For the fans still staying in the comment section, I don’t think there’s any point in fighting with haters. From their comments, it’s obvious most of them are here just to hate, not to give neutral criticism. It’s better to drown them out with positive comments instead.
Wow, Kim Jae wook as the second male lead? Am I out of touch with K dramas, since when did this happen? I’ve never seen the actor playing the male lead before,no shade
In my opinion, many people were just drawn in by the star-studded cast, lavish visuals, and the fresh idea of…
A contract marriage romcom is ALWAYS predictable😭 so I don’t know what major twists people expect. Good visuals and popular actors help but they can’t carry a drama on their own. The story still does most of the work. If the writing were truly as bad as some claim, it wouldn’t be this popular.
maybe i didnt watch the drama carefully ..but i have some questions ..if anybody knows answer please answer this:1…
2, 5, and 6 are not disclosed yet.
1) He hates her because HE cheated on his wife and Huiju coming to their house caused his wife to die from shock.
3) Obviously not. First of all, Ian has already said Huiju is the first person he liked and kissed. We’ve also seen in flashbacks that he liked her since high school. A Kdrama male lead wouldn’t be written as liking two women at the same time.
4) I think he started liking Huiju when she questioned the school’s discriminatory rules back in high school. I don’t think he liked Huiju after his brother’s marriage because he was still in high school then. That would mean the Queen Mother got married before even finishing high school.
Said it last week about who tried to poison Ian. People were overcomplicating it and treating it like some thriller.…
People on X were even making theories about one of the secretaries being the spy when the drama already showed from the beginning who the spy is😂Atp they’re just making up nonsense theories. It feels like they don’t even watch the drama properly, which is why they keep coming up with these weird takes.
Wow, this is rated higher than the previous two seasons. I’m a bit skeptical because of her hairstyle. I delayed watching season one for that reason and this one looks even worse. Now I’m really curious how the chemistry turns out.
If trying to discredit her work and making a sour face at every accomplishment is his way of caring and not even…
Yes, they’ve mentioned it too many times. From the way it’s going, it feels like they might try to whitewash it later by showing he was there in the hospital. But my main point is after neglecting her since she was born, they can’t suddenly frame it as deep love or strong care.
If trying to discredit her work and making a sour face at every accomplishment is his way of caring and not even…
I never blamed you. As an Asian, I don’t really believe in going no contact with parents either. But they could’ve just kept a distant relationship like this. Instead, it seems like they’re going for a route where everything gets forgiven later, where her father secretly cared for her all along but she wasn’t aware of it, which ends up framing her as the villain
1) He hates her because HE cheated on his wife and Huiju coming to their house caused his wife to die from shock.
3) Obviously not. First of all, Ian has already said Huiju is the first person he liked and kissed. We’ve also seen in flashbacks that he liked her since high school. A Kdrama male lead wouldn’t be written as liking two women at the same time.
4) I think he started liking Huiju when she questioned the school’s discriminatory rules back in high school.
I don’t think he liked Huiju after his brother’s marriage because he was still in high school then. That would mean the Queen Mother got married before even finishing high school.
But my main point is after neglecting her since she was born, they can’t suddenly frame it as deep love or strong care.
Instead, it seems like they’re going for a route where everything gets forgiven later, where her father secretly cared for her all along but she wasn’t aware of it, which ends up framing her as the villain