You seem very active here. Just because a drama isnât your taste doesnât mean others donât love it. If I…
one or two accounts created to rate just this show is fine. when it's over new 10 accounts all reviewing within the same time period ....? hmmm yeah, they're fake.
You seem very active here. Just because a drama isnât your taste doesnât mean others donât love it. If I…
all what youre saying has absolutely nothing to do with manipulation of ratings. if you're trying to deny that its happening, then you can keep living your fantasy. and by your own logic, if you didnt like my comment, you shouldnt have responded to it.
You seem very active here. Just because a drama isnât your taste doesnât mean others donât love it. If I…
if you choose to be blind to what's right in front of you, go ahead. dont criticize me for having common sense and discernment. rating it a 10 was never the issue. manipulation of the ratings was. you said a whole bunch of nothing.
I wish the series focused on the business underdog success story and didn't devolve into revenge/interpersonal…
Unnecessary backstory?đ this is a character driven show. maybe you're just a person who prefers plot over characters đ€· basically, the "interpersonal crises" and internal too are the essence of this drama.
I always knew that villains were by far one of the worst aspects in the drama but today's episode left me absolutely…
wow. i actually thought he was quite well written. if you think about it we'll enough, you'll see clearly his motives and how they utilised his inferiority complex. i actually wrote this essay about him. maybe it'll help see him as more layered:
Despite all his running around and causing trouble, I actually think Pyo kid is a well-written villain. I don't like him, but I can't help but understand his motives. He's not your typical havoc wreaking bully. While unjustifiable, his actions do stem from deeply seated issues that force me to sympathize with him.
In the early episodes, his one-sided rivalry with Tae Poong is painted as some petty jealousy. Overtime, we get to see that it's so much more. His jealousy is driven by an inferiority complex he has towards Tae Poong. Pyo kid was clearly given a cushy childhood. He prioritises money even over human life and judges person's value based on their financial situation. Thus, he lacks basic respect and consideration for anyone who isn't within or above his economic bracket. A person with such entitlement can't stand to lose or not get what they want, but he's been losing to Tae Poong all his life, or at least that he said.
When Tae Poong was also rich, he could bear it. He hated it, but he still considered Tae Poong an equal, and thus, could allow it. But what he can't bear is losing to a now bankrupt Tae Poong who he considers less than himself. It feels insulting to him. He's disgusted with himself each time he loses to this penniless version of Tae Poong. He's becoming more and more desperate, and it's pushing him to the deep end.
Couple that with his emotionally and physically abusive father, the one person whose approval he seeks, constantly comparing him to Tae Poong. Watching Tae Poong succeed pushes him to compete, hoping to gain his father's recognition. But he's never been put in a situation to develop any useful qualities like Tae Poong has, and so he's inadequate and constantly failing. But he doesn't understand any of this and can't humble himself to learn, so he'd rather direct his efforts to destroying Tae Poong and hope that will be enough to prove his father wrong.
I wanna punch his face too, but I can't deny that this is solid character writing.
Despite all his running around and causing trouble, I actually think Pyo kid is a well-written villain. I don't like him, but I can't help but understand his motives. He's not your typical havoc wreaking bully. While unjustifiable, his actions do stem from deeply seated issues that force me to sympathize with him.In the early episodes, his one-sided rivalry with Tae Poong is painted as some petty jealousy. Overtime, we get to see that it's so much more. His jealousy is driven by an inferiority complex he has towards Tae Poong. Pyo kid was clearly given a cushy childhood. He prioritises money even over human life and judges person's value based on their financial situation. Thus, he lacks basic respect and consideration for anyone who isn't within or above his economic bracket. A person with such entitlement can't stand to lose or not get what they want, but he's been losing to Tae Poong all his life, or at least that he said. When Tae Poong was also rich, he could bear it. He hated it, but he still considered Tae Poong an equal, and thus, could allow it. But what he can't bear is losing to a now bankrupt Tae Poong who he considers less than himself. It feels insulting to him. He's disgusted with himself each time he loses to this penniless version of Tae Poong. He's becoming more and more desperate, and it's pushing him to the deep end.Couple that with his emotionally and physically abusive father, the one person whose approval he seeks, constantly comparing him to Tae Poong. Watching Tae Poong succeed pushes him to compete, hoping to gain his father's recognition. But he's never been put in a situation to develop any useful qualities like Tae Poong has, and so he's inadequate and constantly failing. But he doesn't understand any of this and can't humble himself to learn, so he'd rather direct his efforts to destroying Tae Poong and hope that will be enough to prove his father wrong. I wanna punch his face too, but I can't deny that this is solid character writing.
