This review may contain spoilers
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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This review may contain spoilers
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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This review may contain spoilers
it was really good, however the end felt rushed
I really wanted to see more of their lives together and how their relationship continued to grow beyond what we were shown. It felt like the story had so much more depth to explore, especially with the characters and their dynamics. Honestly, this could have easily stretched to 10–12 episodes, because with only 8, everything felt a bit rushed and some moments didn’t land as strongly as they could have. That said, despite the pacing, it was still an enjoyable watch overall.
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Some stories entertain, some stories saves lives!
I don’t think I’ll ever be able to explain what season 2 episode 6 did to me.And I won’t spoil it, because some moments deserve to arrive unannounced, exactly when someone needs them most.
But the conversations between Chishiya and K♦️, and later Momoka and K♦️, broke something open inside me. Not in a painful way… in the way light breaks through a locked room you forgot even had windows.
I watched that episode at one of the weakest points of my life. The kind of weakness that doesn’t look dramatic from the outside. The quiet kind. The dangerous kind. The kind where your soul gets tired before your body does.
I’ve been questioning myself for a long time now. Questioning my ideals. Questioning why I keep choosing empathy, sincerity, hope, kindness, sacrifice… when the world often rewards the opposite. I kept wondering if maybe I was naïve all along. If maybe survival truly belongs only to people who learn how to become colder, more selfish, more detached.
And somewhere along that dialogue, I started crying uncontrollably because it felt like the episode was answering questions I had never managed to say out loud.
What if some people simply cannot betray their nature?
What if some people would rather suffer than abandon what makes them human?
What if meaning is not found in winning, but in remaining true to yourself even when the world gives you no reason to?
That episode reminded me that not every way of living needs external validation to be real.
There are people who love without guarantees.
People who continue being gentle after life gives them every reason not to.
People who hold onto impossible ideals not because they’re foolish, but because abandoning them would feel like a spiritual death.
And maybe that makes us irrational.
Maybe it makes us weak in the eyes of the world.
But I think there’s something profoundly beautiful about refusing to let pain turn you into someone unrecognizable to yourself.
For the first time in a long while, I stopped seeing my softness as failure.
I stopped seeing my persistence as stupidity.
I stopped needing proof that my way of living will “pay off.”
I realized that even if the world never rewards people like us… I still want to live this way.
I still want to care deeply.
I still want to believe in people.
I still want to protect the fragile parts of myself instead of killing them to survive more comfortably.
And when my life eventually ends, I think my greatest victory would simply be this:
that despite everything, I did not become cruel.
This scene has become strangely sacred to me.
Every time I begin collapsing internally, I return to it.
And every single time, it pulls me back from the edge.
Some stories entertain you.
Some stories distract you.
And then there are stories that quietly save your life.
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Watch for beautiful visuals, costumes, captivating romance...and a cute cat
Reviewing this after bingeing this again (yes, the show definitely has rewatch value) and as someone who has watched too many xianxia/period costume dramas to count, this is truly one of the better shows to watch. Whether it is the aesthetics, plot, charactors or on-screen chemistry, there is really have not much to gripe about. OST wise was decent too but not particularly memorable where you are transported back to an iconic scene etc. Of course, if you are a fan of Deng Wei, this is a must watch, the styling is on point and there were multiple facets to his charactor on top of the character growth that he portrayed, which really makes you appreciate his acting skill here. Along with the strong characterisation of the FL, and the cohesiveness of how they blended the characters from different timelines together. Some dramas require you to suspend logical thinking or to close one eye to subpar visuals/CGI, but for LOTDT, you can just sit back and immerse yourself in the beautiful world set up in the drama.I also appreciated the references to the meaning of memory, our lives and the outcomes of our own choices/action. What use is restarting in a new world if the memories are completely different, even if the alternative world has the life you desire? In the end, we are but a sum of our own experiences and relationships with each other.
ps. Many others have highlighted this and I will add to the chorus - Deng Wei's hair styling was a main character in itself here too !
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Go man, give us nothing!
Underwhelmed and unsatisfied with the romance: Have you ever waited 4 years for a complete letdown? That's what it feels. The characters are actually well thought out and their interiority beautifully depicted. Yumi is the best version of herself, goal-oriented and very adult.But she still can't dress herself to save her life. The knitwear is atrocious. Over a white t-shirt, what is this, trashy 1998? Couple that with the unflattering haircut and you have a heroine that lacks taste, ironically for an artist. It's good that she doesn't design the comics, she's writing them.
The romance doesn't flourish until the last episodes and even then it's childish and redundant. I signed up for heart-fluttering, not okay-fine. They are adults, sure, but there can still be whimsy. I am profoundly underwhelmed.
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After being publicly canceled in August of 2021 and dragged through the mud by netizens, Zhang was afraid to leave his house and be seen in public. (Having read the complaints, it seemed like the punishment did not fit the crime at least from this outsider’s perspective.) Music helped restore the embattled actor and he found new ways to express himself, find work, and begin healing his wounds. This documentary was one of the ways he let people know that words can hurt and that he was choosing to focus on the positive.
