One thing I applaud about Tanrak is his courage, to face his feelings, understand it and act on it, which went against the things he had been thought. Given the time period and his environment in general, it's a really tremendous step that he took. He decided to trust in himself and his feelings, I can only hope to achieve that level of self-belief.
It's pissing me off that Zhan Wang is actively courting someone who has had lived ones die on him or get injured, branded as a jinx since birth while not informing him about the brain tumour he has which has been diagnosed as terminal. That's just so selfish
Yuma's idealistic version of what homosexual relationships and society's reaction to them is making his partner (ex) and his relationship with him miserable. Maybe I'm biased towards Itsuki because I relate much more to his worldview.
Sorry guys, for not hyperventilating and being all philosophical about this series, but they could have done a…
Personal perspectives are wild, because I thought Fourth did a phenomenal job portraying Tanrak's growing attraction to Barth. Given how he was taken in by the church following the death of his parents, who were very devout Catholics, his overall bearing [at least to me who grew up Catholic] is not strange. Yes he feels much more mature than he is, but with the little jokes he makes when he was with Barth in the beginning of this episode, it is very obvious he was warming up to him.
The 2nd couple is just too cute. The runtime is really killing the vibes though. It's probably a marketing strategy, to give the series more time to get popular before it finishes airing, but that's not fair to the weekly watchers.
Ps. Don't miss out on the post-credit scenes after each episode
16 episodes with a runtime of 40 minutes, that's a full length kdrama.