This acc is not a " ML fan "We've even argued with this account before because we disagree with their…
Yes I really think we need to be serious about this. It always seems to be JJY who receives hate, while trolls and negative comments often get a lot of likes. Time and time again, itâs JJY who is mentioned in these situations. Now, think about this if someone writes a hateful comment about Jiarui and that comment ends up getting many likes, wouldnât that strike you as odd? Wouldnât you start asking yourself who is supporting this kind of negativity? It doesnât make sense for random people to boost hateful comments like that without some reason. Given how active JJYâs fans are here, itâs natural to suspect that they might be the ones engaging or maybe even accidentally fueling this negativity. It makes you question the dynamics of these comment sections and why some people are always targeted while others seem to get attention for trolling.
This acc is not a " ML fan "We've even argued with this account before because we disagree with their…
Honestly itâs always the ML fans who end up being toxic. I havenât seen JJY fans hating on Jiarui at all theyâre actually super supportive and always hyping the Jilu CPs like crazy. Itâs honestly kind of refreshing to see a fanbase that spreads positivity instead of drama. The difference between the groups is so obvious, and it really shows how differently people can behave depending on who they stan.
This acc is not a " ML fan "We've even argued with this account before because we disagree with their…
Then can you explain how that person who constantly posts hateful comments about JJY and her fans gets so many likes? Those comments are flooded with likes from people who agree with the hate. The likes keep piling up, showing just how many people are on the same page and fully support the negativity. Itâs obvious that the hate isnât coming from just one person anymore
Ngl who made her the villain? Because nobody forced that title on her she picked it up herself and ran with it.Sheâs…
Itâs okay, I donât care which men she wants or talks to. Thatâs not the problem. What makes her the villain is the faces she makes at other girls. She doesnât need to compete or act like that. She just needs to be normal and mind her own business.
So, I first liked Min Gee, then saw Min Sue and how friendly she was and liked her too. But that final episode,…
Ngl who made her the villain? Because nobody forced that title on her she picked it up herself and ran with it.Sheâs over here throwing looks and making faces at other girls just because sheâs desperate for a manâs attention. That insecurity is loud. Instead of checking the situation, sheâs busy competing with women who arenât even thinking about her. Even Dex looks completely speechless watching her flip-flop emotions every five minutes. One minute sheâs all in, the next minute sheâs switching sides like nothing happened. The lack of self awareness is crazy. Girl seriously needs to calm down and figure out what she actually wants because this messy behavior is not it.
He could have never been happy bcs he loved beak ajin
You can love someone and later forget them. Itâs not like you will love a person forever if they never loved you back, but the writer chose this kind of ending anyway
I didnât like the ending because Jun Seo did not get the justice or happiness he deserved. He suffered so much throughout the story, yet in the end, it felt like all his pain was ignored. Instead of giving him healing, peace, or a chance to live normally, the ending only showed more sadness. It made his entire journey feel pointless, like he struggled for nothing. The ending also felt rushed and incomplete, as if the author did not care enough to fully finish his story properly. I wanted to see Jun Seo grow, heal, and finally be free from his past, but the ending took that away. Thatâs why the ending felt so unfair and disappointing to me.
People really need to stop confusing trauma with entitlement. Having a painful past does not make you morally superior and it does not give you permission to emotionally damage others. A sad life is not a free pass to lie, manipulate, use, and discard people when they are no longer useful. Pain explains behavior, but it does not excuse it, and it definitely does not erase responsibility.
Saying she âhad no choiceâ is honestly one of the weakest arguments you can make. There is always a choice between hurting someone and being honest with them. She chose to emotionally depend on Ingang when it benefited her, then withdrew when it didnât. That is not survival, that is emotional selfishness. Ingang wasnât just âdepressed.â He was a person who was already struggling and then had the one person he trusted emotionally disappear from him. When someone is in a fragile mental state, abandonment isnât just sad it is devastating.
And stop pretending suicide exists in isolation. It doesnât. People donât just wake up and decide to die for no reason. It is almost always a combination of mental illness and what they are put through emotionally. Being âthe last hopeâ is not symbolic, it means influence, responsibility, and impact. No, she didnât physically cause his death, but emotional damage can kill just as easily as physical harm. You canât escape accountability just because the injury wasnât visible.
Now about Junseo calling him obsessive and evil while excusing her behavior completely is biased and dishonest. He wasnât perfect, but at least he wasnât living a double life. If exposing the truth makes you look bad, then the truth is not the problem your actions are. Truth is not evil just because it comes out when you donât want it to. The real betrayal didnât happen when the truth was revealed. It happened when people around her were lied to and emotionally misled for years.
She didnât âprotect herself.â She protected her image. There is a difference. Protecting yourself does not require wrecking other people mentally. Healing does not involve dragging people into your chaos and watching them drown while you call it coping. Self-preservation that destroys others is not survival, it is selfishness dressed up as suffering.
And no, she did not owe Junseo love. But she did owe people honesty. She owed boundaries instead of manipulation. She owed respect instead of emotional games. Being helped by someone does not make you their property, but using people while refusing accountability makes you something else entirely.
She is not a helpless victim. She is not a villain either. She is a broken person who made harmful decisions and left damage behind her. You donât get to rewrite reality just because you like her. You donât get to erase wounds just because you sympathize with her pain.
Honestly I canât help but feel so bad for Junseo. đ Heâs been holding onto Ajin for so long, even though itâs clear sheâs not the one for him. Watching him struggle with his feelings, trying to stay strong while still being hurt, is heartbreaking. He deserves so much more than this constant pain and uncertainty. I really hope he can find the courage to let go of Ajin, focus on himself, and start finding happiness in his own life
Saying she âhad no choiceâ is honestly one of the weakest arguments you can make. There is always a choice between hurting someone and being honest with them. She chose to emotionally depend on Ingang when it benefited her, then withdrew when it didnât. That is not survival, that is emotional selfishness. Ingang wasnât just âdepressed.â He was a person who was already struggling and then had the one person he trusted emotionally disappear from him. When someone is in a fragile mental state, abandonment isnât just sad it is devastating.
And stop pretending suicide exists in isolation. It doesnât. People donât just wake up and decide to die for no reason. It is almost always a combination of mental illness and what they are put through emotionally. Being âthe last hopeâ is not symbolic, it means influence, responsibility, and impact. No, she didnât physically cause his death, but emotional damage can kill just as easily as physical harm. You canât escape accountability just because the injury wasnât visible.
Now about Junseo calling him obsessive and evil while excusing her behavior completely is biased and dishonest. He wasnât perfect, but at least he wasnât living a double life. If exposing the truth makes you look bad, then the truth is not the problem your actions are. Truth is not evil just because it comes out when you donât want it to. The real betrayal didnât happen when the truth was revealed. It happened when people around her were lied to and emotionally misled for years.
She didnât âprotect herself.â She protected her image. There is a difference. Protecting yourself does not require wrecking other people mentally. Healing does not involve dragging people into your chaos and watching them drown while you call it coping. Self-preservation that destroys others is not survival, it is selfishness dressed up as suffering.
And no, she did not owe Junseo love. But she did owe people honesty. She owed boundaries instead of manipulation. She owed respect instead of emotional games. Being helped by someone does not make you their property, but using people while refusing accountability makes you something else entirely.
She is not a helpless victim. She is not a villain either. She is a broken person who made harmful decisions and left damage behind her. You donât get to rewrite reality just because you like her. You donât get to erase wounds just because you sympathize with her pain.
She suffered, yes.
But others paid the price.
Stop confusing sympathy with innocence.