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A lot of forced drama for no reason
This was good but definitely had moments that felt like forced drama just to keep the show going. Everything with that one guy (I don't even remember his name) was so stupid. Why did he even hate the main two so bad? That felt out of nowhere and then they just kept it going. I did think we'd get a bit more of them together so that was a little disappointing too. It seemed like every time we got a little progress towards them being in a relationship, we then took a few steps back. They were really cute together whether that be as best friends or more. Li Ming and Ouyang were really fun together and I was so happy when they finally got together. The actor's chemistry was pretty good as well. I'm glad I watched this pretty much in one sitting because I think I would've gotten pretty bored if I watched it weekly.Was this review helpful to you?
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Didn't like it
The synopsis says the female lead was reborn after being killed and it didn't seem like that was the case. After watching five episodes, it was unclear how she ended up reappearing after supposedly dying in a fire. She just suddenly reappeared after three years without any explanation on how it happened and as to whether or not she escaped the fire or did she die and time travelled back to the past? She came back looking exactly the same but with a different identity, how could the people in the palace let that escape them for three years? It's just ridiculous.Was this review helpful to you?
Shockingly WONDERFUL
I’m ashamed to admit that I thought this would be just another silly romance drama that would regurgitate all the past scenes but by the second episode I realised I was very very wrong. It was so refreshing and confronted some challenging issues but in a unique and entertaining way. It did so, while taking us through breathtaking Canadian, Italian and Korean backdrops. I laughed, I cried, it became a part of me. Perhaps the icing on on the cake was heart stopping romantic kisses. Seriously, I actually blushed…TWICE!! Pure, feel good magic. MUST SEE!!!Was this review helpful to you?
Fourever Final Part Review: Cute, Light, and Worth the Slow Burn
The final part of Fourever did not disappoint. Across almost 40 episodes over both seasons, the story wrapped up in such a cute and satisfying way. Set in a high school setting with a friends to lovers storyline, the series balances light romance, family drama, and emotional moments really well. Pie as Tiger and Golf as Nao are adorable together, and their chemistry had me hooked from the very beginning.Tiger, the lonely youngest son of a powerful and wealthy family, first meets Nao during football tryouts. While Tiger grows up surrounded by arguments and pressure, Nao comes from a poor but loving family that always feels warm and welcoming. I really liked how the drama showed that money cannot buy happiness. Tiger would rather spend his time relaxing with Nao on a small couch than stay alone in his giant mansion, and those moments made their relationship feel genuine and comforting.
How ironic that in one family, the older brother is completely oblivious, while in the other, the younger brother is the one who cannot see what is right in front of him.
Singha has had Ben by his side for years. A loyal bodyguard, a constant shadow, a man who has quietly loved him for more than a decade. Yet Singha remains utterly clueless, never realizing that Ben's devotion runs far deeper than duty.
Then there is Tiger, who has spent more than six years loving Nao. And somehow, Nao is just as hopelessly unaware. The funny part is that everyone else can see it. North, clumsy as he is, took one look across a soccer field and immediately understood Tiger's feelings. Nao's own twin brother knows. Practically the entire world seems to know except Nao himself.
So we end up with this amusing parallel: in the mafia family, the older brother is the oblivious one, while in the other family, the younger brother is equally blind to the truth. Two different stories reflecting each other in the most chaotic way.
The only part that feels a little hard to believe is how quickly someone who has always considered himself straight suddenly starts trying to navigate feelings for his best friend after a confession. For years, girls were the ones he noticed, the ones he thought were cute. Then his best friend confesses, and now he is genuinely considering dating him. It is a dramatic shift, though feelings and self-discovery can sometimes be far more complicated than people expect.
Still, that is part of what makes the story entertaining. Between Singha being oblivious to Ben's decade-long love and Nao somehow missing six years of Tiger's devotion, this felt like a double episode built entirely on beautiful, ridiculous cluelessness.
