Both tell separate stories of four women unrelated to each other. While The Table (2016) is a film wherein all we see of these women are the conversations they have on the titular table, in Love Scene Number (2021) we get more backstory and time (two episodes) for each woman's story. Thematically they are alike because they show us these flawed women who are at a point in their lives where they have to decide on something that could affect their lives moving forward. This theme is more on the nose in Love Scene Number, and The Table does it ever so subtly but will still hit hard.
If you want more of Cho Seung Woo in a time-bending fantasy-mystery adventure, then check this out. One has more sci-fi elements and the other has more of a crime drama feel to it, but if you're solely in it for CSW playing a charming smart-ass, then here you go.
Both dramas have Yeon Woo Jin playing a male lead trying to find the truth about his brother's death and intentionally approaching the female lead who is somehow to connected to it without letting her know who he really is. Also, they fall in love.
The over-all vibes of both shows are quite different, but if you're into supernatural beings who are also detectives, maybe check this one out.
Both shows have a distraught parent, a cheating spouse, their kidnapped daughter, a miracle with time, and an unexpected new friend (ally?) whose life was always meant to intertwine with theirs.
While the plots of these dramas are very different, Kill Me, Heal Me (2015) features pre-Mystic Pop-Up Bar (2020) Hwang Jung Eum and Choi Won Young.
If your favorite part of this drama was the chemistry between Lee Sang Yoon and Lee Bo Young, then maybe check out another drama they did together. They're very different from each other, as one is a 50-episode family drama, while the other is a 16-episode political thriller. But if you're watching for the romance, then both shows can satisfy you in different ways.
Both dramas are from the same creator, and have the same theme of trying to uncover corruption among the powerful elite. They also seem to be set in the same universe since characters from Punch had crossed over to Whisper.
While the story and over-all vibe of both drama is very different from each other, both star Sandara Park and are consisted of mini-episodes. You could finish the whole show in one sitting.