First Impression: Flavor of Us
Overall: I'm giving this the benefit of the doubt. 10 episodes about 15 minutes each. Based on a book that I haven't read. Airing on YZilla YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrUrqarD5ftEOhN_S4OjArc7HiwqiM3XTContent Warning: slap
What I Liked
- a trans woman character who is not a stereotype
- visuals
Room For Improvement
- do not think they have time to have multiple couples and they bounce from one to the other without a connection between them
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This review may contain spoilers
A perfect drama of imperfect people
Wow just wow!!! I didn't expect this to be such a great drama. To My Shore is definitely the best I watched in 2026 so far. I don't think I'd watch another great one like this in this year either. Last year it was the Kbl "Secret Relationship". I got reminded of Shin Jaemin through Fan Xiao at some points(if you know). A toxic and a manipulative guy. But Fan Xiao is different because he started truly loving Shulang later. And thank god this has a happy ending!Fan Xiao is a complicated guy, he's been raised in a bad environment, which made him a bad, manipulative person. He's like his second brother, as he mentioned it himself. But he has a good and kind side of him because his mom was like that. His mom's death has affected him so much to the point he can't control himself and all the sufferings. He's pitiful, lonely and believes everyone is bad in the world and the world itself is bad. Shulang was the only person after his mom who was truly a good person towards him, which he couldn't accept in an instant because everyone around him are too bad and corruptive. He did so many wrongdoings to Shulang but that's to keep Shulang by his side and to keep him only to Fan Xiao. The thought of having an obsession over the only person who was good to you and keeping him by your side is acceptable. But the methods he used to keep him are definitely not acceptable. But he didn't know any other ways either.
However, no matter how bad Fan Xiao's character is, I couldn't make myself hate him. Personally, the only thing I couldn't accept 100% was the time he molested You Shulang. It should never have happened, no matter the reason. But it happened anyways and can't be undone, so I had to accept it. Aren't there also such things in real life that we can't avoid, no matter how much we don't want them to happen?
By the way, I like Yun Qi's visuals so much that I can't forget him for for a long time. He's really handsome, which was also one of the reasons I couldn't hate him for his actions (Yeah, I admit it's totally biased). Look at his acting, his facial expressions. His face is very expressive.
It was a bit tiring to watch Shulang resisting and avoiding Fan Xiao for a long time. Actually it's understandable after all the mess happened in his life. It was actually my problem that I couldn't wait till they got back together. Fan Xiao did a lot of good things for Shulang to atone his past wrongdoings and to show his love secretly and openly also. It makes him such a perfect lover. I want a scene of Fan Xiao with their kid, it's a pity they didn't give us that. But I'm happy with the ending. I cried a lot in the end.
I'm really really glad for watching this in 2 days this year. I don't think I'd enjoy the drama this much if I watched it while ongoing. I found the perfect drama to watch at the perfect time. I'm grateful such a story even exists. Su Er Liang is a great writer. I'm thankful to all the actors, production team and everyone who helped to create this masterpiece. I'm going to read the original novel sometime.
P.S.: Yun Qi PLEASE FIND MORE ROLES to act, don't stop acting I wanna see you more!
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School Trip: Joined a Group I’m Not Close To After Story
0 people found this review helpful
pretty good special episodes
Overall: two short (11 and 14 minute) episodes that later aired on GagaOOLala as a continuation of their storyhttps://www.gagaoolala.com/en/videos/6233/school-trip-joined-a-group-im-not-close-to-2025-e11
https://www.gagaoolala.com/en/videos/6234/school-trip-joined-a-group-im-not-close-to-2025-e12
What I Liked
- sweet moments
- them talking in episode 2
- Watarai didn't answer the question about a girlfriend in episode 2
- colors in episode 2 (blue and orange)
Room For Improvement
- Watarai came across as a bit pushy/creepy with locking the door and ignoring the ask to wait (ignored in the second episode as well)
- unmatched kissing in the first special
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This review may contain spoilers
Strong romance with the best chemistry
Doona shows us an acquaintance to friends to lovers story that is beautiful. The main leads could not be more different in some ways and then similar in others. I really enjoyed the quirky side characters as a nice compliment to the main case. I personally find this to be my favorite time watching Bae Suzy. The leads chemistry was top tier. Love the directing and cinematography.Honestly I was put off watching this for years thinking it would melo but it was a fun watch.
