I’m literally obsessed with Perfect Crown
This drama is seriously one of the best I’ve watched. The chemistry, cinematography, emotions, and every intense scene feel so perfectly delivered. A true definition of a power couple story with both soft and strong moments. Especially IU and Byeon Woo-seok, I absolutely love them so much — their chemistry is insanely good and feels so natural on screen.¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Something different
I started watching this show because I was drawn to its portrayal of a modern-day monarchy, but by the end, the protagonist gives it up. While I understand the reasoning behind that decision, it was the monarchy itself that initially appealed to me, so I felt a bit disappointed. I also think the show could have worked better as a 16-episode series. Nevertheless, I still enjoyed watching it overall; I just feel it had the potential to be better than what was presented.¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
A Beautiful Yet Painful Story
I started watching A Splendid Match because of a TikTok edit I saw online, and I needed something new and different. Cisha really did justice to the character of Lord Chen, and I’m definitely open to watching more of his shows from now on.One moment in the show that made me bawl my eyes out was Ye Xian’s death. I cried and cried because his death was so painful. All he ever wanted was acceptance from the world, and he finally got it at the cost of his life. It was beautifully written and one of the most emotional parts of the entire series.
My only issue with the show was the ending. I felt like something was missing, though I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. I just didn’t like the ending as much as I hoped I would. I really wish they had properly honored Ye Xian’s character after everything he did for the kingdom and for the king. He sacrificed so much, and I wanted to see some form of recognition or tribute to give viewers closure and consolation for his character.
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I Felt A Lot!
This story covers familiar territory, but I still found it tantalizing. It captured me from the beginning to the end. It is mainly due to the mesmerizing impersonations from the actors and actresses, in particular the main protagonists. They kept the ‘slow-burn’ of their relationship just at the simmer stage with it never boiling over – until it was time for it to do so. I just loved the way they kept us entertained and engrossed until we were able to find out who they were. The build-up was such that we really did want to know about them. The overall splendor of this series is its consistency. It never wavered from its intent. Sure, it takes a long time for their relationship to develop but because these guys seem to make it feel fast, it was. And, given the time frame they were in, we understood their hesitancy. Slow-burn series will work if you have the right actors and a great screen chemistry and good dialogue. And this had all three. They were just on the cusp of developing a strong relationship when the series threw in a gut punch that I did not think it needed to. That is what diminished the impact of this series. A standard cliche twist, completely unnecessary.¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Obejrzane
Obejrzałam ten program bardzo mi się podobał. Duża różnorodność wśród uczestników, różne dyscypliny sportu i nie tylko.Biorą udział mężczyźni i kobiety. Są aktywni sportowcy i sportowcy, którzy przeszli już na sportową emeryturę. Są też inne konkurencie niż w 1 sezonie.
Polecam ten program do obejrzenia.
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Obejrzane
Obejrzałam ten program bardzo mi się podobał. Duża różnorodność wśród uczestników, różne dyscypliny sportu i nie tylko.Biorą udział mężczyźni i kobiety. Są aktywni sportowcy i sportowcy, którzy przeszli już na sportową emeryturę. Też są uczestnicy. Ciekawe etapy i konkurencie.
Polecam ten program do obejrzenia.
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Ambitious, heartfelt, beautifully acted — even if the final arc loses the sharpness it promised
Pursuit of Jade is one of the most confidently mounted dramas of the year. The budget shows in every frame: from sweeping battlefields to intimate, character‑driven sets, and even the green‑screened dam destruction later in the story feels like an ambitious swing rather than a shortcut. My great friends Rita, Jennifer and Beez adored it from start to finish, and for most of the run, I was right there with them.The central OTP between Fan Changyun, the pig‑butcher‑turned‑army commander then general, played with terrific grit and warmth, and the bedevilled Marquis, a man who only ever had eyes for her, is magnetic. Their romance is so strong it demands attention in every episode they are in. One of the show’s emotional anchors is Changyun’s relationship with her little sister Chiming, played by a luminous young actress whose future looks bright. Their bond is tender, protective and beautifully acted.
The second OTP is tragic and brutal, with the heartbreak rooted in the female character being in the wrong place at the wrong time. He is a madman. It’s a thread that lingers long after the scenes end. The fourth OTP is equally tragic: both characters are villains, though one ultimately finds redemption. Their arc is messy, compelling and surprisingly emotional, especially in their final moments together. In contrast, the third OTP: the Grand Princess and the Headmaster/army strategist, is a delight, full of wit, ambiguity due to the differences in status but there was a delightful tenderness there.
The Pig Slaughter Squad deserves its own applause. They’re a loyal, chaotic, charming bunch of gangster deadbeats who adore their Flower General, and every scene with them adds humour and heart. The villains across the drama are brutal, sometimes maniacal, and the show handles that darkness with clarity and confidence. My favourite senior actor appears here as the master, the retired Grand Tutor to both leads, and as always, he elevates every frame he’s in.
