Stayed for the FL
It was a classic reborn revenge plot with a twist—you could take multiple attempts at it and even drag a few unlucky souls back in time with you. (Conditions apply, of course.) Honestly, watching the characters treat this once-in-a-millennium chance like a casual “undo” button had me fuming. They abused it so recklessly, hitting reset like it was a video game save file, completely undermining the gravity of their second chance. And since they knew they’d come back alive, they strutted around carelessly, botching investigations, making absurd decisions, and generally treating life-and-death stakes like a mild inconvenience.
But what truly sent me into an existential spiral was the sheer absurdity of the plot’s central conflict. For reasons beyond mortal comprehension, the entire universe—uncountable galaxies, stars, planets, Earth with its seven continents, four oceans, billions of people, and trillions of living beings—was being tossed back and forth in a cosmic time loop… all for the sake of saving the FL’s uncle. Yes, you read that right. Her uncle. A man whose fate, mind you, was as doomed as a fly heading straight for a bug zapper. Imagine the laws of time and space bending, rewriting history itself, just to prolong this one man's inevitable demise. Unreal.
The tomfoolery alone was enough to make me rage-quit the drama, but alas, I stayed for the FL. She’s an absolute stunner, and her fight sequences? Crisp, clean, and (hopefully) not performed by a double. Her acting was solid, too. As for the ML… well, he was there. Not offensive, not impressive—just existing. Their chemistry, unfortunately, was a tragic misfire, like watching two AI-generated avatars attempt seduction with pre-programmed eye contact. And the villain? Let’s not even dignify that clown with a discussion.
Overall, this drama was an experience—not one I’d recommend unless you have a peculiar fondness for self-inflicted suffering. In fact, I’d strongly suggest watching paint dry instead. At least that has a satisfying conclusion.
But what truly sent me into an existential spiral was the sheer absurdity of the plot’s central conflict. For reasons beyond mortal comprehension, the entire universe—uncountable galaxies, stars, planets, Earth with its seven continents, four oceans, billions of people, and trillions of living beings—was being tossed back and forth in a cosmic time loop… all for the sake of saving the FL’s uncle. Yes, you read that right. Her uncle. A man whose fate, mind you, was as doomed as a fly heading straight for a bug zapper. Imagine the laws of time and space bending, rewriting history itself, just to prolong this one man's inevitable demise. Unreal.
The tomfoolery alone was enough to make me rage-quit the drama, but alas, I stayed for the FL. She’s an absolute stunner, and her fight sequences? Crisp, clean, and (hopefully) not performed by a double. Her acting was solid, too. As for the ML… well, he was there. Not offensive, not impressive—just existing. Their chemistry, unfortunately, was a tragic misfire, like watching two AI-generated avatars attempt seduction with pre-programmed eye contact. And the villain? Let’s not even dignify that clown with a discussion.
Overall, this drama was an experience—not one I’d recommend unless you have a peculiar fondness for self-inflicted suffering. In fact, I’d strongly suggest watching paint dry instead. At least that has a satisfying conclusion.
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