50-Minute Test of Patience, Free Time, and Emotional Endurance
Tide of Love is the kind of show you decide to watch purely out of free will during your free time thinking it will be a light and enjoyable experience. However, once it starts, you quickly realize that you are signing up for a full 50 minutes of emotional resilience training. And you just have to really endure it all trying to make sense out of that shitty storyline.
The storytelling tries very hard to be romantic and heartfelt, but instead delivers an impressive amount of awkward moments that make you pause, sigh, and I just find my self laughing because what else to feel?
To its credit, Tide of Love does succeed in one thing: it keeps you watching, not because it is captivating, but because you want to see just how much more awkward it can become. It’s the type of show that works best if you enjoy cringe story with lots of cuts or need background entertainment while questioning your life choices.
Overall, Tide of Love is not something you casually recommend, but rather something you survive. A unique viewing experience, unintentionally funny, mildly exhausting, and strangely memorable.
The storytelling tries very hard to be romantic and heartfelt, but instead delivers an impressive amount of awkward moments that make you pause, sigh, and I just find my self laughing because what else to feel?
To its credit, Tide of Love does succeed in one thing: it keeps you watching, not because it is captivating, but because you want to see just how much more awkward it can become. It’s the type of show that works best if you enjoy cringe story with lots of cuts or need background entertainment while questioning your life choices.
Overall, Tide of Love is not something you casually recommend, but rather something you survive. A unique viewing experience, unintentionally funny, mildly exhausting, and strangely memorable.
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