This review may contain spoilers
Good start with non sense ending
The story is passable, and there’s no denying the actors are skilled—I’ve admired their performances in other works. However, in this particular drama, they seem unable to inject the emotional depth the story demands. Something feels off, almost like they’re just delivering lines rather than living their roles.
Once the characters’ real identities are revealed, there’s an abrupt and jarring shift in personalities. These 180-degree turns don’t feel earned or natural; instead, they seem like an attempt to quickly pivot the narrative. It gives the impression that the creators opted for a “safe” storytelling approach—leaning into romantic comedy tropes instead of pushing for something more daring or layered.
Overall, it’s the kind of show you watch when there’s nothing better available. It’s not engaging enough to draw you in, but it doesn’t frustrate or annoy either—which, in today’s drama landscape, is still something. In a sea of frustrating titles, at least this one feels watchable, even
At this point, the drama feels more like filler content than an actual story. The pacing drags endlessly, and most of the episodes could be skipped without missing anything significant. This plot could’ve easily been wrapped up in 10–20 episodes.
Also, the supposed “equality” between the male lead (ML) and female lead (FL) is more claimed than shown. If she’s truly his equal, why doesn’t she have her own kingdom, army, or loyal followers? Instead, she has to rely on mortal sects. More importantly, despite repeated claims of equal power, the FL is clearly weaker—she can’t even land a hit unless the ML lets her. That’s not strength, that’s restraint on his part.
The characters lack substance. There’s no real backstory, no emotional grounding—just a set of people moving through the motions without any sense of individuality. They don’t feel like real people with real motivations. Instead of connecting, I felt detached. I didn’t love or hate anyone—I just felt nothing. That emotional void is a clear sign that the drama has failed to make a real impact.
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From beginning to end, the story is a series of irrational decisions made by aimless characters. No one stands out as wise or truly strong. Even after achieving something as grand as immortality, the characters remain shallow and confused.
It’s like watching chess pieces being moved around at random by a writer who’s lost track of the game. Characters are introduced or eliminated without purpose, as if everything is happening just for the sake of drama, not because it serves the story.
The most baffling part? The ending. It’s illogical, emotionally hollow, and completely forgettable. What does the FL even achieve? Living in an illusion? Changing a past that has no real consequence on the present? There’s no emotional payoff, no meaningful closure—nothing that stays with you.
Honestly, the biggest flaw lies in the writing. What started with potential ended in complete disarray.
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