The slow burn romance was done so well, making every small interaction between them feel meaningful. Along with the school setting, athlete male lead storyline, flashbacks to the past, and touches of mafia family drama, the series still keeps a fun and soft atmosphere without becoming too heavy.
Overall, this is a cute and entertaining BL that is easy to watch and enjoy. The romance feels natural, the emotional moments hit well, and Tiger and Nao completely carried the series for me. Definitely one of the more enjoyable light BLs
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ML gives me the ick so bad
i really tried and forced myself to like it bc I think both are good actors and the story is a classic with a twist BUT the male lead is so bad (not the actor just the role). The way he forces himself in her life especially in a position where she must trust him as a lawyer idk its not for mepersonally I also dont find hin that attractive but due to the fact that his acting is quite good I never minded that but in this drama this adds to it
also the manipulation (with the help from the other lawyer but the fact that the ml plays him also dirty) up to just ep 6 no thx
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The sequel disaster ft. Only friends: dream on
I'll start the review by saying that much of my expectation from this sequel stemmed from its original series, which is half of the reason for season two’s poor performance.The story wasnt anything remarkable, the couple stories was nothing extraordinary. The same could be said about season 1, however, what really sets them apart is the toxic writing in season 1. The main part of the plot was the messy relationship between the characters, not the actual relationship itself. In season 2, they completely ignored this aspect, introduced a lousy messy trope to stir things up towards the climax and slapped a “season 2” on it.
I personally would've rated it higher if it weren't a sequel but at the same time, I wouldn't have picked up a mediocre plot such as this if it weren't an extension of only friends to begin with.
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a slice of life paced take on romance…
Countdown to yes… unlike the name suggests there is no drama no cliff hangers no tension, in this countdown.. its a mix of emotions of coming of age and reality of adulthood.Minato and Wataru were cast well… the actors portrayed them beautifully for me, so fresh yet matured acting for their age.
It has very few support cast yet they all gave context to the leads so well. Snippets from the flash back though felt too many initially, effectively bridged the youth and adulthood of Minato and Wataru over a decade
I understand why many felt that it’s slow paced, however for me I enjoyed the details that elaborated on why the hesitation from both Minato and Wataru held back at different Phases. This is a drama without drama for me… it sat somewhere balanced, Not too heavy on romance or not too raw
Spoilers:
There is no doubt for both of them that they are gay or
There is no question if they both love each other or not
The real question was that, can they commit to each other or not and risk their friendship
I felt the pain and confusion of Wataru, when Minato leaves after college for work, I understood why he felt conflicted about MInato wanting to move back in 3 years later, the acceptance that his overflowing feelings cannot be held back but how will he deal with another separation or abandomment from Minato
Minato works hard towards coming back to Wataru since the time he realizes his feelings for him, and the passion with which he pursues him after he comes back captures his longing for the lost time.
Minato however pauses and hold back and not gives into his feelings to respect Wataru’s wishes of wanting to maintain a platonic relationship. ( the scene where he is holding the flowers behind him intended for a confession, But instead says that he is ok to go back to being close friends, Wataru captures it in a selfie and later reflects on it while washing the film) that’s subtle way of portraying the same emotion which Wataru explains earlier to the child about sometimes being an adult is taking care / respect others feelings. Like this, there are many other things that kept looped in to heighlight, like the conversation of Minato and Wataru’s Mom where she says how considerate he is of others feelings to a fault like enduring things he don’t like. Like how during a conversation with grandpa Minato shares how he and wataru are like grandpa and grandma, a quiet yet enduring love over the years of taking care of each other and witnessing and clocking eachothers life… how grandpa and grandma’s relationship was showcased to show how Minato draws that parallel towards him and Wataru.
In that there were no breakups and makeups… no back and forth for the sake of it, For the first time the countdown to yes over 9 episodes to say yes was justified.
They are shorter episodes of under half an hour so 9 is not too long. For me this drama was a hidden Gem that I binged. And I will be rewatching it again in future.
