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Nice Ost
I’m officially done with this drama. I love a good fantasy, but I have zero patience for the trope where the ending reveals it was all just a writer’s imagination. It’s such a lazy way to wrap up a story, and it leaves me feeling cheated. You invest so much time into the plot and the relationships, only to find out they were never ‘real’ even by the show's own standards. It’s hard not to see the series as a complete waste of time when the final payoff is essentially telling the audience that none of it matteredWas this review helpful to you?
This Is How You End a Trilogy ?
Finally watched Yumi’s Cells 3, and honestly… this is one of the best trilogy finales I’ve ever seen💛This season feels much more mature, both in terms of storytelling, character development, and the conflicts it explores. We really get to see Yumi grow, no longer just following her feelings, but starting to prioritize logic in making life decisions.
And honestly, Sunrok instantly became my favorite character.
He’s rational, calm, and very grounded in the way he thinks. Even though he’s 6 years younger than Yumi, he actually feels more emotionally mature. Plus… the visuals? Definitely a win😄
What I love about their dynamic is that: this is no longer an impulsive kind of love, but a more realistic relationship, about timing, choices, and how two adults align their lives together.
Other things IMO that make this season stand out:
The storytelling is deeper and very relatable to adult life (I'm adult and I love the way this drama gives me)
The inner “cells” remain iconic, but feel more meaningful (Yumi and Sunrok cells are the best)
The closure feels complete and satisfying (yes, actually I hope it has at least 12 eps, but I got 8-solid,perfect eps)
Happily ever after, our lovely couple Yumi-Sunrok!!!!
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the best
this season was the best! also, this is the best romcom so far this year. i completely love how they showed the meaning of love. we did not see someone changing for someone else, but we saw them accept each other with their different flaws and slowly give their all. they did a great job portraying this with the cells and the tower falling down. their chemistry was out of this world. this season needed 12-16 episodes 😭. i can't let go. although they were together during the last two episodes only, it did not feel rushed, at least that is how i see it. they showed yumi experiencing love in a different way and the true personality of soonrok was absolutely adorable. it was so precious to see how comfortable they got with one another and how yumi also slowly let her guard down because of him. overall, 10+/10. i wish i could watch it for the first time again.Was this review helpful to you?
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Needed more.
I will always love Yumi and the whole series is a 10 for me, but I would've loved a longer season, specially because this is the ride or die dude, so it needed more time to develop the relationship and having all the cute moments we needed to fall in love with Soon Rok. I never thought I'd say this but I kinda missed Ruby???? wish it had included more of her friends but I guess it comes hand in hand with it being such a short season. That being said, I spent the last episode crying. Reall looking forward to rewatch the whole thing...multiple times.Was this review helpful to you?
Acceptable but not exceptional
So I watched this 2024 short drama in 2026 and man have we come a long way. This is a prime example of what these dramas were like back then and it really helps you appreciate how much some of them have improved since then. This one is pretty simple still with not too much fluff but nothing particularly spectacular about it. This is one of the earliest if not the earliest dramas that this CP has done together and they've done a good amount together since then. They're cute together but this early one lacked chemistry between and they've definitely done more exciting projects together since. Overall acceptable watch but easily forgettable too.Was this review helpful to you?
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The first watch is pure entertainment, but you need a second one to truly "get it."
The storyline is completely interconnected, so you have to watch it until the very end. Spoiler Alert: In that subconscious world, everything is actually real. However, once the protagonist wakes up, it all turns into a dream. The second personality is trying to lure Jiang Shuo into staying trapped in a deep subconscious state so he never has to wake up again. But if Jiang Shuo doesn't wake up, he won't be able to save Dr. Qin, which would lead to the doctor’s death as well.Was this review helpful to you?
Thee Exception to the Rule
This season was short, sweet, and full of broken rules. It beautifully showed that love doesn’t follow society’s expectations. When the right person enters your life, the rules no longer matter; what matters is embracing every moment with them, even when it goes against what others think relationships should look like.Though it was the shortest season, it felt entirely complete. Yumi became someone’s exception, and he realized from the very beginning that she was the one for him. I admired how he let love guide him without reservation, setting himself apart from the men in her past. He was bold, fearless, and unwavering; truly her Superman.
I also have to give credit to all of the emotional cells throughout Yumi’s journey of love and self-discovery. The humor, teamwork, adventures, and even the little moments of chaos made the series so entertaining and relatable. It honestly makes you imagine your own little world of cells working behind the scenes in everyday life. Such a creative and well-produced drama.
Thank you to the writers and production team for delivering another K-drama banger.
