Idol I Episode 6

아이돌아이 ‧ Drama ‧ 2025 - 2026

Episode Title: A Blatant Lie


9.5
Your Rating: -/10
Ratings: 9.5/10 from 131 users
Reviews: 6 users
Season: 1

As the investigation deepens, new truths about U Seong emerge. Se Na and Ra Ik grow closer through the storm - until Ra Ik uncovers the secret she's kept buried in her heart. (Source: Viu)
  • Aired: January 06, 2026

Idol I Recent Discussions

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"Idol I" Review: who is crazy? by Cho Na 3 0
Sweet0Girl
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Your suspects are … ? by IM YourOnlyOne 31 0
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Idol I Episode 6 Reactions

InspectorMegre
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 13, 2026

Amazing and ... hard

The setup - spoiled brat diva relapses into his immature state and runs away Se Na is left suffering. She got used to the cat... I wrote so many posts - search for them
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snoogaloo
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 13, 2026

Stupid twist at end

You're one of my millions of fans I've spent my life wooing? I feel so betrayed, I can't speak to you anymore. I vant to be alone!Such a good show should not have such a poorly written nonsensical plot twist that fits neither the character nor the storyline.
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Sweet0Girl
1 people found this review helpful
Jan 9, 2026

Ugh the ending was the worst!! Other than…

Ugh the ending was the worst!! Other than that a solid ep. Really hate the prosecutors father basically telling him to convict someone without evidence.
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ShelleyB_xoxo
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 7, 2026

Six episodes in — everyone’s suspicious and nothing is clear

Episode 6 leaves me genuinely unsure of who the murderer could be — at this point, everyone feels like a suspect. We learn that Ra-ik’s mother and Kang Woo-seong signed a contract behind Ra-ik’s back, which only reinforces how little control he’s ever had over his own life. There’s also something increasingly cagey about the CEO that’s becoming harder to ignore.We also get more insight into Maeng Se-na’s past, particularly the regret she carries about the last time she saw her father. These quieter moments help ground her character and add emotional depth amid the growing tension.Things come to a head when Ra-ik discovers Se-na’s fan merchandise, making it impossible to ignore that she’s his fan. Whether this reveal was intentional or accidental remains unclear, but it undeniably shifts the dynamic between them. As for Park Chung Jae, the drama hasn’t confirmed anything, but personally, his behaviour reads as deeply protective — perhaps even driven by unspoken feelings — which adds another layer of uncertainty rather than clarity.Six episodes in, the pacing is starting to feel slow. I understand the need to peel back the layers carefully, but I’m still left asking the same questions: why was Kang Woo-seong murdered, who did it, and why is the romance between Ra-ik and Maeng Se-na moving at such a cautious pace?Right now, it feels like the drama is deliberately withholding answers while tightening control around Ra-ik — which makes me think the truth will ultimately be about ownership and power rather than passion.

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MANTA
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 7, 2026

8/10

That was a good plot twist. I didn't expect that guy to be the one who started the legal chaos. I suspected he did something behind Raik's back, but not that. It makes me wonder if the prosecutor knew about this after interrogating Raik's mother. It made me even more convinced that the CEO is behind Wooseong’s death. He may not have killed him himself, but he could've ordered someone to do it. The manager, maybe?
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Critica sin filtro
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 7, 2026

Forced Conflict, No Payoff

Episode 6 continues to drift between romance, jealous looks, and the ex-girlfriend subplot, but without adding real tension or progression. The emotional focus shifts to a manufactured conflict when the idol discovers a box of fan merchandise in the lawyer’s home.The problem is that this revelation makes little narrative sense. He has known from the beginning that she is a fan, and their relationship has been built on that premise. The script frames his disappointment as meaningful, yet never explains why this discovery suddenly becomes an issue.Instead of exploring boundaries, power imbalance, or ethical concerns, the episode relies on vague reactions and silent frustration. The result is a conflict that feels imposed rather than earned.By this point, the romance advances not through development, but through convenience, reinforcing the sense that the story is driven by necessity rather than logic.

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