Queen of Divorce: Episodes 11-12 (Final)
by Unit
Our final hour sets out to prove one thing: some people will never change, whether it’s our Solution team making one questionable move after another, or the bad guys relying on stale tricks to outwit the heroes, or me returning each week despite knowing I won’t get anything different. It’s one packed finale of kidnapping, spy activities, broken alliances, the final face-off between good and evil, and other tropes fitting for the closing week of what has been a pretty average show.
EPISODES 11-12
The week kicks off with the reveal of how Sara’s mom died. Apparently, Mom tried to make a deal with Yool-seong: she won’t tell the prosecution about his (alleged) role in his mistress’s death if he helps Sara get out of prison. Yool-seong took Mom to the rooftop to scare her, but she lost her footing and fell down. It wasn’t intentional, but Mom did die at Yool-seong’s hands. (And I did not need that long closeup shot of her bleeding out head.)
In the present, the show surprises us with a ta-da: Driver did not die from last week’s car crash! Yool-seong starts to suspect that Sara is aware of his connection with Driver, but she deflects his suspicion — and intentionally accuses Chairwoman Cha of masterminding her mom’s death. Yool-seong goes along with Sara’s accusation, and this is enough to piss the chairwoman off to the point where she begins to look into the case herself.
Sara also spreads rumors that Yool-seong is trying to take over Chayul behind his mom’s back, and when Cha learns that Yool-seong was behind Driver’s near-death, she confronts her son with the assumption that he’s about to frame her for Sara’s mom’s death. Chairwoman Cha uses her police connections to hurl Yool-seong’s ass to the station for questioning. And while this doesn’t lead anywhere, it’s a warning for him not to mess with her. “Always bear in mind that there are parents who can eat their own children,” Cha says, and she will not be getting that World’s Best Mom mug.
To get even with mommy dearest, Yool-seong has Driver kidnapped from the hospital. Bom and Dae-ki chase after the kidnappers, but Bom ends up getting injured — and once again, the show uses kidnapping as an effective tool for romance. Cue: Dae-ki and Bom in a slo-mo princess carry scene. Not to be left out of the romance, Driver ends up getting showered with Yool-seong’s love languages: acts of violence, words of affirming threats, quality time in confinement, and the likes.
Driver is so touched by Yool-seong’s sentiments that he goes after Chairwoman Cha. He makes her admit that she ordered the hit on Yool-seong’s mistress — and with a recording of the conversation, Yool-seong now has leverage on his mom. Proving that he learned nothing from his ordeal, Driver blackmails Cha again for 2 million dollars, and I think he died of a lack of that specific amount in his former life. Driver gets his money and flees abroad as promised, but as a parting gift, he tells Yool-seong that Sara is digging into him.
A paranoid Yool-seong bugs Sara’s room and his mom’s office, but thanks to Ki-joon’s timely bug sweeper gift, Sara is able to detect the bugs before she slips up. Sara informs Chairwoman Cha about the bug, and next thing you know, Cha is confronting her son and dishing out slaps. Earlier on, Sara bugged Yool-seong’s office for the inevitable showdown between mother and son. But since we’re in an episode of botched Spy Kids, the bug is discovered before Yool-seong can implicate himself as the mastermind behind Sara’s mom’s death. K-drama lesson 101: never plant a bug under a flowerpot when you have a violent mother-in-law who can use anything as a weapon.
Now that Yool-seong and Chairwoman Cha know that Sara tried to come in between them, they plan to beat her at her own game. But speaking of beating at a game, Driver loses a whooping 1.3 million dollars at a casino, and continues his unbeaten streak of being the most stupid character in this show. Thanks to Korea’s strict anti-gambling laws, the prosecution is hot on Driver’s trail, and they link the 2 million dollar transfer in his account to Chayul.
Knowing that Yool-seong and Chairwoman Cha are on to her, Sara puts an end to the show by calling the cops on them. Yool-seong is arrested for instigating his mistress’s murder, but he calmly throws his mom under the bus for being the mastermind. LMAO! I swear, classy Chairwoman Cha sitting in a cell is a sight for sore eyes. Yool-seong further pins Sara’s mom’s death on Cha because someone has to be on the outside to help mommy dearest with her trial and work on the Chayul law school project. It’s all for the good of the family, right? Looool.
Yool-seong sounds so convincing, and Chairwoman Cha reels from the emotional shock of going down for her son’s crime to actualize her lifelong dream of building Chayul town via the law school project. But Yool-seong has no plans of helping his mom with her trial, so he announces that Chayul will cut all ties with the chairwoman. Same script he played with his assemblyman father-in-law! Never change, Yool-seong, never change.