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An Engaging (even though long) Show
This show was good, and I was thoroughly entertained even though it ran pretty long. I thought I would drop it because most of the synopsis had already happened by episode 15, and I still had more than double that number of episodes left to watch, but I had 0 idea what the plot would be. I am shocked that I made it all the way through, but I don't regret committing.I liked the creativity around the show. That said, because it was so long, even though it was creative, it also occasionally felt tedious and repetitive. They insisted on killing a lot of characters, which plot-wise made sense, but of course, I never like it when they kill characters that are good. I'm still not over the fact that they killed the little boy sidekick Dou. He was so cute, and he deserved so much better, but I mean, he got to be a general in the end, I guess.
It was doubly ridiculous that an unprecedented number of characters committed suicide by knife to the throat, as if they didn't have poison or something they could use. I don't know why everyone had to take a knife to their throat, including her mother, which was a decent plot twist except for the fact that, once again, someone had taken a knife to their throat to kill themselves as opposed to something different.
I did enjoy that the Great Khan's wife was the real villain, but I hated that her story was pretty similar to every evil empress in that she wanted her son to become a ruler. Honestly, if she had just left Ashile She Er be, he probably would have been the ruler regardless. She actually just wanted power like every other person who is evil, and I'm not convinced about the reason why she did what she did. The Great Khan did suck, and he wasn't a great husband. It sounded like she literally had a better husband before him, and she still killed him, too. To say that her villain origin story started with this guy isn't true because she literally killed the original husband (the father of her son) she had. So, I don't know. It's like I low-key get her point of view, but they made her so black and white that it was a bit ridiculous.
I will say that the uncle killed Li Chang Ge’s dad, and I was trying to figure out how we would come back from that. Of course, they made it so that Li Shi Min literally killed Li Jian Cheng, not to become the crown prince, but because Li Jian Cheng was gonna kill Li Shi Min first, and so to survive, Li Shi Min killed Li Jian Cheng instead. Then it's crazy to know that low-key Li Shi Min was gonna be with Lady Jin if he hadn't come back from war to find out that Li Jian Cheng, the late crown prince, basically raped her???? I feel like they glossed over that a little too much because I'm like, wait, I don't understand how this was allowed and how this even happened. It was insane, but it did work to the plot's advantage. It was one of those points that was, for lack of a better word, “creative”, because normally in these shows where the character needs to get revenge, she succeeds, and it's literally the peak climax – she got her revenge, her parents are satisfied in their graves, and she feels like she's committed proper retribution – but in this show, they kind of turn that on its head and really push that idea of not everything is as it seems. Sometimes you have to think of the greater good as opposed to just revenge, which was this show's strongest point.
The romance was more of a slow burn secondary part of the plot, but I loved:
- Ashile Sun’s three reasons and letter of proposal 😭🥹
- omg omg she found Falcon’s letter of proposal ahhhh so cute i will die
- Their ride or die attitude for each other
Other parts of the show I liked:
- The godfather to father scene between Du Ru Hui and Hao Du was super cute
- Hao Du and Li Le Yan’s romance was nice and pretty decent overall
- Li Le Yan’s “side quest” as a princess learning about the people
- I actually enjoyed Ashile She Er’s character arc and how they explored his brotherhood with Ashile Sun
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Too Young to Communicate
This show was had a strong start for what it was as a light-hearted, youth, slice-of-life type show. It reminded me of Exclusive Fairytale and a little bit of When I Fly Towards You. However, the biggest issue with the show was the last four episodes. Up until then, it was actually very engaging in terms of complex characters. Instead of having a one-all, be-all antagonist, they had characters with depth. Each character had their flaws or moments of attitude/stubbornness that was more realistic than if there were just two characters that were point blank evil for the sake of plot.That said, the ending was actually so disappointing. I only had 4 episodes left, but I genuinely contemplated not finishing it because of how badly they set up the ending.
SPOILERS BELOW
For the first 20 episodes, the main leads are excellent communicators. They have loved and trusted each other as friends since childhood, and it only strengthened as time went on. So it made no sense for us to just time jump and be told that they took a break because they needed to go their own way, and that led to a breakup basically…and then work backwards from there to show us flashbacks of her missing her recital, him being MIA, and then them not talking for over 12 months properly because both of them felt slighted by the other. Both felt the other had broken up with them, rather than the reality of the situation. It was just absolutely chaotic, and it made no sense for their characters at all for them to have fallen apart the way that they did. It definitely felt forced for the sake of the plot.
