I have not heard of any reason why the emperor of Qi…
And doesn't it seem like something the ever observant Fan Xian would have noticed and capitalized on when he was in Qi? 🧐
I'm only in the first 1/3 of Season 2 so maybe they'll explain it later? 🤷♀️ Most of the threads I thought they had dropped get picked up again at some point, except for Yan Xiaoyi and He Daoren (who doesn't seem to be in Season 2), which are just a few I can think of off the top of my head.
Have you finished Season 1? If not, don't read the next part cause it has ending spoilers. 😉
I really hope Fan Xian pulls the card of being the Emperor's son at some point; it seems like (and I assume) only Chen Ping Ping, Fan Jian and the Emperor know about his identitiy. And I mean, Fan Xian is clearly the best candidate for emperor among all of the princes (not sure about the 1st Prince yet). Did the Emperor experiment and have him raised differently to see if he would turn out better than the princes? 😅 But it also seems like a great way to get your son to turn on you; if I was Fan Xian I'd be very, very displeased about being toyed with and used. And I've officially decided I dislike the Emperor; he treats people like they are pawns in a game, as does Chen Ping Ping. This is Fan Xian's whole issue with those in Jingdu: they see people not as people but as tools to achieve their ends.
Ah, the power of social media to "make real change"; if this is true, I'm so convinced people grew in compassion for the victims of war due to this drama getting down voted. 👏👏👏 So impressed with their earthshattering championing of "the good."
🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ Sarcasm aside, this is an embarrassing case of internet "bandwagoning."
Someone explained to me how alternate accounts and bots can work since they've been lost on me until recently. 😅 It does seem like MDL should work on verifying accounts more carefully? I'm sure it's an evolving issue that many sites like this are dealing with so hopefully it will improve over time 🤷♀️
Because she's a female emperor that pretend to be a man.
Huh, interesting! I didn't expect something that far-fetched in this drama. Wondering how they're going to make that work? Did the previous Emperor of Qi have no sons? Seems unlikely with all those concubines they have. 🤔
Managed to grab my attention in the first 5 mins, very well done! 👏But man if you cheat I'm out
I could bet with 99% certainty that he wouldn't "cheat" if this was made by a Korean network (for instance, I think of Fated To Love You, where the FL gets pregnant from the ML while both are dating other people and somehow they manage to make both the ML and FL sweet, upstanding people who have good intentions and who you root for--um, how'd they pull that off? As only a Kdrama can! 😅), but since it's Netflix, all predictable moral standards and Kdrama rules are potentially off the table, so, who knows? 💁♀️
When shows are experimental (and Netflix loves to experiment!), the results are... unexpected.
Your comment makes me want to stay away. I'm an anti for many/most Netflix Kdrama originals, so this isn't encouraging. 😂 Usually the more "Netflix" it feels, the less I like it...
And I KNEW Wu Zhu was some kind of robot/cyborg! I loved the way he went into robot-defend-his-person mode when the Divine Temple emissary mentioned killing Fan Xian--ooh, the Mama Bear really kicked in then. No one messes with Wu Zhu's boy! 😂🥰 I was honestly bummed there was so little of him in this season; the middle portion of Season 1 with him and Fan Xian teaming up were some of my favorite episodes out of all two seasons!
Unlike some of the things I've read people say about this, I don't think it was that different from Season 1. I thought it was a bit more confusing at points, for sure (and some characters, if possible, became even more ambiguous and confusing, but it also felt intentional), but I thought it continued to show Fan Xian as smart, capable, compassionate, a person of integrity, and ever the optimist with a seemingly endless supply of hope.
Fan Xian does realize he's more of a pawn in this season (we see it, too, and boy is it frustrating; it maybe makes him feel less smart and almost more naive than in Season 1, but even in that season at the end he realized he was played the whole time, too), and I can't to wait to see what he does once he's had enough. Cause CPP and the Emperor can only keep up their shenanigans for so long before this kiddo snaps.
I'm wondering if so far Fan Xian hasn't been able to break out of pawn status and anticipate the Emperor and CPP's plots because their true intentions and goals are hidden. Because he doesn't know what they want to achieve or what they want, he can't anticipate their moves. On the other hand, the reason they've been able to play Fan Xian so easily is because he is an open book. What he wants and who he is is there for all to see--and exploit. I love that about him, though. His good-hearted sincerity makes him a character you can't help but root for and love.
This season does have considerably less action, and more court/city politics, and I missed the pacing of the action breaking up the politics like in Season 1, but it was still solid in its own way and explored some new facets of Qing that we haven't seen before. And there are even more lovable characters added to Team Fan Xian this season, as well!
A very good drama, and I look forward to seeing what season 3 has in store--I honestly don't know how one season will be enough to wrap this up!
Two final things:
I'm at Episode 20 so far, and it just seems like CPP keeps talking him into doing the troublemaking thing that gets CPP and the Emperor what they want but ends up leaving Fan Xian in a lurch. At this point, if I was him, I'd just want to derail their plot if I was him (he has the brains for it!)! 😅 He's too optimistic and kindhearted for his own good. 😟
And the Emperor makes even less sense in this season than Season 1. In Season 1 it seemed like he genuinely liked Fan Xian and approved of what he did. In this season, the Emperor is just hardcore messing with him and doesn't seem to give a darn.
I'm only in the first 1/3 of Season 2 so maybe they'll explain it later? 🤷♀️ Most of the threads I thought they had dropped get picked up again at some point, except for Yan Xiaoyi and He Daoren (who doesn't seem to be in Season 2), which are just a few I can think of off the top of my head.
Have you finished Season 1? If not, don't read the next part cause it has ending spoilers. 😉
I really hope Fan Xian pulls the card of being the Emperor's son at some point; it seems like (and I assume) only Chen Ping Ping, Fan Jian and the Emperor know about his identitiy. And I mean, Fan Xian is clearly the best candidate for emperor among all of the princes (not sure about the 1st Prince yet). Did the Emperor experiment and have him raised differently to see if he would turn out better than the princes? 😅 But it also seems like a great way to get your son to turn on you; if I was Fan Xian I'd be very, very displeased about being toyed with and used. And I've officially decided I dislike the Emperor; he treats people like they are pawns in a game, as does Chen Ping Ping. This is Fan Xian's whole issue with those in Jingdu: they see people not as people but as tools to achieve their ends.
🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ Sarcasm aside, this is an embarrassing case of internet "bandwagoning."
When shows are experimental (and Netflix loves to experiment!), the results are... unexpected.