Where the show falters for me is in the final five or six episodes. What should have been a political tour de force softens into something closer to a limp lettuce, and the wimpy emperor never quite earns the narrative weight the story required. The Chancellor and the current Grand Tutor also undermined the political intrigue the story had developed so strongly in the beginning. Even so, Pursuit of Jade remains one of the better dramas of the year. I’m only flapping my wings a little because the ending didn’t land for me. The journey there is rich, emotional and absolutely worth watching.
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This review may contain spoilers
my babies
the cinematography was TOP-TIER. i love how it portrayed society's view towards lgbtq+, the different perspectives of minato's mom, their teacher, and minato himself showed a lot about how we humans see the world from different points of view. just because yori seemed "girly" and "gay" in his dad's pov, his dad keeps saying that he has a "pig's brain" like wtf that pissed me off so much and since that's what his dad calls him, he started to think that he is wrong for being different. the scene where yori said "i'm cured now, i'm normal now.... i lied," then his father just grabbed him aggressively back to their house made me cry so bad.. another scene that made me cry was the trumpet scene with the principal, the line "if only some people can have it, that's not happiness. happiness is something anyone can have."¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Not really hit my expectations but great series.
Since this series is really popular, I decided to watch this. But it felt like a typical 2010s office romance. But loved the dynamics of the main characters. Perfect cast, no actors would have done it better than them. A great series which would make you have big nostalgia..................................................................¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
Beautiful Lighting, Emotional Damage, and a Small Town That Needed Therapy
Tender Light is one of those dramas that quietly tricks you.You arrive expecting a thriller.
What you actually get is a melancholy character study disguised as a mystery, wrapped in summer heat, whispers, loneliness, and the kind of sadness that seems permanently trapped inside small towns.
At the center of the story are Nan Ya, a woman surrounded by rumors, judgment, and invisible cruelty, and Zhou Luo, a younger man drawn into both her sadness and the unsettling circumstances surrounding a murder case. But if you are expecting fast-paced suspense or endless twists, recalibrate immediately.
This drama moves slowly.
Deliberately.
Like it fully understands how uncomfortable silence can become.
And surprisingly, the emotional connection between Nan Ya and Zhou Luo worked for me more than I expected.
Not because this is some grand sweeping romance.
It isn’t.
The connection feels quiet, awkward, and painfully human. There is longing here, tenderness, protection, misunderstanding, and that particular kind of closeness that grows between two people who recognize sadness in each other. Zhou Luo’s feelings never felt purely idealized; more like someone trying to understand and protect a person already carrying too much hurt.
Now, let us discuss the real co-star here:
the cinematography.
Because Tender Light is gorgeous.
The lighting department deserved overtime pay.
Warm street lamps, humid summer nights, fading sunlight, dim interiors, shadows sitting quietly in corners like they also know family secrets; everything feels unusually intimate and emotionally heavy. The camera constantly creates the feeling that people are trapped inside spaces too small for reinvention.
You can practically feel the heat.
The gossip.
The exhaustion.
This is one of those dramas where the visuals are not just pretty, they actively deepen the mood. The world feels melancholic, bruised, and quietly suffocating, and for once, the beauty actually serves the story instead of distracting from it.
And Tong Yao? She understood the assignment.
Her performance as Nan Ya is restrained in the best possible way. No dramatic speeches every five minutes. No emotional over-performance. Just exhaustion, loneliness, vulnerability, and quiet resilience sitting permanently behind her eyes.
Which is partly why I found myself wanting more from Nan Ya’s perspective.
For a story so shaped by Nan Ya’s suffering, the drama occasionally felt strangely more interested in everyone orbiting her than fully staying with her. The town, the gossip, the people judging her, even the people claiming to help while quietly enabling harm.
Because when Tender Light actually slows down and stays with Nan Ya?
That is when it feels strongest.
Messy people.
Realistic emotions.
Realistic story.
My hesitation comes from the thriller side.
The mystery itself occasionally feels weaker than the emotional atmosphere surrounding it. There were moments where I found myself more invested in the emotional sadness, social judgment, and slow tragedy of these characters than the actual suspense.
Which is not necessarily bad.
It just means this drama works best when you stop expecting:
“high-stakes thriller chaos”
and accept:
“emotionally wounded people quietly unraveling in aesthetically devastating lighting.”
It feels literary.
Sad in a quiet, lingering way.
The kind of drama that sneaks back into your mind later, not through plot twists, but through mood.
Not something that emotionally kidnapped me.
But definitely something I’m glad I watched.