The show would have been better off with us actively watching them during the breakup time. Instead of it lasting for a year and a half, it should have only lasted a month or two. We should see them breaking up and figuring themselves out, figuring out how to communicate, rather than them just going silent with each other for over 12 months. That's just so unrealistic, and it made no sense because literally they're just a phone call away. I don't believe that they could not have communicated better.
Similarly, Ning was a solid character, and I understood she didn’t want to rely on her boyfriend but after everything, she ditched Chen Fan only to rely HEAVILY on a man that didn’t give two sh*** about her and almost helped her get assaulted??? Like, make that make sense?
I also want to note they succeeded in casting actors who passed as high schoolers, then college students, then adults. But I really don’t understand why they cast 30-year-olds for these kinds of shows…
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Enjoyed, but wasn't as pulled in
I liked the show, I really did, but I also hated, *like really hated*, the age gap set up, especially when the “secondary lead” was the male lead’s *nephew*. Lord Ding looks older than Zhuo Hua and kept being presented as “a sickly old man about to die” and I just was not a fan of it at all. It was the *main* thing that held this show back. Every time I “forgot” about it or accepted it, they would make some comment or other about his age and how he’s at death’s door or her age and how she has so much life to live. They are both *grown* so it wasn’t creepy, but the gap just served no more purpose than him being sickly.I also loathed the empress dowager. I can respect the use of a straight-forward antagonist but every time her face was on screen I wanted to throw my phone. The complexity of the first princess really made up for the pain of listening to the empress dowager.
Lastly, I originally kind of liked the monotone baseline personality they gave to both Lord Ding and the first princess. However, since the show was on the longer side, it did start to get frustrating as they did the same ish over and over again. I guess they were solid foils with tragic childhoods that shaped their defensive/offensive personalities.
While Zhuo Hua and Lord Ding’s romance was very slow and *subtle*, I thoroughly enjoyed Zhi Mo & Ju Li’s romance. Just two sweet cuties that deserve nothing but good things. I also enjoyed how Zhi Jian interacted with them.
I wouldn’t rewatch this show just because it is on the longer end and most of the plot is more political than romantic. The show was just barely entertaining to me at first (the FML was an actress I liked and her character as Zhuo Hua was fun) *but* it ramped up once we get the “reveal” *but then* gets a tad repetitive near the end.
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A tad disappointed but was entertianed
This show was *not* bad. In fact, production and acting wise it was pretty solid. However, the plot? Not for me. The slivers of romance and my enjoyment of all the actors faces (esp. Jospeh’s) is really what kept me, and my own burning curiosity to see the ending. Being able to foster said curiosity out of me is credit to the show because I usually just don’t care enough.Let me break down what I enjoyed:
- **The actors**. Literally everyone was impeccable and felt truly like the character(s) they were playing.
- **The sliver of romance.** It truly is not a lot of romance as I would say this is more a fantasy action than romantasy by any means. But the two main pairs that have a romance do not hold back. You get some fated mates, some “enemies to lovers” to close proximity to “fake dating”. A nice range of tropes with a questionable but classifiable “happy ending” for both. I actually get it a 9 for *both* the pairings because they were equally the main characters. It was a 9 and not a ten bc of the said questionable happy endings.
- The general pace of the plot. I think the reason I was able to finish the show was that it maintained a solid tempo. Anytime I was getting sick of a storyline, the storyline changed to something new.
Time to highlight what didn’t work:
- The synopsis does not set the viewer up for what is to come. It only covers Xiao Wei and the Dragon Deity's power but it should have focused on trying to defeat Jiu Ying. I don’t think saying it up frount would have been a spoiler as the show has so many twists its hard enough to keep up. I genuinely started the show thinking we would spend 29 episodes in Wei Manor and was getting a bit confused by the shows tempo as we got closer to finding Xiao Wei.
- I have to say the synopsis doesn’t lean into romance but the trailer and tone of the show seem, not light hearted but not so serious either so I did expect more romance and levity overall. As such, the show was doomed to be a hit for me. I am not a fan of being given a show I wasn’t expecting lol
- The show overdoes red herrings. In an effort to impress the viewer with plot creativity, the show actually just achieved frustrating me and also becoming a bit redundant in its “plot twists”.
- 9.9x out of 10 I am not a fan of time travel because the show usually just ignores its own plot holes and causes more of a headache than less. While the show did a decent job with the time travel for the whole Lu Wu Yi & Ji Ling’s stuffed fox, it also just felt overwhelming and unnecessary. It was romantic enough but we’re told she *cannot* change the future, but then to prevent him from committing suicide she conveniently could by cutting her tail which was conveniently “fixed” by Ji Ling STILL “committing suicide” by giving her his dragon scale which is conveniently resolved by the DEAD Chi Wen’s last power giving energy to a special rock which is conveniently fast tracked by the ALSO *supposedly* DEAD star stone and idk what else.