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A cute story. Nothing spectacular
I really liked the character of Soon Duk's mother-in-law. Assertive and incredibly smart. She could have done things in a better way but it doesn't change how intelligent she is.The movie was slow a bit. But there were no plot confusions, so it was an easy flow.
All the couples had a great storyline that could have been explored, i guess they didn’t want to get into the minor plots proper.
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better than the series
Overall: the original series was about 200 minutes. They cut stuff out and this is 96 minutes. If I had edited it, I would have made a few changes and given it an 8 but their edited movie version I'm giving 7.5 https://www.gagaoolala.com/en/videos/6179/sweetheart-service-the-movie-2025Here is my original review, most of which is still true https://mydramalist.com/profile/blcompilations/review/453724
Content Warnings: coercion, punch, stalking mentioned
What I Liked
- they cut out the bloated/slow plot and made it focus more on the MLs which was good
Room For Improvement
- they should have cut even more of the brother being oddly possessive
- they cut out the scene of them getting the key chains, but then showed them several times
- if they had had any footage of scenes with the side couple flirting, they should have included them and tried to develop that relationship more (didn't take off points for this though)
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great, but missing something
This drama felt like i was eating a meal, but it tasted like something was missing and i don’t know what.The overal story and was interesting, but somehow could be better? I think it was just a bit dragging at some point. We (as watchers) could’ve known sooner what happened at that day.
I did like the warm feeling of this drama. All the characters were so sweet and full of love. it’s maybe not very realistic, but i loved it. I liked all the side couples tho, very very sweet! I hope we will all find a loving home surrounded with people full of love.
I think it’s still worth watching, just don’t expect a mind blowing crazy drama. Just a great lovely drama.
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Still moronic… Avoid anything by this writer
When the story started declining around ep 4 I just googled the writers name and it all started coming back to me. Make a mental note to avoid anything made by this writer like the plague. I mean sure they might still have a section who will like it. But if u are person who gets rage baited by dumb characters and their dumb decisions in a snail paced show …. Avoid. No amount of good acting , looks n chemistry can save a show that has to make the FL dumb n selfish as a plot point to drive the story forward since it doesn’t have any other major conflicts. N y always the FL ???????? Korea always likes to idolise the make leads coz majority female audience I guess . Whatever .Was this review helpful to you?
i dont know why the ratings so low. there are flaws but what do i know about making and writing dramas. the most important thing is this entertained me. made me laugh and sad at times. and i thank everyone who created this. its been awhile since i enjoyed a kdrama.
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Zero stress, 100% comfort
Since I Met You is a feel-good drama that truly lifts your mood. It’s well-paced, never repetitive, and keeps things fresh from start to finish. The main couple has great chemistry—they’re playful, natural, and very easy to root for. I also really enjoyed the second couple, who added extra charm to the story.What I appreciated most is the overall positivity of the drama. It avoids unnecessary exaggeration—there’s no overly traumatic backstory for the male lead, no excessive angst, and no dragged-out conflicts.
The seaside setting adds a beautiful, calming atmosphere, making the whole experience even more relaxing. Overall, it’s a light, comforting drama that helps you unwind and de-stress. Perfect if you’re looking for something warm, simple, and genuinely enjoyable.
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Great actors and stunts…. Dumb screenplay
Internally scream with frustration at how much I love and hate this show. Good parts are definitely the actors, the stunts, the dedication to the physical challenges and the chemistry between the two MLs. Getting to the bad part. S1, I definitely knew what went wrong. Once the FLs DUI incident blew up, u could literally see the show go down coz they were trying to write off the character. Made no sense coz she’s literally on the poster of the WEBTOON which had 3 main characters. Coming to s2 🤦♀️ some of the decisions the characters make are so dumb af. Wadduyu mean u don’t know the bad guys are following u , or tracking u , or will blow up the place if they know ur coming, or they jammed ur WiFi or a gazillion different things when they specifically told u they will come at u with everything they got ?????? Make it make sense . ATP I just feel, since the s1 did well solely based on chemistry n stunts they just used that formula in s2 with better stunts and bigger villains and put a ChatGPT level of storyline to stitch it all up together. Barring screenplay n writing loved everything else. Would still watch another season for the dedication the actors haveWas this review helpful to you?
