This review may contain spoilers
Park Yu-Ho acted better than two grown-ass adult lead actors. Either he’s genuinely that good, or the adult characters were written as cliché, pointless bickerers with zero depth.
The male lead is an immature man-child — something we’ve already seen a hundred times in Korean dramas. Nothing new. Same recycled trope again and again.
The love triangle is painfully obvious:
Female lead ↔ her boss (former college friend / crush) ↔ male lead.
The bickering was fun only until episode 3. From episode 4 onward, the fights had no reason to exist.
The male lead just talks nonsense all day. No logic, no reasoning — he just says whatever comes to his mind, even when it makes absolutely zero sense. It’s exhausting, not entertaining.
Park Yu-Ho, despite being just a 2-year-old, outperformed everyone — without any help from the writers. He had more personality, maturity, and presence than the adult male lead. That alone says everything about how badly the lead character is written.
Nowadays, Korean dramas seem obsessed with either making babies or taking care of babies. Ironically, this show actually discourages people from having kids. It clearly shows how grown adults can’t even take care of themselves — so how are they supposed to raise another fragile human life?
The male lead is extremely selfish, especially considering his so-called “trauma.” He was abandoned by his older brother in an orphanage, and because of that, he wants his own nephew to be abandoned and sent to an orphanage as well.
What kind of sick logic is that?
If he suffered from abandonment, he should want to prevent the same thing from happening to his nephew — not recreate it just so he can feel validated about his own past. Instead of breaking the cycle, he wants to repeat it.
That’s not trauma — that’s selfishness, immaturity, and terrible writing.
The male lead is an immature man-child — something we’ve already seen a hundred times in Korean dramas. Nothing new. Same recycled trope again and again.
The love triangle is painfully obvious:
Female lead ↔ her boss (former college friend / crush) ↔ male lead.
The bickering was fun only until episode 3. From episode 4 onward, the fights had no reason to exist.
The male lead just talks nonsense all day. No logic, no reasoning — he just says whatever comes to his mind, even when it makes absolutely zero sense. It’s exhausting, not entertaining.
Park Yu-Ho, despite being just a 2-year-old, outperformed everyone — without any help from the writers. He had more personality, maturity, and presence than the adult male lead. That alone says everything about how badly the lead character is written.
Nowadays, Korean dramas seem obsessed with either making babies or taking care of babies. Ironically, this show actually discourages people from having kids. It clearly shows how grown adults can’t even take care of themselves — so how are they supposed to raise another fragile human life?
The male lead is extremely selfish, especially considering his so-called “trauma.” He was abandoned by his older brother in an orphanage, and because of that, he wants his own nephew to be abandoned and sent to an orphanage as well.
What kind of sick logic is that?
If he suffered from abandonment, he should want to prevent the same thing from happening to his nephew — not recreate it just so he can feel validated about his own past. Instead of breaking the cycle, he wants to repeat it.
That’s not trauma — that’s selfishness, immaturity, and terrible writing.
Was this review helpful to you?


