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Welcome to Waikiki korean drama review
Completed
Welcome to Waikiki
0 people found this review helpful
by Rei
May 8, 2025
20 of 20 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.5

An Octopus Costume and a Gut Punch: Waikiki’s Surprising Emotional Curveball

Some dramas sneak up on you like a soft breeze. Others slam through your emotional walls like a marching band in clown wigs—and Welcome to Waikiki belongs gloriously to the latter. It’s wild. It’s absurd. It involves being trapped in a giant octopus suit, enduring rogue hair removal cream incidents, and navigating baby poop disasters. But beneath all that beautifully deranged exterior lies a drama that understands the quiet war of adulting: the slow, unglamorous hustle toward your dreams, the ache of self-doubt, and the healing magic of being surrounded by people who never stop rooting for you—even when you're wearing a lion costume in the middle of a film audition.

At its core, Waikiki is about three friends—Kang Dong-gu (Kim Jung-hyun), Lee Joon-ki (Lee Yi-kyung), and Bong Doo-sik (Son Seung-won)—who are clinging to their creative dreams while managing a failing guesthouse in Itaewon. The place is falling apart. Their bank account is allergic to commas. And then one day, a baby and her single mom, Han Yoon-ah (Jung In-sun), arrive out of nowhere and change everything. What begins as a simple comedic setup turns into something much richer: a story about makeshift families, the resilience of young adults trying to find their place, and the deep emotional rewards of not giving up—even when everything tells you to.

Let’s start with what made Waikiki not just a comedy but a statement piece wrapped in laughter: its women.

For a drama that aired in 2018, Welcome to Waikiki was decades ahead in how it portrayed its female leads. These weren’t just love interests or side dishes to male-centric narratives—these women moved the story. Han Yoon-ah, the single mother, is a masterclass in softness being mistaken for fragility. She never once raises her voice, but her boundaries are iron-clad. She doesn’t let trauma define her, nor does she perform resilience for applause. She simply lives—delicately, powerfully, and on her own terms. When she tells Dong-gu, “Go to Dubai. I’ll be here when you return,” it isn’t just an indirect proposal. It’s a mic drop moment in emotional maturity.

Then there’s Kang Seo-jin (Go Won-hee), Dong-gu’s sister, and perhaps the most emotionally intelligent person in the entire guesthouse. She’s a dreamer, yes, but never desperate. She slaps a harasser mid-job interview and walks away from her “dream job” with her dignity intact. And Min Soo-ah (Lee Joo-woo)—once a fashion model, now broke and living in the same guesthouse as her ex—isn’t reduced to comic relief. She’s given the space to crumble, rebuild, and confess her feelings under anesthesia (as one does). All three women make the first move in their respective relationships. They initiate the first kiss. They speak their truths. They are never accessories—they are architects of their own arcs.

This dynamic, where female characters drive their own narratives without overshadowing or being overshadowed, is nothing short of revolutionary for its time. And the men? They’re beautifully messy. Dong-gu is neurotic and temperamental, but he’s never controlling. Joon-ki is flamboyant and goofy, but his pain is real, especially when faced with the slow death of his acting dreams. And Doo-sik, the quietest of the trio, is a soft soul hiding under layers of hesitation. The three of them may start the show as comedic clichés, but by the end, they are fully-realized, heartbreakingly human.

What Waikiki does best is balance. It takes the most ridiculous moments—Joon-ki ended up stalking his own fans because he never had one before, or Dong-gu and Yoon-ah somehow stuck planning their wedding that was paid by their landlord just because they lied to avoid paying rent—and pairs them with scenes so emotionally raw they catch you off guard. The image of Seo-jin, alone on her birthday, staring at two uneaten steaks while waiting for Joon-ki, is one of the most quietly devastating moments in the show. It’s a comedy that’s not afraid to pause, take a deep breath, and ask you to feel something real.

And let’s not forget the soundtrack. “Waikiki Wonderland” by Ulala Session and “Would You Come In” by MIND U provide the energetic, slightly unhinged tempo that mirrors the daily disasters of guesthouse life. But it’s the softer tracks like “Grown Up” by Cho Eunae and “Cheer Up” by Choi Sangyeop that land the emotional gut punches. When Yoon-ah stands alone in the hallway questioning her worth, and that guitar starts strumming? That’s not just a scene—that’s an emotional mugging. And we thank it for that.

Is it perfect? No. Some of the tropes are familiar, some jokes a bit too slapstick, and the parade of side characters might be overwhelming if you’re trying to keep track of names like it’s a K-pop lineup. The 20-episode length may also seem daunting to those used to breezier rom-coms. But Waikiki earns every one of those minutes. You stay not because you’re binging, but because this wild house of misfits starts to feel like home.

The final episode ties everything with a bow—not a neat, sterile ribbon, but one that’s frayed at the edges and lovingly patched together. Joon-ki almost throws away his career for love, only to be hilariously saved by a bigger scandal breaking just before his press conference. Doo-sik, passive for most of the show, is finally nudged forward when Soo-ah confesses under anesthesia. And Dong-gu? He gets rejected mid-proposal, only for Yoon-ah to gift him something even better: trust. Faith. And finally—acceptance, as her daughter calls him “Appa” in a tearjerker of a goodbye scene.

Verdict:
Welcome to Waikiki may have been marketed as a slapstick young-adult comedy, but what it delivered was a soul-soothing story of found family, emotional growth, and the kind of love that doesn’t always shout but shows up anyway. It’s about failing spectacularly, crying about it, then putting on a silly costume and trying again the next day. In an industry flooded with love triangles and chaebol clichés, Waikiki carved its own little corner of heartfelt chaos—and it will stay with you long after the final credits roll.

So if you’re looking for something that will make you laugh so hard you snort and cry so suddenly you check if onions are nearby, Welcome to Waikiki is your next stop

Final score: 9/10
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