This review may contain spoilers
it was
Overall: the plot never grabbed me. Aired 59 short (couple minute) episodes on the VBL Series YouTube Channel and they were then put into longer episodes https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsvZaVybjXZccIazdEHkCmuCdvW3qAB_BContent Warning: past death & grief, vomiting, blood, non con touching, non con kissing, slap
What I Liked
- an established couple
- visuals
- the plot idea of moving on from a past love
- sweet moments
Room For Improvement
- the plot never grabbed me, I had to restart this series 3 times
- with the main couple, they didn't hold my attention
- comedy sound effects
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This review may contain spoilers
Truly an entertaining and interesting watch
DisclaimerWhat I am writing here are my views and thoughts about this series. Some of you may not like it. That does not give you the right to try to come at me with your opinions on why this series should get a higher or lower score and why it is better/worse than I think it is. You have your own opinions, and I have mine. Kindly respect that.
It is unfortunate that not a lot of people tuned in to watch this series, but I'm not surprised, as it's not from any of the three countries that a lot of us watch here on MyDramaList – South Korea, China or Thailand. And that's sad as a lot of people are missing out on an incredible series.
When I first saw this trailer on Netflix a few weeks ago, I instantly put it on my plan-to-watch list, as the trailer looked interesting. And I am so grateful that I did. This series has excellent acting from the casts, a good script and awesome effects, and it was able to keep my attention throughout the eight episodes. It was able to carry me throughout an emotional journey where one minute I'm smiling at the interactions between the characters, the next minute I'm tearing up at what I am seeing on my screen, and the next time I'm frightened for the main character, with the final strong moment of me cheering for the main character.
What I will say is this, which can be seen as a SPOILER –
The way it ended makes it clearly set up for a season 2, but I'm not holding my breath for it, as this is Netflix, people; they always cancel good series.
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brutality
I love the fact that the fight scene upgraded a lot in this season and I must say the storyline doesn’t really makes sense.rain Oppa doesn’t really fit in the villain character, although he literally tried in bringing out the villain character but it’s just not in him but in all the show is interesting and intriguing, it makes you curious about what’s gonna happen next, I’m definitely gonna rewatch.
if I was asked to rate the best between the two seasons I’m sticking with season one storyline.❤️
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A Fragile Woman and A Toxic Relationship
Why are we still cheering for this trope in 2026?It is a question I found myself asking repeatedly across twelve episodes of In Your Radiant Season, MBC's latest romantic drama that arrived in February dressed in stunning cinematography, a genuinely moving OST, and a premise that had every reason to work. Two broken people healing themselves so they could meet each other in the middle. A narrative goldmine, in theory. What followed was a drama so bizarrely split between its own best and worst instincts that by the finale I had developed a full taxonomy of my emotional responses to it, ranging from genuine tears to genuine laughter, and not always in the directions the show intended.
Let me start with the cast, because this drama's greatest achievement and its most damning failure both live there. Chae Jong-hyeop as Sunwoo Chan starts as one of the most promising male leads in recent memory. His golden retriever energy is genuinely disarming, his carecore foundation in the early episodes feels rare and earned, and Chae Jong-hyeop carries the character's warmth with complete conviction. The tragedy of Chan is not in the performance. It is in what the writing does to him once the romantic machinery kicks in. Manipulation does not require malicious intent to be manipulation. It only requires consistently choosing your own comfort over someone else's right to informed consent, and Chan does exactly that, on a loop, across ten episodes.
The original sin was the website lie in episode two, the moment Chan consciously decided to control what Ha-ran knew about their connection. Not to protect her. To protect himself from a conversation he was not ready to have. The replacement pen sourced internationally from Boston. The "I don't want to reopen old wounds" justification that was never about her wounds. Every single one traces back to that one decision, and he had maximum opportunity to come clean before anything romantic developed, before the three month trial, before the camera, before the kiss, before his own internal monologue admitted "I know I'm being greedy." Strip away the soft lighting and the slow piano keys and what remains is a man who consistently prioritized his own emotional comfort over a grieving woman's right to know her own story. Textbook manipulation, dressed in carecore aesthetics. Which the drama itself admitted in episode 12.
