

If you loved the quiet comfort of summer strike, there’s a good chance you’ll vibe with little forest too. Both are slow-paced, healing stories about young women who walk away from the chaos of city life to reconnect with themselves in peaceful, rural settings.
In Little Forest, Hye-won finds her peace through cooking and nature — there’s something deeply soothing about watching her prepare meals with ingredients she grows herself. In Summer Strike, Yeo-reum escapes to a small seaside town, where doing “nothing” becomes her way of processing grief and burnout.
What makes both stories special is how they focus on the small, meaningful moments — a quiet meal, a walk through nature, a heartfelt conversation with a stranger. There’s no big drama, just the slow unfolding of self-discovery and healing.
They remind you that it’s okay to stop, breathe, and just be — and sometimes, that’s exactly what we need.
In Little Forest, Hye-won finds her peace through cooking and nature — there’s something deeply soothing about watching her prepare meals with ingredients she grows herself. In Summer Strike, Yeo-reum escapes to a small seaside town, where doing “nothing” becomes her way of processing grief and burnout.
What makes both stories special is how they focus on the small, meaningful moments — a quiet meal, a walk through nature, a heartfelt conversation with a stranger. There’s no big drama, just the slow unfolding of self-discovery and healing.
They remind you that it’s okay to stop, breathe, and just be — and sometimes, that’s exactly what we need.