My Brain Hurts but I Loved It
As a huge fan of Korean reality game shows (Running Man, Busted—yes please), The Devil’s Plan was a wild shift from laughter to pure mental torture. The set? Phenomenal. The living quarters, the game room, the prison, the secret room—chef’s kiss. But the games? Mentally painful. I never understood the rules during the explanation—only once someone lost or cried. And yes, people cried. That’s what made me curious to begin with, and I totally get it now.
What really hooked me was the cast dynamics. Ha SeokJin = silent but deadly. Orbit? The resilient zombie-genius you can't kill. He got dragged, but I admired his heart and strategy (controversial and annoying for some). The whole “strong vs weak” alliance drama was peak social psychology—this show tested not just IQ but EQ, pushing everyone to their edge. I genuinely felt like my brain had to reboot between episodes, but it was so worth it. If you're into logic games, betrayal, survival, and social chaos, this is your next obsession. Just make sure your brain is well-rested—mine almost melted.
What really hooked me was the cast dynamics. Ha SeokJin = silent but deadly. Orbit? The resilient zombie-genius you can't kill. He got dragged, but I admired his heart and strategy (controversial and annoying for some). The whole “strong vs weak” alliance drama was peak social psychology—this show tested not just IQ but EQ, pushing everyone to their edge. I genuinely felt like my brain had to reboot between episodes, but it was so worth it. If you're into logic games, betrayal, survival, and social chaos, this is your next obsession. Just make sure your brain is well-rested—mine almost melted.
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