There were times the set-ups felt overly staged as he played with children, helped a restaurant owner cook and serve, learned from river raft guides about their business and relationship, or interviewed a Tibetan musician. Having said that, I enjoyed the bits and his chats with the different people who opened their lives to him. The scenery, as expected, was stunning. Mountain vistas, glaciers, rivers, green fields with nomadic herds, all were soothing as Zhang experienced them.
If you are a Zhang Zhe Han fan, I could highly recommend “August” as he bared his heart and discussed his life without going into the “scandal” that nearly broke him. If you don’t know who he is, the documentary is still a sweet ride through the Tibetan mountains with brief glimpses into the people who live and work there.
4 May 2026
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loved everything about this
This was a well-told, very tight story. If it was a Cdrama it would have been 40 episodes. I wish it was longer because I would've loved to have seen the other characters and storylines fleshed out more. The leads were great. The ending was satisfying. I rated it 10/10 because it was great despite the story not being long enough.Was this review helpful to you?
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This review may contain spoilers
100 ways to not date the one you like
Everyone is in love in this drama and there is no real toxic guy (or is there ... )Not only everyone has a loved one and every character who is love is a decent BF on some extent but most of the couple are from ep. 1 in love with one another.
Starting from this premise, the drama will therefore inevitably be a long succession of a thousand reasons, more or less valid, that the characters alone will impose on their should-be couple.The goal is to prevent them from being in sync about their decision to start a relationship until almost the very last episode.
Besides... I know life is hard sometimes... but I've never seen a drama with such a massive character kill-off without it involving a serial killer or zombies. Was it really necessary to kill off all the characters' family members?
...if it prevents these characters from dating, it must have seemed like a good enough of a reason to the screenwriter.
Otherwise... the characters are quite cute and the acting is pretty good... but the plot devices are still rather disappointing.
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The story about the different ways
I've never been interested in Liu Yuning's work before, but I'm impressed by his acting in this drama and I love the main song 'Blazing Moon' (烽月 - fēng yuè) that he sings. My friends told me that he doesn't act a lot; he's rather a singer, so my impression is even higher. I've also never watched any drama with Sun Zuer before, and I really like this actress now. I'll definitely watch another drama with her and I'll watch some of Yuning's concerts on my computer ;) This couple did an excellent job together. You can feel all of their emotions: hesitation, trust building, and falling in love.What about the drama? I can say it is about the long way. The way from envy to treason, from hate to forgiveness, from distrust to deep trust, from reluctance to genuine love. It's about beautiful friendship and commitment. You should watch it. It's 10/10 from me.
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Story line, acting
Honestly i have watched many bl dramas and this is so perfect. This doesn't show how they met or anything. It shows how they are staying in love, how they overcome their problems and how they chose to stay with each other every time. It's rare in bl dramas. The acting of perth santa was everything, Santa's acting of sun then acting like solar while being sun showed how good of actor he is. This drama is so underrated!! It needs more recognition. In my point of view this series is not only series anymore it holds feelings, there not a bad thing of this drama.Was this review helpful to you?
BEST SEASON
Yumi’s Cells Season 3 is easily one of the most heartfelt and satisfying installments of the series, proving once again that the blend of live‑action storytelling and 2D animated cells is a formula that never disappoints. Even if someone hasn’t watched Seasons 1 and 2, this season stands strong on its own because of its emotional clarity, relatable character arcs, and the charming world inside Yumi’s mind.This season dives deeper into Yumi’s growth — not just in love, but in her identity, career, and emotional maturity. What makes it special is how honestly it portrays the messy, confusing, and beautiful parts of being human. The cells, as always, steal the show. They’re hilarious, dramatic, and painfully relatable, acting out the inner chaos we all experience but never say out loud. Season 3 gives them even more personality, more conflicts, and more moments that make you laugh one second and tear up the next.
The writing feels tighter, the pacing smoother, and the emotional beats more grounded. Yumi’s journey feels less like a romance drama and more like a coming‑of‑age story for adults — one where heartbreak, healing, ambition, and self‑discovery all collide. The chemistry between the cast is warm and believable, and the animation team once again delivers expressive, vibrant cell sequences that elevate every scene.
What truly makes this season shine is how confidently it embraces Yumi’s independence. It’s not just about who she ends up with — it’s about who she becomes. And that message lands beautifully.
If you’re hesitating, don’t. Don’t overthink it. Just watch. Season 3 is heartfelt, funny, comforting, and deeply human — a perfect reminder that growth is messy, love is complicated, and your inner cells are always cheering you on.
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Re-Watch value keeps rising.... 100%
STAR & SKY: STAR IN MY MIND
Dunk & Joong are natural born actors!
I love this drama so much, I had to watch it again 😋 ... I enjoy this couple #Dunk & #Joong or as their fans put them #JoongDunk. Don't understand how they choose whose name goes first etc... 🤣. Yet in my book he is my bias... I would go #DunkJoong 😉
It's funny how when you first watch it, the 2nd or 3rd time you watch it... you see or hear things that you didn't pick up before & the understanding of the situation was a bit clearer.
It brought out how much the misunderstandings between the two characters Dao & Kleun slowed down their relationship to go forward. And even now... this annoys the heck out of me ... 😉. (The downside of watching a drama... is you see the full story, but you can't shake the person and scream ... "You got this all wrong!!!" or "Oh my goodness, can you just speak up and tell him the whole truth!!!" The number of times tears started to form ... is ridiculous lol.
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