Recent Discussions
Hyeok Jun takes the job because he's drowning in debt and sees no way out same driving force behind Liar Game's protagonist, who gets pulled into a dangerous game out of financial desperation. Both characters realize way too late that the system they walked into is far bigger and far more dangerous than it ever let on.
A protagonist steps into what looks like a completely normal environment, only to slowly uncover that something sinister and organized is running underneath it all and everyone around him already knows.
The parallel is straightforward: Hyeok Jun is drowning in debt and takes the job out of pure financial desperation same exact logic as Squid Game, where broke people say yes to an offer that's too good to be true, only to walk into a deadly trap. Both shows hit hard on South Korea's wealth gap and class inequality.
- Wuxia dramas set in a sect
- Sect power struggles
- Badass and powerful FLs that actually are super competent and skilled fighters
- Aloof and uncompromising FL
- ML pretending to be someone else
- Multiple men vying for FL's hand
- Gender Role Reversal themes in both
- Flirty FL x Easily flustered ML
- Similar dark gothic aesthetics
- The leads being dressed in opposite colors on the cover ?
- Sect power struggles
- Badass and powerful FLs that actually are super competent and skilled fighters
- Aloof and uncompromising FL
- ML pretending to be someone else
- Multiple men vying for FL's hand
- Gender Role Reversal themes in both
- Flirty FL x Easily flustered ML
- Similar dark gothic aesthetics
- The leads being dressed in opposite colors on the cover ?
Hidden double lives drive the tension in both stories, where seemingly normal students or individuals are involved in secret actions that slowly spiral out of control.while Extracurricular leans more into crime, survival, and real-world consequences, Notes from the Last Row focuses on psychological manipulation and intellectual tension within an academic setting
Both focus on a struggling writer whose life changes after mysterious people enter his isolated world and become the source of inspiration.
The difference is that Million Yen Women leans more into existential mystery and passive observation, while Notes from the Last Row is more psychological, obsessive, and centered on mentor student tension.
The difference is that Million Yen Women leans more into existential mystery and passive observation, while Notes from the Last Row is more psychological, obsessive, and centered on mentor student tension.
Both stories are female-centered, revolving around a mutually beneficial alliance formed to help the female lead achieve her revenge.
Yang Yang played a similar ML character: task-oriented, hardworking, powerful, resilient, and indifferent to love. Huo Linglong is like Mo Caihuan: resilient, independent, yet experiencing one-sided love for the ML.
Similar historical context to the Song dynasty. Watching SIP makes you understand ZZA better, why he is such a righteous character and prioritizing legal order.
travel through time second chance romance to correct the past A romance comedy centered on a love-hate relationship between Sin Seo Ri, a legendary villainess from Joseon, and Cha Se Gye, a ruthless modern-day chaebol.
Sin Seo Ri, a nameless actress who becomes possessed by the spirit of a notorious Joseon-era femme fatale, gains a vicious personality. Once a royal concubine of the highest rank who was called a national seductress and sentenced to death by poison, her soul is transported to the 21st century, where she begins a new life.
Sin Seo Ri, a nameless actress who becomes possessed by the spirit of a notorious Joseon-era femme fatale, gains a vicious personality. Once a royal concubine of the highest rank who was called a national seductress and sentenced to death by poison, her soul is transported to the 21st century, where she begins a new life.
-child abandonment and child neglect
- Sunk in the Womb is a little bit more graphic but just as devastating.
- Sunk in the Womb is a little bit more graphic but just as devastating.
During the Tang Dynasty, gifted forensic investigator Li Jing Lan joins forces with the mysterious “ghost detective” Jue Ming and skilled constable Su Yu An to solve a string of shocking cases. As they uncover hidden conspiracies behind each crime, danger, justice, and romance become deeply intertwined.
Both are action-comedies about former agents living under secret identities, having built ordinary family lives while hiding their pasts. When unexpected events drag them back into danger, they’re forced to balance domestic chaos with their old lethal skills.
Both are action-comedies that mix over-the-top fight scenes with slapstick humor, following reluctant former gangsters who are pulled back into dangerous situations they wanted to leave behind.
Both are action-comedies about former agents living under secret identities, having built ordinary family lives while hiding their pasts. When unexpected events drag them back into danger, they’re forced to balance domestic chaos with their old lethal skills.




