A Robin Hood Concept Lost in Palace Politics
My Secret romance presents itself as a Robin Hood–style story, inspired by the Korean folk hero Hong Gil-dong. The concept is interesting: a female protagonist excluded from society because of her birth, forced to exist outside the system.
However, episode one quickly sidelines that idea. The “Robin Hood” angle works more as an excuse than a driving force, while the story falls back into familiar sageuk territory: palace intrigue, power struggles, political marriages, and corruption.
The heroine is portrayed as almost superhuman — jumping across rooftops and escaping danger with little effort — which removes tension and risk. On top of that, romantic interest is introduced too early, before the social conflict has time to breathe.
There is potential here, but the first episode makes it clear that the series chooses safety over bold storytelling.
If you’re looking for a classic palace drama, this might work.
If you expected a sharper Robin Hood–style adventure, this probably isn’t it.
However, episode one quickly sidelines that idea. The “Robin Hood” angle works more as an excuse than a driving force, while the story falls back into familiar sageuk territory: palace intrigue, power struggles, political marriages, and corruption.
The heroine is portrayed as almost superhuman — jumping across rooftops and escaping danger with little effort — which removes tension and risk. On top of that, romantic interest is introduced too early, before the social conflict has time to breathe.
There is potential here, but the first episode makes it clear that the series chooses safety over bold storytelling.
If you’re looking for a classic palace drama, this might work.
If you expected a sharper Robin Hood–style adventure, this probably isn’t it.
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