This review may contain spoilers
Cliche and Boring
It wasn't the worst but it wasn't the best. I mainly stuck around for the casting I enjoyed the regular scenes were they were living normally.
There's lots of things they dont really do well in this show.
FEMALE LEAD:
- She views humans as weak, so it would’ve been a powerful moment to show her strength as a human. Instead, it felt frustrating to see her become helpless and fearful when attacked by them. While that role reversal is interesting in theory, given how she treats humans, it becomes repetitive when she continues to fall into a damsel role that constantly requires the human male lead to step in. For example, the male lead getting shot to protect her could have been a defining moment for her to fight back and prove her capability to be powerful as a human. Considering she’s lived for over 1,000 years and mastered countless skills, it feels unrealistic that she never found an interest in learning basic combat/martial arts? Even if she didn't, you don't need strength to be strong, so it would've at least been better if she was more smarter to assess dangerous situations and be able to figure out how to safe herself or help others. In the end, it feels she's only most powerful with her fox powers which helps her feel protected, and act cocky because she knows she's stronger than humans. But is weak as a human, and rely on a human for protection.
ENDING:
- I don’t get why writers assume every story needs a happy ending. Sure, audiences say they want one, but that doesn’t mean it should be taken so literally every time. There’s a reason sad or bittersweet endings tend to be more memorable, they leave a stronger emotional impact and stay with you longer. Happy endings can still be powerful, but only when they feel earned and not like the typical “they all lived happily ever after” cliche. When that trope is overused, it becomes predictable, repetitive, and ultimately less meaningful.
- I honestly think she should’ve died, especially since the story makes such a big deal about fate being unchangeable, with the heavens and deities enforcing consequences for anyone who tries to alter it. Yet somehow, those rules don’t apply to her. Because she sacrificed herself for the one she loved, she’s suddenly exempt, allowed to live on and even keep her powers. It feels inconsistent and undermines the very stakes the story tried to establish.
- The villains were built up to feel intense and threatening, they drove the entire climax, but the payoff went nowhere. After all the buildup around soul-eating, killings, and the shaman’s power, everything gets resolved in an incredibly anticlimactic way. It doesn’t feel earned, and it weakens the stakes the story spent so long establishing. On top of that, the moment meant to push the female lead toward her “death” falls flat. Instead of a powerful or meaningful turning point, it comes down to a weak human with a rifle missing the shot, only for the male lead to step in and take it for her. It turns what should’ve been a high-impact, character-defining moment into something predictable and underwhelming like bruh.
- I understand that she chooses not to give up being a fox just to be with a human, but the story doesn’t clearly define what that choice means for her in the end. It lacks proper closure and skips over the emotional weight behind it. Before, being a fox had a clear meaning, it represented her freedom, her independence, and her defiance against the deities and the fate her older sister accepted. That identity was strong and intentional. But by the end, that meaning becomes unclear. Being a fox is her idenity and she doesn't want to sacarfice her idenity for love, but the story never explains what about it matters so deeply to her now. What does her fox identity truly mean in this new context? Why does it hold enough value that she’s willing to outlive her lover and accept her immortality? What does immortality mean to her?
Her acceptance feels surface-level, without showing the emotional consequences or growth that should come with such a heavy realization, making her character arc feel incomplete. Does the story provide enough depth for us to truly understand and appreciate the female lead’s decision to remain a fox?
There's lots of things they dont really do well in this show.
FEMALE LEAD:
- She views humans as weak, so it would’ve been a powerful moment to show her strength as a human. Instead, it felt frustrating to see her become helpless and fearful when attacked by them. While that role reversal is interesting in theory, given how she treats humans, it becomes repetitive when she continues to fall into a damsel role that constantly requires the human male lead to step in. For example, the male lead getting shot to protect her could have been a defining moment for her to fight back and prove her capability to be powerful as a human. Considering she’s lived for over 1,000 years and mastered countless skills, it feels unrealistic that she never found an interest in learning basic combat/martial arts? Even if she didn't, you don't need strength to be strong, so it would've at least been better if she was more smarter to assess dangerous situations and be able to figure out how to safe herself or help others. In the end, it feels she's only most powerful with her fox powers which helps her feel protected, and act cocky because she knows she's stronger than humans. But is weak as a human, and rely on a human for protection.
ENDING:
- I don’t get why writers assume every story needs a happy ending. Sure, audiences say they want one, but that doesn’t mean it should be taken so literally every time. There’s a reason sad or bittersweet endings tend to be more memorable, they leave a stronger emotional impact and stay with you longer. Happy endings can still be powerful, but only when they feel earned and not like the typical “they all lived happily ever after” cliche. When that trope is overused, it becomes predictable, repetitive, and ultimately less meaningful.
- I honestly think she should’ve died, especially since the story makes such a big deal about fate being unchangeable, with the heavens and deities enforcing consequences for anyone who tries to alter it. Yet somehow, those rules don’t apply to her. Because she sacrificed herself for the one she loved, she’s suddenly exempt, allowed to live on and even keep her powers. It feels inconsistent and undermines the very stakes the story tried to establish.
- The villains were built up to feel intense and threatening, they drove the entire climax, but the payoff went nowhere. After all the buildup around soul-eating, killings, and the shaman’s power, everything gets resolved in an incredibly anticlimactic way. It doesn’t feel earned, and it weakens the stakes the story spent so long establishing. On top of that, the moment meant to push the female lead toward her “death” falls flat. Instead of a powerful or meaningful turning point, it comes down to a weak human with a rifle missing the shot, only for the male lead to step in and take it for her. It turns what should’ve been a high-impact, character-defining moment into something predictable and underwhelming like bruh.
- I understand that she chooses not to give up being a fox just to be with a human, but the story doesn’t clearly define what that choice means for her in the end. It lacks proper closure and skips over the emotional weight behind it. Before, being a fox had a clear meaning, it represented her freedom, her independence, and her defiance against the deities and the fate her older sister accepted. That identity was strong and intentional. But by the end, that meaning becomes unclear. Being a fox is her idenity and she doesn't want to sacarfice her idenity for love, but the story never explains what about it matters so deeply to her now. What does her fox identity truly mean in this new context? Why does it hold enough value that she’s willing to outlive her lover and accept her immortality? What does immortality mean to her?
Her acceptance feels surface-level, without showing the emotional consequences or growth that should come with such a heavy realization, making her character arc feel incomplete. Does the story provide enough depth for us to truly understand and appreciate the female lead’s decision to remain a fox?
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