Recommended for: people who enjoy atmospheric slow-burns, restrained acting, beautiful cinematography, emotional melancholy, and stories where social cruelty feels more frightening than the crime itself.
Not recommended for: viewers expecting nonstop suspense or thriller mechanics powerful enough to raise your blood pressure.
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Disapponting
The premise is promising, but the drama does not deliver. You can guess what the whole plot will be from the first episode. It's obvious how their stories are connected and what the big clash towards the end is going to be about.I liked the rural area people and vibes, the simplicity and the sort of healing atmosphere. However, the main characters and their storylines do not give enough to be interested in watching this to the end.
The SML is sort of just there, does not pose any "threat" to the ML, I am not even sure why he is there, because he does not show any emotion apart from smilling sweetly at the FL.
I would say the minor characters in the village are carrying the show but it's not enough to keep you interested.
The main characters are also kind of bland, not many emotions at all and I am sure the actors are capable of so much more if the characters were written differently.
From the 6 episode onwards, you can sort of tell how the story will go forward and I just don't like predictible stories like this.
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This review may contain spoilers
good
many dislike because of ,ml career or not depth to the characters, first of all 90% cdrama don't show a proper slow burn romance? or chemistry? i drop many just because of this ? this one they don't show how much FML liked him in past, but it's slow burn ,they have romantic interaction before and after relationship, they have healthy relationship,love isn't forced random or fast ? atleast they show how romance actually should be , ml career scenes were unnecessary and too long you have to skip it, most high rated cdrama don't even have a proper romance or how it should be , many cdrama has good background plot but focus is always other things? other unnecessary things in cdrama are villians, side characters,2nd couples,drama etc you need drma like this when you watch too many like the one I mentioned above where romance is non-existent¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
This review may contain spoilers
Perfect Crown — Beautifully Made, Politically Intriguing, and Driven by Strong Romantic Tension
Perfect Crown (also known as Wife of a 21st Century Prince) is one of those K‑dramas that reminds you why the form endures. It is beautifully made, with elegant production values, confident direction, and acting that consistently lands. There’s a light thriller‑mystery thread running through the story, never overwhelming the narrative, but giving it a steady hum of tension.At the centre of it all is the romantic pairing of IU as Seong Hee‑ju and Byeon Woo‑seok as Grand Prince Yi‑an. IU is fabulous — poised, emotionally precise, and quietly magnetic — and she gives the drama much of its heart. Byeon Woo‑seok is pretty good too, especially in the way he plays Yi‑an’s restraint and vulnerability. Together, they generate strong romantic tension that acts as a counterbalance to the political manoeuvring and the mystery elements, giving the series a warmth and human pulse even when the plot shifts direction.
The political world‑building is surprisingly textured. Although the drama describes its setting as a constitutional monarchy, the system functions more like a semi‑constitutional structure: the Crown holds real executive power but is supported — and sometimes challenged — by an elected cabinet. It’s an intriguing setup, and the show is at its best when exploring how tradition, legitimacy, and modern governance collide.
The Queen Mother provides much of the open hostility in the palace storyline, and the drama plays cleverly with our uncertainty: at times we’re not sure whether she is a villain, a political realist, or a reluctant supporter of the Grand Prince. What is clear is her love for her young son, the King, though strict at times, a performance that adds emotional grounding to the palace scenes. Her shifting loyalties give the political arc a welcome unpredictability.
The young King and the love for his uncle is a very nice, and welcome, touch.
Prime Minister Min, friend to both our leads, was a bit of a flop for me. The writing of his character needed to be sharper, more layered, and more consistent with the tone of the show. Even so, he has great presence — the kind of actor who can fill a scene even when the script doesn’t quite know what to do with him.
Where the drama falters is in its final episode. It suffers from a recognisably Korean ending: a sudden shift in focus, a rush to resolve big thematic questions, and a pivot toward political system reform that ultimately undermines the story the series had been carefully building. The 12‑episode length simply wasn’t enough. You can feel the compression everywhere — character arcs that needed space, political ideas that deserved deeper exploration, and a mystery that could have unfolded with more elegance if given time.
One performance deserves special mention: Lee Sung‑min as Lord Seo. My hat goes off to him — a standout performance. He brings gravitas, intelligence, and a quiet authority to every scene. He has become a dab hand at playing morally ambiguous or outright dangerous figures (Alchemy of Souls, anyone), and here he elevates the palace storyline with ease.
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Boring
After watching Pursuit of Jade, everything else became mediocre. Had high hopes for this because of the good reviews and have watched the male lead perform well in other dramas. Unfortunately, his acting here wasn't great. Both the leads were emotionless and funny didn't suit them. It's also hard to believe them acting as a married couple don't even kiss 😆 No chemistry at all! I had a hard time keeping my eyes open and not falling asleep thru each episode.¿Te ha parecido útil esta reseña?
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