This review may contain spoilers
That double standard is hard to ignore.
What makes it worse is how the two male leads are written. The CEO’s behavior especially makes no sense. Why is he patiently waiting while she compares him with another man like she’s choosing between products? That’s not love — that’s evaluation based on “who gives me more value.” Real feelings don’t work like a value-for-money calculation.
If anything, genuine liking is closer to brand loyalty — like people who choose an iPhone not because it’s the best spec-wise, but because they genuinely prefer the experience. You don’t “compare and select” someone you truly like — you gravitate toward them.
The drama tries to present this as a mature exploration of choice, but instead it feels like it’s avoiding accountability and dressing up indecisiveness as depth.
And honestly, the most unrealistic part is this: both men just accept it. In real life, most people would walk away instead of waiting to be “compared.”
So for me, the issue isn’t whether she chooses passion or stability — it’s that the show is built on a dynamic that doesn’t feel honest or believable to begin with.
What makes it worse is how the two male leads are written. The CEO’s behavior especially makes no sense. Why is he patiently waiting while she compares him with another man like she’s choosing between products? That’s not love — that’s evaluation based on “who gives me more value.” Real feelings don’t work like a value-for-money calculation.
If anything, genuine liking is closer to brand loyalty — like people who choose an iPhone not because it’s the best spec-wise, but because they genuinely prefer the experience. You don’t “compare and select” someone you truly like — you gravitate toward them.
The drama tries to present this as a mature exploration of choice, but instead it feels like it’s avoiding accountability and dressing up indecisiveness as depth.
And honestly, the most unrealistic part is this: both men just accept it. In real life, most people would walk away instead of waiting to be “compared.”
So for me, the issue isn’t whether she chooses passion or stability — it’s that the show is built on a dynamic that doesn’t feel honest or believable to begin with.
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