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Miss Ripley and The Art of Sarah are similar because both center on women who reinvent themselves through deception to escape difficult pasts and achieve wealth, status, and success. Jang Mi-ri in Miss Ripley fabricates her background and qualifications, while Sarah Kim in The Art of Sarah creates an entirely new identity to gain entry into elite social circles.
Both stories explore social climbing, ambition, and the consequences of living a lie. The protagonists come from troubled backgrounds and become increasingly dependent on their false identities as they rise in society. Their actions often hurt the people around them, but their struggles and motivations make them more tragic anti-heroines than outright villains.
The main difference is that Miss Ripley is a melodrama focused on romance and personal downfall, while The Art of Sarah is a mystery thriller that places greater emphasis on identity, manipulation, and suspense. Overall, both stories examine how far someone is willing to go to escape their past and create a better life for themselves.
Both stories explore social climbing, ambition, and the consequences of living a lie. The protagonists come from troubled backgrounds and become increasingly dependent on their false identities as they rise in society. Their actions often hurt the people around them, but their struggles and motivations make them more tragic anti-heroines than outright villains.
The main difference is that Miss Ripley is a melodrama focused on romance and personal downfall, while The Art of Sarah is a mystery thriller that places greater emphasis on identity, manipulation, and suspense. Overall, both stories examine how far someone is willing to go to escape their past and create a better life for themselves.
Miss Ripley and Dear X are similar because both focus on ambitious women who reinvent themselves through lies and manipulation to escape painful pasts. Jang Mi-ri in Miss Ripley fabricates her background and qualifications to gain wealth and status, while Baek Ah-jin in Dear X carefully crafts false personas and manipulates others to achieve fame and success. Both protagonists are driven by a desire to leave behind lives marked by trauma, neglect, and insecurity.
Another key similarity is that their traumatic childhoods shape many of their decisions. Rather than trusting others, both women learn to rely on deception as a survival tool. As they rise in society, they become increasingly trapped by the very lies that helped them succeed, causing harm to the people around them and damaging genuine relationships.
Both stories also feature men who fall in love with the protagonists, often seeing them as kind or vulnerable women. However, Mi-ri and Ah-jin frequently use these relationships to further their goals, making love secondary to ambition. This creates emotional conflict as their personal and professional lives become more entangled.
Ultimately, both Miss Ripley and Dear X explore the consequences of building a life on deception. The main difference is that Miss Ripley is a melodrama centered on fraud and social climbing, while Dear X is a darker psychological thriller that examines manipulation, fame, and emotional detachment in greater depth.
Another key similarity is that their traumatic childhoods shape many of their decisions. Rather than trusting others, both women learn to rely on deception as a survival tool. As they rise in society, they become increasingly trapped by the very lies that helped them succeed, causing harm to the people around them and damaging genuine relationships.
Both stories also feature men who fall in love with the protagonists, often seeing them as kind or vulnerable women. However, Mi-ri and Ah-jin frequently use these relationships to further their goals, making love secondary to ambition. This creates emotional conflict as their personal and professional lives become more entangled.
Ultimately, both Miss Ripley and Dear X explore the consequences of building a life on deception. The main difference is that Miss Ripley is a melodrama centered on fraud and social climbing, while Dear X is a darker psychological thriller that examines manipulation, fame, and emotional detachment in greater depth.
Same main leads/cp: Yang Zi and Li Xian are reunited six years later. Flourished Peony + In the Name of the Blossom is set in historical Tang dynasty while Go Go Squid is a modern youth e-sports drama.
- Both are comedy, slice of life dramas
- One is set in the prison, while another is set at the military base
- Involves a lot of characters and they gradually get along with each other / becoming friends
- Very chill to watch, good for relaxing!!
- One is set in the prison, while another is set at the military base
- Involves a lot of characters and they gradually get along with each other / becoming friends
- Very chill to watch, good for relaxing!!
- Net and JJ, the main couple, makes a cameo as a couple in Episode 6!
- I will not spoil, go watch :3
- I will not spoil, go watch :3
Similarities:
- Includes zombies, survival and horror
- Are both South Korean
- Trapped in a building with zombies
Differences:
- Gangnam Zombie is inside an office building
- All of Us are Dead is inside a school building
- Gangnam Zombie is a South Korean movie
- All of Us are Dead is a South Korean series
- Includes zombies, survival and horror
- Are both South Korean
- Trapped in a building with zombies
Differences:
- Gangnam Zombie is inside an office building
- All of Us are Dead is inside a school building
- Gangnam Zombie is a South Korean movie
- All of Us are Dead is a South Korean series
Similarities:
- Includes Zombies, Horror and Survival
- Both are set in South Korea
- Both of them are movies
Difference:
- Gangnam Zombie is in literally in Gangnam
- Train to Busan is taking a train and traveling to Busan
- Gangam Zombie is tryna survive inside a building
- Train to Busan is trying to survive while taking a train to travel to Busan
- Includes Zombies, Horror and Survival
- Both are set in South Korea
- Both of them are movies
Difference:
- Gangnam Zombie is in literally in Gangnam
- Train to Busan is taking a train and traveling to Busan
- Gangam Zombie is tryna survive inside a building
- Train to Busan is trying to survive while taking a train to travel to Busan
Both stories are unique, full of interesting characters, absurdly funny moments, and both follow a high school student as our main character.
While the stories are quite different, they both give me the same feeling: colorful K-dramas with interesting premises, unique characters, and lots of funny moments
I reallyyyyyy love the chaotic, farm bl vibes. Personally one of my favourite. Both my sweetheart jom and your dear daddy have that chaotic x more serious trope and both are also very different in a way. I love how the side characters in both are also VERY funny and similar. Very big recommendation. Your dear daddy is about a green tea farm (if I’m right) and My sweetheart Jom about helping Jom out on the farm. Another similarity is the whole ‘boss’ thing, where the top is the boss of a farm. Really cute and both my favourite!!
“Let’s just abandon all our problems and go hang out on an island while meeting our old high school classmate there”
Gave me very similar vibes although I can’t quite explain it. Almost sort of the same story (two boys falling in love and accepting themselves) except one of them is sad and the other one is uplifting lol
Feel What You Feel is like Double Helix in an alternate timeline where nobody cared about their relationship and they just continued being cute college students forever
At the core of both dramas is a supernatural connection to a past life that directly interferes with a character's current modern-day reality: chicago typewriter 's past lives is more emotional and have well build up story. And chicago typewriter characters are well written.
While My Royal Nemesis (2026) leans more into a snappy, modern romantic comedy framework and the 2017 classic Chicago Typewriter is a deeply emotional, poetic fantasy melodrama.
Celebrated author Han Se-joo is drawn into a past life through a mysterious typewriter, uncovering his past incarnation as a resistance fighter during the 1930s Japanese occupation of Korea. The trio must remember their past traumas to fix their present-day relationships.
While My Royal Nemesis (2026) leans more into a snappy, modern romantic comedy framework and the 2017 classic Chicago Typewriter is a deeply emotional, poetic fantasy melodrama.
Celebrated author Han Se-joo is drawn into a past life through a mysterious typewriter, uncovering his past incarnation as a resistance fighter during the 1930s Japanese occupation of Korea. The trio must remember their past traumas to fix their present-day relationships.
The dad and daughter combination is strong on both. If you want romance, 18 again is the one for you. If you want no romance, reborn rookie is for you. But if you watch for relationships explorations while being a different body, then both is for you :)