- See how conveniently everything unfolded? I am a happily ever after girl so I don’t mind convenient plot solutions but with all those conveniences, why the heck did the show end with 3 out of 4 of the main lead forgetting EVERYTHING that happened in the show? Two of whom randomly land in a different timeline.
- Also circling back to the time travel, the secondary time travel makes less sense because if Jiu Ying was killed back in time before Lu Wu Yi is part of the nine-tailed fox clan, then how does Wu Shi Guang still end up as the 10th dragon deity–everything we watched has been undone and we have 0 real knowledge of the “actual” timeline that happened in the show. We see You Chi
alive again and more serious, but that’s it. Does that mean You Chi’s father isn’t dead because that whole situation didn’t happen? Does that mean Wu Shi Guang never had the sliver of Jiu Ying’s essence in him? If so, why does he remember everything that technically didn’t happen?
See what I mean? The show tried so hard to *be* and instead it was just a snake eating it’s own tail (pun intended bc Jiu Ying is a snake). I enjoyed it at face value but with all the twists and turns that led to dead ends, it’s clear this show wanted to appear intellectual to some degree. If you like fantasy, and don’t mind the headache involved in keeping up with everything, I would recommend, otherwise, eh.
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After 4 Years! At last but…
Since 2021 I watched S1 then S2! I loved Yumi Cells! Loved it bc I could see and understand every aspect of Yumi.Those cells made me laugh, cry and understand what she was going thru. I was team Babi! Had to wait almost 4 years for S3 and I cried of happiness to be able to see Yumi’s final journey S3. I was so worried that I would only have 8 episodes and how would things turn out. I have a bittersweet feeling bc I wanted more. How can after 4 years they gave us only 8 episodes? I wanted more of her relationship with Soonrok, their wedding. We deserved more!
I gave S1 10/10 and S2 10/10 but this season I just couldn’t. I gave it 9.5 and only bc it was too short for me. I felt it somewhat rushed those last 2 episodes. How can we enjoy 1-1/2 episodes of their relationship only.
So happy for Yumi that she found her love at last! One of my favorite kdrama!
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A Heroine's Journey (versus the generation before her with a whole lot of yearning from the ML)
WHAT A GOOD SHOW. ITS EXACTLY WHAT I’D BEEN CRAVING.I just love a good costume or fantasy with mostly yearning and romance and love. This show had it! It’s not a 50/50 split, definitely more a “from the female leads pov” but I didn’t mind because Zhou Yi Ran did soooo good conveying his thoughts/emotions with just his face let alone his delivery of lines.
The good of this show:
- **The Plot:** it’s simple and relatively straightforward in a way some fantasies are not, but is a way that allowed the real messages of the show shine AND that allowed us to just enjoy Cai Zhao’s journey (and her romance with Mu Qing Yan)
- I love this more literally visual/breakdown of generational trauma in this show. You can clearly see how her aunt’s choices (and the choices of those around her) affected everyone and in turn colored how the kids grow up.
- **The Romance:** As I mentioned, we don’t get scenes with Mu Qing Yan much without Cai Zhao, but Zhou Yi Ran does such a good job that I don’t think we needed more than what we got. Mu Qing Yan clearly falls for Cai Zhao almost instantly, wanting to be around her as much as possible, being clearly upset when he learns she betrothed, following her on all her adventures for no other reason than to make sure she is safe.
- I adored their “break up scene” as much as anyone could adore it. Cai Zhao loves him, but he was being toxic, a bit too manipulative, selfish, and shortsighted. She saw that, she STILL loved him, BUT she told him, they were not going to work with that set up. Lo and behold, he stops trying to learn the Wu method, he stops being as aggressive as he was at the start, and he start letting her make her own choices properly – even when he really wanted to just throw her over his shoulder and hide them away somewhere safe.
- The Main Leads: I know I talk about them in the romance point, but their characters were great.
- Cai Zhao is a caring young woman determined to follow the path of justice like her beloved aunt. I loved how she kinda breezes by peoples negative opinions, but you can see how she has to struggle with prioritizing her own feelings vs her morals vs what the adults she admire tell her.
- Mu Qing Yan is an iconic male lead imo. Is he a little bit “toxic”? Sure, but not so much so that is unreasonable. To say his upbringing was traumatic is an understatement. The man could probably do with some therapy but his arc is clear – he was a young man on the road set for revenge and then death. But in meeting Cai Zhao, his softer side is slowly exposed and freed from the wall around his heart. He was totally smitten with her and I ate up every second of it.
