

Lee Seo-yeon, a free-spirited woman, is having a secret affair with Park Ji-hyung, an architect who has a fiancée. Upon hearing that Ji-hyung's parents set the date for his wedding, Seo-yeon splits up with him. But she has no time to lament over her painful breakup, as she gets diagnosed with early on-set Alzheimer's, a very unlikely disease for a 30-year-old woman. Ji-hyung happens to learn the shocking fact, and he breaks off his engagement only two days before the wedding to return to his ex-girlfriend. Despite vehement opposition from his parents and even from Seo-yeon herself, he never gives up on her and marries her without delay. The doting husband is devoted to taking care of his ailing wife, who is losing her ability to remember. Despite her distressing condition, the couple tries to hang on to love and experience it to the end. They have a baby girl and find happiness in their married life from time to time, even though both are well aware that a tragic end awaits them.


The story of a middle-aged man and woman who have given up any dreams of a passionate romance, but are both afraid of living and dying alone.


As a single, unmarried woman in her mid-thirties, Lee Yeon-jae (Kim Sun-a) is meek and timid, considered a spinster by society. After spending ten years working for the same travel company owned by Kang Chul-man, she is falsely accused of stealing from a client. In addition to enduring the accusations of her superiors, she is diagnosed with gallbladder cancer with approximately six months left to live. Mustering up her courage, Yeon-jae resigns and embraces her remaining six months of life.
Embarking on her first vacation alone, she splurges on clothes and flies first-class to Okinawa Island, Japan, where she runs into the man of her dreams, Kang Ji-wook (Lee Dong-wook), who happens to be the son of her former boss. Ji-wook is a rich young man, cynical and lifeless, until he falls in love with Yeon-jae. Together they live out a series of misadventures, both comical and bittersweet, as Yeon-jae completes each dream in her Bucket List.
Embarking on her first vacation alone, she splurges on clothes and flies first-class to Okinawa Island, Japan, where she runs into the man of her dreams, Kang Ji-wook (Lee Dong-wook), who happens to be the son of her former boss. Ji-wook is a rich young man, cynical and lifeless, until he falls in love with Yeon-jae. Together they live out a series of misadventures, both comical and bittersweet, as Yeon-jae completes each dream in her Bucket List.


About a terminally ill man who enters into a contract relationship with a woman that he falls heads over heels with and has a connection from an incident that changed her life completely and how they both help each other get over their past and present.


The stories are similiar is that's about a terminally ill patient, given a second chance at life after getting a heart transplant and now lives each day to the fullest until she meets a man that changes her life.


The two are similar in that -- Night Drama is about Japan's emergency medical care system, which suffers from a severe labor shortage. Overtime work per doctor in emergency medical care rises, with a need for more experienced doctors being the cause of the problem. Emergency medical care at night is worse than during the daytime. The Hakuoukai Asahi Kaihin Hospital, a hospital branch of the Hakuoukai Group, takes steps to reform the emergency medical care system by creating a night doctor system, which is looked down upon by their daytime counterparts for taking all kinds of cases, especially the ones that no other hospital wants and therefore creating issues for the day time doctors at least that's how they see it. Cutbacks and hate from different angles start to threaten the night system. Still, teamwork and dedication, under the steadfast leadership of their supervisor, begin to turn things around.


It reminds me of Black Dog, which focuses on the public side of education, whereas Hagwon focuses on the private side without the romance aspect. One focuses on teachers in public schools while the other navigates the life of a lecturer in a Hagwon, and of course the level of services one provides over the other,


Both dramas are about wives who have to start over because of a dead rich husband or a cheating one.
In Rose War Gu Nian's husband, Song Jia Chen, is a successful lawyer and their family of three lived happily. However, everything changes when Song Jia Chen was not only embroiled in a crime but also caught cheating on her. Gu Nian finds work at a law firm through Feng Sheng's referral and attempts to start over.
In Rose War Gu Nian's husband, Song Jia Chen, is a successful lawyer and their family of three lived happily. However, everything changes when Song Jia Chen was not only embroiled in a crime but also caught cheating on her. Gu Nian finds work at a law firm through Feng Sheng's referral and attempts to start over.


Another twisted and not very well outlined plotlines or storylines ... both have weak female leads , who lead on their counterparts and just twisted and messy all around.


Both are set in sort of the same time period -- minus the time travel aspect but both deal with crimes and criming solving within a certain period of time when policing wasn't so cut and dry or as cemented as it is today


Both are set in sort of the same time period -- minus the time travel aspect but both deal with crimes and criming solving within a certain period of time when policing wasn't so cut and dry or as cemented as it is today


Both have some kind of genetic mutation kind of feel to them and both feature the same Female Lead with a few differences.