

If Rebel Thief Who Stole the People moved you with the fight of ordinary people against injustice, Jumong offers the next dream:
Not just survival — but the building of a new world.
From stolen villages to founding kingdoms, the spirit of rebellion carries forward.
Not just survival — but the building of a new world.
From stolen villages to founding kingdoms, the spirit of rebellion carries forward.


If Jumong stirred your heart with the birth of a nation, The Great Battle shows you what happens when that legacy must be defended with blood and iron.
A cinematic echo of courage — smaller in scope, but no less vital.
A cinematic echo of courage — smaller in scope, but no less vital.


After the mythic founding of a kingdom in Jumong, Korea-Khitan War shows you what it takes to keep that kingdom alive generations later.
Loyalty, sacrifice, and survival — less in legend now, more in the cold, grinding reality of empire.
Loyalty, sacrifice, and survival — less in legend now, more in the cold, grinding reality of empire.


If The Great Battle left you awed by the stand at Ansi Fortress, Korea-Khitan War carries you deeper — into a harsher, more enduring kind of heroism.
Not one battle, but generations fighting to hold a fragile kingdom together.
Less myth, more survival — and every victory feels like something carved from stone.
Not one battle, but generations fighting to hold a fragile kingdom together.
Less myth, more survival — and every victory feels like something carved from stone.


If Record of Youth showed you the quiet weight of ambition under quiet skies, Itaewon Class shows you what it looks like when ambition refuses to stay quiet at all.
Both dramas carry dreams — but where Record of Youth endures, Itaewon Class fights, burns, and rebuilds.
Both dramas carry dreams — but where Record of Youth endures, Itaewon Class fights, burns, and rebuilds.


If When the Weather is Fine wrapped you in quiet ache and forgiveness, Winter Night offers an even starker kind of winter:
a story about missed moments, what might have been, and the soft, unbearable beauty of being known — even if only for a while.
a story about missed moments, what might have been, and the soft, unbearable beauty of being known — even if only for a while.


If Parasite left you haunted by the brutal cracks between classes, Extracurricular dives deeper — through the eyes of teenagers forced to navigate the same broken system.
There are no easy villains here — just choices, survival, and the quiet horror of what desperation makes possible.
There are no easy villains here — just choices, survival, and the quiet horror of what desperation makes possible.


If Record of Youth left you hungry for stories where ambition feels raw, where dignity matters more than applause — Fight for My Way is waiting.
Less polished, more bruised — but full of the same stubborn fire: the kind that dares to believe you can build a life worth living, even if no one else believes in you yet.
Less polished, more bruised — but full of the same stubborn fire: the kind that dares to believe you can build a life worth living, even if no one else believes in you yet.


If you loved the stubborn, awkward chase for dreams in Fight for My Way, The Producers offers another kind of messy ambition — this time inside the chaotic world of television.
Both dramas celebrate humans who don’t fit the mold, who stumble, fail, and still find a way to belong — not by changing who they are, but by holding onto it.
Both dramas celebrate humans who don’t fit the mold, who stumble, fail, and still find a way to belong — not by changing who they are, but by holding onto it.


After Chicago Typewriter leaves you haunted by sacrifices half-remembered, Mal-Mo-E walks you into the heart of what was truly lost.
Both are stories of loyalty — not to people, but to memory, to language, to identity itself.
Where Chicago Typewriter aches like a half-heard song, Mal-Mo-E reminds you who wrote it — and what it cost.
Both are stories of loyalty — not to people, but to memory, to language, to identity itself.
Where Chicago Typewriter aches like a half-heard song, Mal-Mo-E reminds you who wrote it — and what it cost.


After the brutal scramble of surviving together, #Alive offers a quieter, lonelier survival: isolation, silence, and the stubborn hope that you aren't truly alone.
A perfect next step if you need to stay inside the ache, but breathe differently.
A perfect next step if you need to stay inside the ache, but breathe differently.


If Blossom left you lingering in sorrow's quiet, The Story of Pearl Girl deepens the ache — weaving love, loss, and legacy into something unforgettable.
Tender, patient, and devastating in its stillness.
Tender, patient, and devastating in its stillness.