- The secondary leads! I didn’t think I would like Qi Ling Bo or even her mom because they were definitely annoying at the start, but their growth and pain and struggles were legit and I loved them both by the end. The rest of the secondary leads were great too. I feel bad for my guy Song Yu Zhi, but hope he finds love with someone else. I also actually loved his dad LOL the way he was trying to get his son to woo Cai Zhao was highly entertaining and he spoke facts when he said that Cai Zhao likes how unrestrained Mu Qing Yan is with and around her which is why she isn’t into Song Yu Zhi.
So for the “flaws” of the show, I think some were less “serious” than others but:
- There are some “logistics” of the story that are conveniently skipped but threw me off. Like Cai Zhao’s sheath for her sword makes no sense. How does the sword come out of the sheath when the tip of the sword is way bigger than the base but the base of the sheath is small? And how did Mu Qing Yan get his sword when she hijacked his “execution”? Those were the more obvious ones, but there were other little things like that, that I wished they properly resolved even with a sentence or something. If it’s going to happen off screen it needs to be something you can obviously stitch together which wasn’t the case for those moments.
- The plot was solid, but I was kinda hoping for some kind of “wow” climax. I don’t think it was horrible, but heaven knows some shows overkill on red herrings and “plot twists” for shock value, but I could see Qi Yun Ke being the villain from a mile away and no one else would have made sense but still – would have been nice if they thought more on how to make the antagonist more dynamic and not the “leader of all the good sects” lol
That are my only two complains. Some people claim that the show is confusing, which considering my second complaint, I wholeheartedly disagreed. But then some people say there were too many characters introduced all at once. To which I say: I am not a native Chinese speaker so I am *used* to being confused by fantasy plots in the beginning...but this show is no more confusing than others similar to it. If anything it’s a pretty simple fantasy with just two sides: the demons vs the “amazing perfect six sect”. There's a range of characters, but you really don't need to "keep tabs" as the last names do most of the heavy lifting. After finishing it, anyone that I could not really "remember" well was not more important than if they were "good" or "bad" tbh LOL.
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Yumi’s Cells: The K-Drama That Redefined Love for Me
It’s been a while since I last wrote a K-drama review, but Yumi's Cells truly deserves one.I’ve followed this series since 2021, from Season 1 all the way to Season 3, and somewhere along the journey, it felt like I was growing alongside Yumi. This isn’t your typical K-drama where you can easily predict a happy ending. Instead, it gives you something more real, something more human.
Seasons 1 and 2 gave me both butterflies and heartbreak. I genuinely thought Woong was already the best match for Yumi. But the story reminds us of a hard truth: love alone isn’t always enough. If one person isn’t ready to fully commit, no matter how strong the feelings are, it simply won’t work.
Then came Babi, someone who seemed ready, stable, and “right.” But when challenges appeared, his sense of commitment wavered too. And that’s what makes this drama stand out, it doesn’t romanticize love; it shows how fragile and complex it can be.
Season 3 felt entirely different. More mature. More grounded. It quietly teaches that love can be patient, calm (except Soon Rok's naughty cell 🙈), certain and not defined by how long you’ve known someone. Sometimes, the right kind of love comes when you’ve already become the person you needed to be.
What I love most about Yumi’s Cells is how it beautifully captures life in all its highs and lows and how every experience, whether painful or joyful, shapes who we become.
This drama didn’t just tell a love story. It told a story about growth, timing, and self-understanding.
Definitely one of my all-time favorite K-dramas and a must watch (please do watch the other seasons too since it will really hit different before watching S3).
And yes… I will truly miss Yumi—and of course, the adorable cells. 🥹
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Sound Bigger Than The Horror
A horror with classic formula, full of obnoxious characters making selfish and ignorant decisions that endanger everyone. Well, without them there is no horror story, right?No complaint about the acting, I love them all staying true to the character. Thorough the movie there was non stop jump scare with freaking loud sound, it was supposed to scare me, but it became repetitive, tiring to be completely honest, and even funny at some point. Story wise, there might be a dozen of plot hole unexplained, given the short duration. Feels like this movie would be more wrapped nicely if they gave us back story snippet, but instead they left us hanging. I only came to understand the story more after reading some theory. This also became a hit in Korea, because the real background setting. Maybe for foreigner like me- it didn't impact me as much as it is only full of cheap scare.. but if you want that experience, you might enjoy this! As for me, unfortunately this isn't the type of horror I am into.
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