Lee Sung-kyung as Song Ha-ran is my first exposure to her work, and I will say this honestly: her early episodes genuinely moved me. The specific brand of grief she carries in episodes one through three is precise and layered, less a woman who lost someone and more a woman who appointed herself responsible for that loss and built her entire architecture around paying a debt nobody assigned her. That reading held, briefly, and beautifully. Then the full picture assembled itself and the math stopped adding up. Ha-ran lost her parents at sixteen and functioned. She lost a boyfriend she had just started dating, long distance, at twenty-five, and spent seven years in complete paralysis requiring her grandmother, a coffee shop owner, and eventually a stranger with a camera to engineer her back into the world. And eventually, the performance flattened entirely under the weight of a character the writing had stopped protecting. By the later episodes, every new crying scene over increasingly minor provocations stopped reading as grief and started reading as habit, and my response shifted accordingly from empathy to apathy, and then from apathy to something closer to active irritation. That is the quietest possible indictment of what the writing did to both the character and the actress carrying her. Her own grandmother noted that she did not take her parents' loss this hard.
The drama offers this line sympathetically. It lands as an indictment. By episode six, Ha-ran was doing slow motion Seoul bucket list tours and heart to hearts with her grandmother because a man she insisted she was not that close to had failed to deliver a text message before switching to airplane mode mid-flight. She is thirty-two. She runs a design team at Korea's premier fashion house. And she is sprawling across her emotional floor over an undelivered iMessage. Song Ha-ran will be filed permanently as a prime example of a fragile Female Lead with zero emotional regulation, zero agency, and zero identity outside of her romance. A block of tofu would have been more compelling to watch. The show wanted her to be the lone woman walking into a snow field, poetic and wounded and profound. The timeline and the surrounding cast revealed she was just standing at the edge of a very warm room, choosing not to turn around. That is not a fortress. That is a preference.
Here is where this drama becomes genuinely extraordinary, and genuinely maddening, in the same breath. Because Han Ji-hyun as Song Ha-yeong, the middle sister, is one of the finest performances I have encountered in recent dramaland, and I am not being generous. Ha-yeong checks every single box of a strong female lead while occupying a supporting role, which should embarrass the writers responsible for Ha-ran enormously. Han Ji-hyun plays Ha-yeong on two simultaneous frequencies, the surface brightness that the other characters receive and the undertow of grief underneath that only the audience catches if they are paying close enough attention. Ha-yeong made her defining decision at approximately fourteen, standing in a funeral hanbok against a wall, eyes closed, saying "I have to be okay. I have to keep this family together." She has been executing that decision every single day since, converting pain into laughter in real time, for everyone else's benefit but also for her own, because someone had to hold and she volunteered without being asked. She cried exactly twice across eleven episodes. Both times voluntarily, both times with directional purpose, because Song Ha-yeong does not break accidentally. Even her grief has agency. Han Ji-hyun threads the needle of this character with extraordinary precision, never tipping into melodrama, never losing the comedy, never letting you forget that the loudest person in every room is also the one carrying the most invisible weight. Her confession scene, her "then start thinking of me that way" delivered at a dinner table, and her beaming nod in a blizzard after twelve episodes of patience, are the three best scenes this drama produced. I want a spin-off. I want it immediately. I will watch it in one sitting.
Oh Ye-ju as Song Ha-dam, the youngest sister, quietly surprised me throughout. Ha-dam is the most emotionally mature person in this drama despite being a high school senior, and Oh Ye-ju carries that specific brand of grounded teenage wisdom without making it feel precocious. Her trajectory as a young actress is worth watching. Lee Mi-sook as Nana Kim is the drama's steadying heartbeat, a woman managing her own quietly terrifying secret while remaining the warmest presence in every room she occupies. Kwon Hyuk as Yeon Tae-sok is perfectly cast against Han Ji-hyun in a way that feels almost unfair to the main couple. His contained stillness against Ha-yeong's unbridled energy creates a dynamic that generates more genuine romantic tension in a single sour candy detail than the main couple managed across twelve episodes of soft lighting. Kim Tae-young as Cha Yu-gyeom rounds out a remarkably strong ensemble, accessing emotional range well beyond what his age and experience would suggest.