I am writing this review because had I relied only on the reviews I might have not given it a go and ended up missing it!!!
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Hilarious Chaos Ruined by Frustrating Writing
Rating: 7/10(Without the female lead’s writing, it honestly could’ve been an 8.5/10 for me.)
The show started off surprisingly fun for me. Ep 1 i was just getting into it. but Ep 2 was so funny and by ep 3 my stomach genuinely started hurting from laughingThe comedy worked really well in the beginning, and the show had this chaotic energy that made it entertaining to binge.
The plot twist with Woon Jeong shocked me because I genuinely didn’t expect him to hand Chae Ni over like that. Even though he secretly helped her escape later, it still felt like a huge betrayal and such a risky move.
But as the show went on, my biggest issue became the female lead. I really hate when dramas make female leads unnecessarily dumb and treat it as comedy or “cute.” Chae Ni constantly made careless decisions, got caught repeatedly, and created problems even when she literally had teleportation powers...
The drama had so much potential, but many scenes lost their impact because of weak writing and frustrating character choices. Some action scenes that could’ve been thrilling or funny just felt awkward instead.
Juran was also frustrating because every time it seemed like she was finally realizing the truth, she went right back to blindly believing her father.
Meanwhile, Sun Kyo Hong completely stole the show for me. He was hilarious but also one of the few characters actually using his brain.
The grandmother was another standout. Easily the best characters in the drama.
The coolest scene was definitely when the male lead stopped the bullets and turned them back on the villain. That whole sequence was amazing.
The final rat scene opening the possibility of S2... honestly, I don’t think this drama needs another season, especially not with the same female lead.
Overall, The Wonderfools had a strong mix of comedy and action, but the frustrating writing choices held it back from being truly great. Still, it was entertaining enough to keep me watching.
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FL getting rejected in 50 different ways yet still refusing to gain any dignity
Okay, so I just finished this drama, and my thoughts haven’t changed much since I wrote this review after watching the first eight episodes.Kim Seon-ho returning to rom-coms had me seated and I like the actress too. The first few episodes had everything going for it with unique storyline, fun chemistry, interesting setup and beautiful cinematography. Then episode 5 happened and things started to get too boring !
My one issue is with Cha Mu-hee continuing to chase after Hojin even after he rejected her several times! I understand she’s supposed to be cute persistent, but at some point it stopped being “cute rom-com chasing” and just became too repetitive to watch. Episode 5 gave me secondhand embarrassment because Ho-jin LITERALLY rejected her saying if she was okay being a rebound. That should’ve been the moment she stepped back and regained some dignity. But no. The very next day she kissed him like nothing happened??
After misunderstanding Ho-jin and dramatically saying goodbye in episode 6, she STILL followed his friend just to get to his house in the next episode. THAT was my final straw. Like at that point I paused the episode because it was frustrating to watch.
Plus I couldn’t understand how Dorami resolved misunderstanding between Muhee and Hojin??It felt more like she held Hojin hostage until he accepted Muhee! But I feel like there was NO REAL MISUNDERSTANDING between them! It’s simply that both of them had complex personalities. Even thou I admire complex personalities but here it felt like Dorami shined at the expense of ML bcz we barely see any focus on him.
And don’t even get me started on Yongu’s love story with Ji seon!! Like WHAT!! It felt so random and unnecessary. Also, how did Ho-jin magically get over years of feelings after ONE conversation? This man spent half the drama ranting about her, only to move on in five minutes?? Ji seon could’ve been used for making the story complicated and create a real conflict between the main leads but instead she was given useless subplot love story .
Honestly, I watched because I love Kim Seon-ho and I needed to see where this trainwreck goes, but wow… I expected SO much better after those first few episodes and what was even that last episode ???
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Seven years later this is still a good watch
There are some cheesy acting moments, especially in the fighting scene choreography.Other than that, this was divine. The story was interesting. The chemistry of the main and second couple was great. The mains were so so good. Their interactions felt so sincere. The second couple was adorable.