Writer nim, you should check your facts before turning it into a script. In Typhoon Family, you said Malaysia…
And you should do your research before lecturing others. Malaysia DOES have over 800 islands. Indonesia simply has a whole lot more. over 17000 actually. This is easily verifiable so go CHECK YOUR FACTS.
i like the struggles and obstacles cz it's an underdog drama but the fact that one familyis causing all this makes…
well, all their issues don't come from the Pyos, like the Shoe Park and Thailand problems. But yeah, most of the time, it's the Pyos. Thing is, the Pros never did anything illegal until episode 12. Taking their fabric, stopping them from using the ship, and other things they've done have been completely legal. Wrong, but still legal, so they couldn't have been arrested. Our leads win for themselves, not to topple their enemies. So why would Taepoong's win affect the Pyos financially? It's really not that easy to destroy such a big company. The Pyos clearly have connections and lots of money.
These days, people dont even try to make their bot accounts look believable. I just wanted to read new reviews of this show, just to find so many of them posted yesterday from accounts with no profile photo, and no shows on their watchlist other that WYMM. Their reviews were all generic and similar, mostly 5-10 lines long. They all rated this show a 10 and we're clearly created to ramp up its rating. I guess that's how things work on this app, but please try making it less obvious.
After episode 12, I really didn't see a way forward for the Typhoon gang. The stock they lost was so expensive. I thought for sure it was the end. But their temwork and Taepoong's resilience got them through again.
Lots of people complain about their losses and setbacks being repetitive. I actually like it that way. Each time they face an obstacle, it's just the story taking them to a place with possibility for growth. In the end, the characters come out as better, more developed people.
Obviously, this is a character centred story, so it's understandable that the plot serves the character development. Even so, its never felt boring or repetitive to me. Each setback is unique and watching them navigate it is genuinely entertaining for me, because even in the midst all the commotion, the story always finds time to give us deep, heartfelt character moments. The result is a set of brilliantly written characters all across the board.
i actually wrote this essay about him. maybe it'll help see him as more layered:
Despite all his running around and causing trouble, I actually think Pyo kid is a well-written villain. I don't like him, but I can't help but understand his motives. He's not your typical havoc wreaking bully. While unjustifiable, his actions do stem from deeply seated issues that force me to sympathize with him.
In the early episodes, his one-sided rivalry with Tae Poong is painted as some petty jealousy. Overtime, we get to see that it's so much more. His jealousy is driven by an inferiority complex he has towards Tae Poong. Pyo kid was clearly given a cushy childhood. He prioritises money even over human life and judges person's value based on their financial situation. Thus, he lacks basic respect and consideration for anyone who isn't within or above his economic bracket. A person with such entitlement can't stand to lose or not get what they want, but he's been losing to Tae Poong all his life, or at least that he said.
When Tae Poong was also rich, he could bear it. He hated it, but he still considered Tae Poong an equal, and thus, could allow it. But what he can't bear is losing to a now bankrupt Tae Poong who he considers less than himself. It feels insulting to him. He's disgusted with himself each time he loses to this penniless version of Tae Poong. He's becoming more and more desperate, and it's pushing him to the deep end.
Couple that with his emotionally and physically abusive father, the one person whose approval he seeks, constantly comparing him to Tae Poong. Watching Tae Poong succeed pushes him to compete, hoping to gain his father's recognition. But he's never been put in a situation to develop any useful qualities like Tae Poong has, and so he's inadequate and constantly failing. But he doesn't understand any of this and can't humble himself to learn, so he'd rather direct his efforts to destroying Tae Poong and hope that will be enough to prove his father wrong.
I wanna punch his face too, but I can't deny that this is solid character writing.
Lots of people complain about their losses and setbacks being repetitive. I actually like it that way. Each time they face an obstacle, it's just the story taking them to a place with possibility for growth. In the end, the characters come out as better, more developed people.
Obviously, this is a character centred story, so it's understandable that the plot serves the character development. Even so, its never felt boring or repetitive to me. Each setback is unique and watching them navigate it is genuinely entertaining for me, because even in the midst all the commotion, the story always finds time to give us deep, heartfelt character moments. The result is a set of brilliantly written characters all across the board.