The drama's greatest structural achievement, and its most accidental one, is what happens when you look at all four couples simultaneously. By episode nine, every supporting character had become a satellite lighthouse for someone in their orbit, taking care of others in the specific language only they knew how. Ha-yeong holding a family together for fifteen years while quietly watching Nana Kim for signs nobody else caught. Tae-sok stocking Ha-yeong's favorite sour candy and sweeping cemetery paths and begging supplier favors in secret so a designer could be fully creative without the weight of practicality. Yu-gyeom engraving "guardian" on a necklace with his phone number for a grandmother he met crossing a street because it was simply the right thing to do. Mr. Park keeping a coffee shop light on for seven years and proposing before surgery in one quiet sentence: "take a rest, by my side, with me." Ha-dam telling her injured, frightened boyfriend "then you can just be my Yu-gyeom who tried." Every single one of them demonstrating love as a verb, love as a daily practice, love as something you do without requiring an audience or a piano cue. And then the main couple, still locked in their manufactured tensions and their soft lit lies, completely absent from this constellation of genuine human warmth. The heart and soul of In Your Radiant Season is everyone except the people on the poster.
The OST deserves its own mention, because it is genuinely one of the stronger soundtrack collections this year has produced. I Feel You by Yegny and Beautiful Days With You by Youngjun carry the quieter melancholy of the drama's better moments with exactly the right restraint, while You Are My Color by JUNGSOOMIN and About Time by BANG YEDAM bring a slightly warmer, brighter texture that serves the ensemble stories beautifully. All I Wish by Seo Ja-yeong caps the collection with grace. My only complaint is that the same songs were routinely deployed in service of the main couple's manufactured emotional moments, which is less a criticism of the music and more a casualty of association. The OST itself is blameless. I recommend seeking it out on your streaming platform of choice, ideally divorced from the scenes it was occasionally asked to carry beyond its job description.
This is what makes the editorial gaslighting so specifically damaging. Three consecutive episodes dressed minor inconveniences in the cinematographic language of genuine tragedy. A cancelled work project became a world-ending emergency. A failed text message from airplane mode became the emotional equivalent of losing a person. A bucket list Seoul tour became the dramatic processing of profound grief. When everything is painted as dramatic with every trick available, nothing is. The result was predictable and devastating. By the time the actual dramatic revelation arrived in episode eleven, the genuine climax the show had been building toward, I was laughing. Pure schadenfreude. The moment a drama's climactic emotional revelation produces genuine schadenfreude in a viewer who wept over a laundry detergent scene and a man standing in the rain with an umbrella, you have your most complete and honest verdict on what went wrong. They did not just fail to make me feel what they intended. They inverted it entirely. That is not a stumble. That is a structural collapse.
To be precise about something before closing: I am not opposed to fragile or grieving female leads. Dramaland has given us devastated women written with full agency and complete internal logic, women whose grief scale matches their loss, whose healing arc belongs to them rather than to whoever showed up with a camera and a carecore foundation. Song Ha-ran's depression was not one of those. It was unearned, disproportionate, and structurally inconsistent with every other character in her own drama who survived the same foundational loss and chose to keep moving. Her resolution, chasing a man who lied to her face across ten episodes because she saw his drawing on Instagram, is among the most unearned happy endings I have encountered. The woman who survived losing her parents at sixteen, who built a career, who runs a design team, has her entire arc hinge on needing a boy to complete her healing. In 2026. With Ha-yeong standing right next to her as proof that the writers knew exactly how to do this differently.
With all of that said, I do recommend In Your Radiant Season, with one very specific condition. Watch it the way I eventually learned to, with a working FFWD button and zero guilt about using it. Because the moment you grant yourself permission to sidestep Song Ha-ran and Sunwoo Chan's manufactured orbit entirely, something genuinely beautiful opens up. A grandmother who was proposed before surgery in one quiet sentence. A profound and supporting sisterly love between the three sisters. A middle sister who cried twice in twelve episodes and meant it both times. Two high school sweethearts charting an uncertain future with complete honesty. A younger sister trying to recreate her late mother's scents. A man in a blizzard finally asking the question he has been circling for fifteen years. Every one of these stories is told with full hearts, sharp writing, and endings that land exactly as earned as the journey that built them. The ensemble of this drama is worth your time and your tears. They just happen to share a show with a main couple that is worth neither.
Which brings me back to where I started, why are we still cheering for this in 2026?
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