The story wasnt entirely predictable but it wasn't outrageous either. The flow was good and the emotional peaks and valleys were earned.
I'm glad I decided to watch this one!
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A Slow Burn That Forgot When to Burn
I finished The Sword and the Brocade with mixed feelings, which honestly may be the most appropriate response to a drama that is both genuinely thoughtful and frustratingly overextended at the same time.At its best, this drama is not really about romance or even the mystery plot. It is about systems: the emotional damage created by aristocratic households, concubinage, filial duty, inheritance pressure, and the quiet loneliness that exists inside “proper” family structures. The strongest part of the drama is the way it shows how every woman in the Xu household survives differently under that pressure.
Qiao Lianfang becomes obsessive and unstable. Concubine Wen becomes resentful and desperate. Concubine Qin becomes hollowed out by grief and neglect. Tong collapses under the emotional violence of the household. Even Shiyi develops hypervigilance and emotional avoidance as survival mechanisms. The drama is actually surprisingly critical of the concubine system itself by the end, and I appreciated that a lot.
Wallace Chung was excellent as Xu Ling Yi. I never viewed him as a “cold male lead.” To me, he played Ling Yi as resigned: a man who emotionally detached himself from obligations he never truly wanted. His gradual emotional awakening felt believable, restrained, and mature. Some of the strongest scenes in the drama are simply him quietly realizing how much damage emotional neglect can cause even when no cruelty is intended.
Tan Songyun also did a very good job making Shiyi intelligent, capable, and emotionally layered. Their chemistry worked for me. Tang Xiaotian as Ou Yanxing brought a gentleness and dignity to the role that kept the second male lead from becoming irritating or one-dimensional.
The production itself is consistently strong. The household atmosphere, costumes, and domestic details all feel lived-in and immersive.
My biggest issue is pacing.
This drama mistakes prolonged delay for emotional tension. Early on, the slow burn works beautifully because the emotional progression is evolving naturally. But eventually the show crosses a line where the emotional reality between Ling Yi and Shiyi has clearly advanced, while the physical and romantic progression is artificially frozen in place for many, many episodes afterward.
That disconnect became increasingly frustrating for me.
By the time Shiyi openly acknowledges that Ling Yi has given her his whole heart and she wants to return those feelings, the continued fear of basic intimacy no longer feels emotionally truthful. It starts to feel like the drama is simply trying to preserve “slow burn” status until a designated episode number. Episode 35 is extremely late for the relationship payoff in a 45-episode drama, especially considering how emotionally bonded they already were long before that point.
The other issue is that the final third becomes repetitive. The embroidery house repeatedly becomes a target for schemes, misunderstandings, framing attempts, and political manipulation to the point where I started feeling more exhausted than tense. The drama absolutely could have told the same story in fewer episodes with tighter emotional impact.
That said, the ending itself fits the story. It resolves the emotional themes well, particularly Ling Yi and his younger brother openly rejecting the concubine system that damaged nearly everyone around them. The final episodes also give satisfying closure to most of the major arcs without feeling forced into artificial tragedy or artificial happiness.
Overall, I think this is a good drama that could have been a great one with stronger pacing discipline and more trust in its own emotional progression.
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Sick of cold man/warm woman trope
The ML is so mean to the FL. She behaves like a doormat when it comes to him. His apologies seemed hollow for how badly he treated her. A woman who has any self esteem would hate the guy who treated her like crap--not continue to make excuses for him. I understand why the ML was angry, but he took it too far. I'm so sick of the cold man/warm woman trope of the ML treating the FL like crap, but we're supposed to be happy and feel butterflies when he changes to being warm. Yawn!I agree with many of the reviewers that it started strong, but ended weak. The last two episodes just dragged on. Instead of making me feel emotional, I was skipping scenes.