Hee-jin aligns with Sara and calls for a press conference where she exposes Yool-seong’s affair with the mistress — and drags him for leading her on with the promise of marriage. Someone is still butthurt about not becoming wife #3. Hehehe. Thanks to the press conference, Yool-seong’s image takes a hit, but it’s not serious enough to put him behind bars. It’s not until Professor Seo wakes up from his coma — and testifies that Yool-seong blackmailed him — that Yool-seong begins to feel the heat.
Sara goes after Yool-seong’s five-membered committee — or should I say four-membered since Professor Seo is out — and the search is on for the ledger containing evidence of their bribery for the Chayul law school project. Solution capitalizes on the greed of the weakest member in the committee, and he leads them straight to the farmhouse where the ledger is. They excavate the surrounding farmland, they check for secret safes and hidden panels in the wall, and Sara even looks under a chest of drawers. “Only a fool would hide [the ledger] there,” Ki-joon says to her. But what do you know? That’s exactly where they find the ledger!
With Professor Seo’s testimony and the discovery of their ledger, the committee members turn on Yool-seong. As always, Yool-seong resorts to threatening Sara with their son if she doesn’t hand over the ledger. And one clandestine meeting on a bridge later, Yool-seong and Sara make the exchange. She gets her son and he gets… a fake ledger. Pfft.
Thanks to the ledger, Solution exposes the committee for bribery and lobbying, and the Chayul law school bid is rejected. The prosecution storms Chayul for a search and seizure, and Yool-seong tells his loyal secretary to take the fall for Sara’s mom’s death in case his bribery investigation leads to the reopening of Mom’s case. Only a fool would trust a boss who’s famous for throwing people under the bus, so the secretary decides to side with Solution.
Cornered, Yool-seong reaches out to Sara and she agrees to meet up with him. Sara knows he’s going to kidnap her, so she wears a wire in a bid to extract a confession out of him. Unfortunately, Yool-seong finds the bug and destroys it, then he takes her to the seaport since he’s gone full-on gangster mode. Luckily, Sara is smart enough to leave a trail behind, and Team Solution storms the port to rescue their team leader before she’s shipped abroad in a freezer container. Cue: Ki-joon saving Sara’s life for the 100th time.
In the five harrowing minutes Sara spent with Yool-seong in the container, she managed to get him to admit that he killed her mom, and everything was recorded on his phone. That’s what happens when you try to force a “I faked the ledger” confession out of your ex-wife. Or wife. Wait, they’re still married, right? Anyway, to wrap up with the Yool-seong arc, Sara puts her kickboxing skills to use, and delivers a satisfying high kick on Yool-seong’s face before he’s dragged away by the prosecution.
The rest of the drama plays out as expected with Sara getting custody of her son after her second divorce. Dae-ki and Bom get married a few months later, and I’m surprised they filmed a whole ass wedding scene for these two — but it’s not that I didn’t like it. Ki-joon proposes to Sara, but after two marriages and two divorces, the institution no longer appeals to her. Sara says the only way she’ll consider marriage is if there’s an expiration date attached to it. She proposes a five-year period after which they’ll reexamine their relationship and extend the contract or terminate it depending on the outcome of the re-examination. Spoken like the queen of divorce that she is. Ki-joon agrees to this arrangement, and they stare at the sunset in contentment as the drama comes to an end. This is not the perfect happy ending I had in mind for them, but it’s a realistic one, so I’ll take it. I mean, do I even have a choice?
As a whole, what I got from this drama is not what I had in mind when I pressed play on Episode 1. As the show progressed, I was disappointed by a number of things, but when I turned off my brain and stopped looking for logic, the show became a fun way for me to pass time. It was just one long ping-pong match between Sara and Chayul — with the ball slipping out a few times to fatally hit some unsuspecting side characters. But our heroine emerged victorious in the end, and that’s all that matters. I guess.
Oh Min-seok as Yool-seong was definitely a highlight for me throughout the show. That man knows how to play bad in a so good, so ridiculous, and so fun manner. Hopefully, he gets his lead role soon — and hopefully, it is better than what Kang Ki-young got. I still can’t believe that Kang Ki-young was poached from Hanbada to Solution for his much-awaited lead role, only for him to end up being a supporting character and a white knight in Sara’s story. The dramaverse owes us a better drama with him as the lead, and I will not stop manifesting until he gets the befitting lead role that he deserves.
