ok, don't quote me on this, but I think that the Disintegration ( the weird power MQY used to defeat QY) is supposed…
Correct. The disintegration technique was supposed to make his power surge, but because he had given it all to Zhao the only thing left in his inner body was the poison, so the disintegration pushed it out of his body and effectively cured him.
Even though your guess is right , they shouldn't have release too many previews 🥲 Because of those previews…
So you will be skipping the parts you have NOT seen in order to watch those you have ALREADY seen in the teasers, which you could have chosen not to watch anyway. Just asking..., did you accidentally hit your head? 🤔
Only one episode today. Well, it seems my guess was right about the man in black. Teaser Ep 34https://wetv.vip/en/play/i6yekmap7cxnuy9/n41011tdnyz-Teaser_EP34%3A_Generation_to_GenerationTeaser…
I suspect about everybody had already guessed who the man in black was, that's probably why the teaser reveals his identity. At this point it's not a spoiler. 😂
All I have to say about A Xiu, I don't understand what is it that those two women are fighting about. The guy is boring, self-centred, disloyal, utterly uninteresting, artistically mediocre at best, short, ugly and has zero personality and a wart on his face. WTAF??!!
Yuzhi is not an honest, straightforward guy. He's crafty, for most of the drama he's been using fake excuses to try to separate Zhao from Qing Yan, when his real reason is that he wants her for himself. He also knows Zhao loves Qing Yan, but he doesn't care about making her miserable through separation. I don't like him at all and I don't feel sorry for him. I predict he'll become a bad guy in future episodes.
A lot of the “battle” is actually not being shown but inferred via conversations.- so MQY and building his…
Thanks again, Soocrafty, much appreciated. That list goes to show how ridiculously and unnecessarily complicated the storyline is. Having 9 different whole groups of people to identify and follow is crazy. If that weren't enough, the plot started and finished secondary arcs in the early episodes, which are the ones that should be tracing where the story is going. This is a 0/10 for the script from me.
Themes in a nutshell:1) the previous generations strayed from the founder’s vision and left a mess for this…
Thanks, Gekijo. I did gather that info from the 10 eps I've watched so far, but who is who and what they are up to..., this has got to be the worst laid out storyline I have come across in a cdrama in the last 5 years, and I chain-watch them.
A lot of the “battle” is actually not being shown but inferred via conversations.- so MQY and building his…
Thank you so much for your effort to explain it, Soocrafty. Alas, I'm also having difficulty understanding some of your sentences. I think I'm just going to drop this series, I can't face 27 more episodes of the same mess.
I've just finished ep 10 and I'm about to drop this series because I cannot make head or tails of the storyline. I am a well seasoned cdrama watcher and this has never happened to me before. All I can tell is there are a few human sects and a demons sect; there are also grievances between the sects about who killed whom and why someone inherited the leadership instead of someone else. Is there any better summary/synopsis of what the hell this plot is about? Thanks in advance.
For those wondering why Dan was laughing so much when Wan Yin told him her real name (Cui Hua), here is the result of an AI search.
"Cui hua" (翠花 - cuì huā) literally translates to "emerald/jade flower" or "bluish-green flower". Culturally, it is a stereotypical, old-fashioned, and rustic name often associated with rural Chinese girls, sometimes used in jokes or as a colloquial term for a country waitress.
Common Uses and Meanings:
Cultural Stereotype: Historically used for girls in rural areas, implying a simple, uneducated, or rustic persona. It is often referenced in popular comedy phrases like "翠花,上酸菜" (Cuihua, serve the sauerkraut). Literal Translation: Represents a, 翠 (cuì - jadeite/bluish-green) and 花 (huā - flower).
and degrading men to just NPCs can't do anything to the fl and accept everything from her and he is it simp to…
How ridiculous! Why should a woman think from a man's perspective? Women don't owe you. As for the characters, the ML is still portrayed as honest and responsible, and now he's also fallen for the FL as she's also fallen for him because this is a romance series, hello??. The 2ML had been in love with her forever, so he's still trying to get her. Stop projecting your resentment on fictional characters on a fictional tv show, it's cringe.
I agree that's she's been really rude and dismissive. I've stuck with it cause I figured the character was having…
Yes, the ML character is an array of virtues while the FL is obnoxious. As I said, misogyny by the book. The FL actress has also been given awful makeup that makes her look like a wax figure, while the ML actor looks young and fresh. Nasty producers.
"Cui hua" (翠花 - cuì huā) literally translates to "emerald/jade flower" or "bluish-green flower". Culturally, it is a stereotypical, old-fashioned, and rustic name often associated with rural Chinese girls, sometimes used in jokes or as a colloquial term for a country waitress.
Common Uses and Meanings:
Cultural Stereotype: Historically used for girls in rural areas, implying a simple, uneducated, or rustic persona. It is often referenced in popular comedy phrases like "翠花,上酸菜" (Cuihua, serve the sauerkraut).
Literal Translation: Represents a, 翠 (cuì - jadeite/bluish-green) and 花 (huā - flower).