The drama did its best when it focused on the FL and not the ML. He's eye candy and a great actor, but that is not what I signed up for.
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The Best Enemies to Lovers I've Seen
I really like how the show was paced, and the theme is very cute. Everyone behind the scenes did a great job to the point where I'd stop mid-episode and say, "Is this really GMMTV?! Why don't they do this more often?" Because it's that much better than a lot of their other shows. I've re-watched the first episode an embarrassing amount of times...and I will continue to. Some of the jokes had me holding my breath to not laugh. The music is okay, I liked the theme song, (I get it stuck in my head every now and then, so be warned) but other than that the background music feels like a bit much in certain scenes. But other than that it stands as THE best enemies to lovers I've seen, I would recommend it if you like 70% enemies 30% loversWas this review helpful to you?
I found it very enjoyable!!
Okay, so some of the reviews I'm reading are not very good concerning the show and so the stars are lower than I expected. I personally enjoyed it. Now, some parts of it may have been a little cliched but other than that it was pretty enjoyable. The main couple has always had good chemistry with their acting abilities toward each other. I only had one issue with the main couple and it was during their intimate scene in episode 9; the kissing was all wrong! I mean who kisses like that?And then there was the second couple the editor/book writer couple. First of all, the guy that got to play the editor is absolutely gorgeous and they have pretty good chemistry as well. However, their kissing scenes are terrible! It was almost like the guy who writes the books in this TV series (as I don't know his real name), didn't feel comfortable/look comfortable kissing another guy. It just looked really awkward between the two, but I do like their pairing. Other than these issues, I really found it enjoyable and would definitely watch it again.
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Failed to manage my expectations and paid dearly for it
I didn't realize this was a late-night drama going into it and that was a HUGE mistake. Usually, when a drama has a poster of the characters in scandalous poses or an obviously smutty vibe, I know to promptly turn my brain off and carry on enjoying watching attractive people get freaky, but in this case, nothing about the poster or the synopsis indicated to me that this was one of those dramas. So, I went in thinking this would be a sincere exploration of a couple navigating a sexless marriage and I was on board for the first couple of episodes. Then I kept waiting...and waiting...and suddenly I was 3/4 of the way through and realized this drama had absolutely no intention of seriously engaging with its themes, and, in fact, it wraps up all the plotlines in borderline offensive ways - like you're telling me Oji's ED was immediately fixed because he had one (1) dream about being cucked?? Huh?????I think my expectations were also higher than average because the original work was created by a reputable mangaka who also did Saionji-san, which I quite liked the drama for, so I'm not sure if my problems with Saint Love Survivors existed in the manga or came about in the adaptation process.
Haru in particular was an UNBELIEVABLY unlikable character. It's never established that she is someone who has high libido or really values sex, so it makes no sense why she is SO insistent on doing the deed. It opens up the implication that she feels entitled to Oji's body just because they're in a relationship and that she only likes him because she wants to get into his pants which is gross. I'm all for female sexual fulfillment, but not like this!!! And Oji isn't much better - I can understand why his performance issues lead him to not want sex, but why was ALL physical contact off the table? Like, even holding her hand and hugging her was a big deal? It could've been a chance for some asexual representation, but since he was magically cured in the last episode, it just makes his behavior bizarre.
And, subverted expectations aside, this drama is just plain bad on its own. The narrative flow and pacing was all off, to the point that it felt like huge chunks of the drama were missing despite being 12 episodes long. There was more chemistry between the main couple in the little 40-sec end credits scenes than in the whole drama, and the rest of the cast had practically negative chemistry with each other. There was plenty of eye candy, but all the actors were phoning it in except during the kiss scenes, which were the only times the drama had any oomph. It's a shame because I know pretty much everyone here can do and has done better. Honestly, I'm half-convinced this drama is supposed to be satire from how they dressed Mashiko Atsuki alone - the early 2000s skinny jeans and feather statement necklace combo was DIABOLICAL !
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