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Tags: Kang Ki-young, Kim Sun-young, Lee Jia, Na Young-hee, Oh Min-seok, Queen of Divorce, Seo Hye-won
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1 Blue (@mayhemf)
March 8, 2024 at 5:16 PM
What a dud!
Thanks @unit for the company.
Kang Ki Young deserves a better show. Let’s hope.
Oh Min-seok was the sole reason I kept watching. He was fantastic here. The last two episodes focused so much on him (what’s with those camera angles and lighting!!) I wonder if he WAS the male lead all along.
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Martine
March 9, 2024 at 7:11 AM
He definitively was the male lead. He had as much screen time if not more than Kang Ki Young.
Not that I minded, he was an excellent character and actually the most interesting of all of them
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2 Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
March 8, 2024 at 5:41 PM
@Unit I swear, I kept refreshing my Dramabeans page just to see if your recap is up, because that has been the best part of this drama. You are absolutely hilarious, and so very kind to this drama.
That's exactly how I felt. He started so strong and then eventually faded out to a point where the side characters get more footage than him, with a wedding to the boot.
They styled Oh Min-Seok in such a way that everyone else became obscure.
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3 Seon-ha
March 8, 2024 at 7:08 PM
In the final analysis, I have come to the conclusion that Oh Min-seok's Noh Yul-seong was indeed the ML of this drama. The outrageous caressing that his face received from the camera in the final episode, an hour in which he not only fell from whatever grace he had, but also began to descend into a physical and mental isolation, demonstrated an attention to his physical beauty and the transformation of his character into a true villain that no other person received in this drama, no matter their role.
Interestingly enough, rather than being a lead who we watched suffering after a previous mother-trauma, in this drama we were privy to the ongoing, seemingly unending creation and propagation of that trauma by his petty, invasive, controlling, "child-eating" mother. There was to be no way that Yul-seong could escape or heal from the wounds she had inflicted because she was always there--so beautifully dressed--waiting to actively slash them open again. Nor was he trying to terribly hard to escape her clutches. He was not really allowed to love, or really capable of loving, any other person.
Of course, in the end he "escaped" his mother, but the mode of her departure left him with no one else around him. Literally no one, because everyone who surrounded him was in a linked to him through their relationship to his mother or his mother's goals and needs.
What burns me in the end, though, is that while I (of course) stand behind Sa-ra in her rejection of Yul-seong, I note that Sa-ra, as a woman and a mother, did not really share her love with any other person than her son. Certainly Dong Ki-jun saw almost zero. Her worry for him was as close as he got--and he was willing to grasp at those straws.
No, our FL's love was almost solely reserved for her son who will now, in all likelihood, become the center of her rapt, totalizing attention. Ki-jun wants to share in that burden, and perhaps she'll let him (begrudgingly). So, let us hope that what we're really watching here at the end of this tale is not the birth of another ML who will be shaped by an childhood-long trauma centered on his mother's desperate ongoing attempts to ensure that he does not turn out like his murderous paternal family and instead...to ensure that he clings to her, and her alone.
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bomibeans
March 8, 2024 at 7:23 PM
*chills down the spine* 👏
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hacja
March 8, 2024 at 9:54 PM
Let me just also note, in total support of what you say, that the son has already shown psychopathic tendencies by cutting up the photo of his mother into slits. Undoubtedly, he also poked the eyes out of all his stuffed animals. I hope to God that there is no Queen of Divorce Part II. It would be gruesome horror show where the son would get away with all his crimes because he was good looking!
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Annie
March 10, 2024 at 5:51 PM
You make a very good point! And Sa Ra becomes a MIL from hell because (even if she is not a mom who eats her child) she tries to protect him too much against the world, and she devises a horrible battery of tests for the potential candidates.
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hacja
March 10, 2024 at 5:55 PM
😂
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 2:22 AM
I would disagree with Noh Yul-seong as a ML... Despite his best efforts to be omnipresent (and also dare I add, omnistupid too; if you want to get rid of your ex-wife, my good man, a ship container will NEVER be as effective as a gun) I think Sara was the hermaphrodite lead of the K-drama, playing both the male and female part whenever she needed.
