Calling people brainless for disliking a drama is wild. We’re watching a show, not defending a PhD thesis. Some…
If you like the show, that’s great — enjoy it. But why hate people who are simply sharing their reviews? Everyone has the right to express their opinion as long as they’re not insulting others. That’s exactly why platforms have comment sections. A world where people can’t criticize or discuss things would be pretty boring. Many people commenting aren’t doing it out of hate — they’re just saying they got disconnected from the plot. And honestly, most of us don’t hate the people who still enjoy the show.
Some people form an opinion after the first bite of the cake, others after finishing the whole cake. But the taste of the cake doesn’t magically change. now I’m going to eat some cake.
Was considering watching this before because it seemed like an interesting premise but after waiting a few episodes…
I even imagined a scene where the FL holds an umbrella over him in the rain because he was once abandoned in the rain and fears it. That emotional K-drama moment was right there… and they still missed it.
one good thing to come out of this show is to see many like minded that also hate love triangles i truly believed…
love triangle only works if series are longer and no male lead has expressed interest to FL.. also series name is our universe and was supposed to be focused on baby. ML and FL falling in love...but they rushed it and took completely wrong way too fast. also added sad stories randomly....just comparing it with " Can this love be translated" which is great. , also hope " in your radiant season" will be good
Bedwetters, inability to get past the 2ML one sided affection for the FL isn't a sign of the Apocalypse in Kdramas.Hollywood,…
Calling people brainless for disliking a drama is wild. We’re watching a show, not defending a PhD thesis. Some of us just feel the SML love triangle hijacked the story.
Bedwetters, inability to get past the 2ML one sided affection for the FL isn't a sign of the Apocalypse in Kdramas.Hollywood,…
Is this another Ragebait well I am going to take it..... First of all, insulting people as ‘bedwetters’ or implying they lack intelligence just because they don’t enjoy the same show is not really a strong argument. It just makes the discussion unnecessarily hostile.
People criticizing the show aren’t doing it because they can’t understand ‘breadcrumbs’ or subtle storytelling — most of them understood the premise perfectly well. The issue many viewers have is with the execution and direction the story has taken.
Yes, tropes like misunderstandings, one-sided crushes, and love triangles exist in storytelling. But the fact that a trope exists doesn’t automatically mean it’s being used well. Viewers are allowed to feel when a trope starts dominating the story rather than supporting it.
For many people, the SML love triangle started taking too much space, which shifted focus away from what originally made the show interesting. Also, audiences reacting to episodes as they air is completely normal. That’s literally how television works. Viewers discuss pacing, writing, and character focus week by week. Saying people must watch the entire production before having any opinion ignores how media discussion has always worked.
And let’s be honest — liking or disliking a show doesn’t require decoding every background music cue or micro-expression like it’s a detective investigation. Sometimes viewers simply react to what the narrative emphasizes on screen. If a love triangle becomes the central tension for multiple episodes, fans are naturally going to comment on it, especially if they preferred the earlier focus of the story.
Different viewers value different aspects of storytelling — pacing, emotional development, character balance, or originality. Some people still enjoy the direction the show is taking, and that’s completely fine. Others feel it lost some of its initial charm. That’s also completely valid. Discussion spaces exist precisely so people can share those different perspectives without being told they’re immature or incapable of understanding the story.
At the end of the day, criticism doesn’t mean hatred for the show. In many cases it means viewers cared enough about the premise to notice when the focus shifted in ways they didn’t enjoy.
Well, that was another addition to the ‘why did I watch this?’ collection. I’m convinced C-dramas are a…
This is the writers’ problem — they lost the focus. It’s like there’s a rulebook: add a love triangle, make the ML’s story sad, and forget the flow. One episode is all happy, the next is all misery. Shows like Can This Love Be Translated? prove good K-dramas can still exist, but it’s getting harder to find them these days.😅
Some people form an opinion after the first bite of the cake, others after finishing the whole cake. But the taste of the cake doesn’t magically change.
now I’m going to eat some cake.
First of all, insulting people as ‘bedwetters’ or implying they lack intelligence just because they don’t enjoy the same show is not really a strong argument. It just makes the discussion unnecessarily hostile.
People criticizing the show aren’t doing it because they can’t understand ‘breadcrumbs’ or subtle storytelling — most of them understood the premise perfectly well. The issue many viewers have is with the execution and direction the story has taken.
Yes, tropes like misunderstandings, one-sided crushes, and love triangles exist in storytelling. But the fact that a trope exists doesn’t automatically mean it’s being used well. Viewers are allowed to feel when a trope starts dominating the story rather than supporting it.
For many people, the SML love triangle started taking too much space, which shifted focus away from what originally made the show interesting.
Also, audiences reacting to episodes as they air is completely normal. That’s literally how television works. Viewers discuss pacing, writing, and character focus week by week. Saying people must watch the entire production before having any opinion ignores how media discussion has always worked.
And let’s be honest — liking or disliking a show doesn’t require decoding every background music cue or micro-expression like it’s a detective investigation. Sometimes viewers simply react to what the narrative emphasizes on screen. If a love triangle becomes the central tension for multiple episodes, fans are naturally going to comment on it, especially if they preferred the earlier focus of the story.
Different viewers value different aspects of storytelling — pacing, emotional development, character balance, or originality. Some people still enjoy the direction the show is taking, and that’s completely fine. Others feel it lost some of its initial charm. That’s also completely valid. Discussion spaces exist precisely so people can share those different perspectives without being told they’re immature or incapable of understanding the story.
At the end of the day, criticism doesn’t mean hatred for the show. In many cases it means viewers cared enough about the premise to notice when the focus shifted in ways they didn’t enjoy.