# of Watchers: 19
Reviews: 1 user
On the night of On Seo Jin's engagement, On Do Hyeon saved her from being harassed. "Please don't leave me. I'm scared..." From then on, their 19-year-long brother-sister relationship changed. (Source: TopReels app) Edit Translation
- English
- Español
- Português (Brasil)
- 한국어
Cast & Credits
- Park Shi AnOn Seo JinMain Role
- Kim Se YongSeo Min UUnknown
- Lee Ha Neul Unknown
Reviews
This review may contain spoilers
Wicked Just for You — because someone had to suffer.
This drama was the narrative equivalent of rubbernecking a train wreck — grotesque, chaotic, and somehow impossible to look away from. I don’t know why I sat through this drama; it felt like forcing myself to chew through charred bread while my brain screamed “just stop,” but my eyeballs refused to comply.The central relationship — a non-blood sibling bond — could have been compelling if framed with nuance. Instead, it’s a mess wrapped in a marketing lie. The so-called “progressive” sibling dynamic leans more into toxic gaslighting than the nurturing that I expected. I could have bought this Kool-Aid if the fiancé had been the actual abuser and the brother the protective buffer — but no, we get gaslighting packaged as growth and a female lead whose metaphorical blindness is so unearned you start wondering if the script misplaced her character arc.
Why doesn’t Seo Jin marry her endlessly forgiving fiancé? Why is she so predictably, stupidly not choosing Min Woo? And speaking of Min Woo, he’s the only likeable human in this circus. By episode thirty, I’m shipping Seojin and Min Woo just to preserve my sanity. Did I not already say Min Woo’s the best??
And to top it off, the production isn’t any better. Technical execution only compounds the mess. Continuity errors abound — glasses on and off in the same scene, “rich” characters recycling the same outfits for days, exaggerated acting that borders on parody. Even the blood that came out of noses started effervescing. Likewise, some sequences border on the absurd -- a guy dragged to jail tied with rope, and another poor dude sent to the hospital twice in a row like he’s on a loyalty punch card.
Except for Min Woo, every character feels like a caricature rendered in a crayon. In the end, this drama isn’t the worst rendition of its trope, but it’s certainly borderline. I endured it, but only as one endures a spectacle of failure — not for resonance, not for legacy, but because sometimes you can’t look away from a dumpster fire.
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