Queen of Divorce should in fact be renamed after the only hermaphrodite that comes to mind on this rainy day The Snail of Divorce - a reflexion on her strong anti-romance independence/multi-lead stubbornness/personality disorder (she can be equally damsel in distress and fearless thug) as well as the impression the drama has left me (a trail of mucus that is slowly drying out)
Everything else you said... Honestly, yes, one hundred times yes, Sara develops that completely fixated attention on her son only, and literally nobody else. The left me wondering why anyone of her little gang was helping her; she's the snail of self-centredness. What is there to gain from forging an alliance with her, except for a little mucus? (I appreciate snail mucus is the holy grail of skincare, but seriously people, ditch Sara and buy yourself some face masks instead)
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Seon-ha
March 11, 2024 at 6:13 AM
Well, she did save that dude's life with her bone marrow or whatevs. Sure, that also got her out of prison, but still.
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 7:19 AM
Technically true... But then he only choose to work with her after hacking through totally confidential data he shouldn't have had access to... So, can he still get the bone marrow and then buy himself a pack of face masks? Best of both worlds!
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4 bomibeans
March 8, 2024 at 7:17 PM
Oh, these k-drama “ta-da!”s, which have been prophesied at least once somewhere in Beanie Universe…
I really didn’t like the 5 year contract nonsense. Six month is an ideal time-frame to get to know everything you need to know about your potential partner and be brutally honest about compatibility with yourself. I wish ONE thing people learn in life that it’s ok to passionately fall in love, and marry and divorce and repeat a cycle. We are brought up in this pressure-cooker expectations of HEA, but instead we should be focusing on celebrating that you gave your best in your TRIES. It’s not hedonistic or childish to focus on tries. I think it’s only realistic and does not diminish the institution of marriage in the least. Public vows are always going to be meaningful no matter how many times you say them in your life.
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bomibeans
March 8, 2024 at 7:27 PM
But I digress. This show was never about a meaningful exploration of a concept of divorce, so…, here we are.
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5 Kathryn51
March 8, 2024 at 7:24 PM
Thanks @unit - for confirming that my decision to put on hold/dropped after Ep. 4 was the correct one. If I was one to weep (but, alas, I am not) I would weep for Kang Ki-young. Does he need a new management agency? are Korea viewers just too different from this Westerner and so he doesn't appeal to them? Which is okay - this IS their world and I am a mere observer. I will continue to watch for hi and his next drama.
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
March 8, 2024 at 7:40 PM
Seeing how reasonably well this drama fared in SK, I think you have something there. Their world is a bit different in ways even I at times don't understand even though our societal structure is not that far apart, and I am OK with that. It is their world.
However, I can't help but feel sorry for how pitiful and a sorry figure he cut in this drama.
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6 hacja
March 8, 2024 at 9:57 PM
@unit There are many things I could say about this drama, most of them bad. But your recaps were all good. You kept me in this one--Thanks, but no thanks!
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7 Reply1988 -❣️Mother Bean❣️
March 8, 2024 at 10:06 PM
Thanks for the weecap @unit
‘Not to be left out of the romance, Driver ends up getting showered with Yool-seong’s love languages: acts of violence, words of affirming threats, quality time in confinement, and the likes’👈🏾 thank you for this laugh out loud moment.
I loved the potential of this drama, the ridiculous schemes Solution came up with to get their wins, the side character romance and the fact the schemers finally got their punishment.
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8 Kurama
March 8, 2024 at 10:33 PM
What a scam! The plot let us believe they will help women to divorce from their villain husbands. But it was just a revenge drama for the FL. The Solution team was not good at all. It was so stupid to think they would hide a ledger in a field... it's so impractical. The father kidnapped his own son? And we have to think he would hurt him when he never did anything in the past?
In short, the whole drama was disapointing.
First, I thought Kang Ki-Young didn't have luck with his first role because his character didn't have a lot to do. But at the end, I think he didn't understand he was the lead. I had the impression to see his role in Extraordinary Attorney Woo as supporting cast. He didn't lead his scenes and he didn't have chemistry with Lee Ji-A who wasn't better, her face can't emote anymore. Oh Min-Seok is really the one who acted the best and shined in this role.
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 7:23 AM
nobody lead - it was the story of queen of divorce told by the queen herself while her loyal servants were just called occasionally in to shine some more light on her Maj' in bermudas... What happened writer-nim?
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9 loveblossom🌸
March 9, 2024 at 11:33 AM
Well, I started this drama late (last week?) because I had more time. It didn't evoke much emotion out of me, but I was going along with it fine. Then I heard some not-so-good reviews so I quickly read the rest of the recaps. Glad I didn't give this show any more of my time.
Oh Min Seok was so good at being bad. I'd love to see him be the good guy sometime though.
Kang Ki Young and Kim Sun Young deserved better. I liked her transformation after her case; she was a bright light. Did not get enough of her.
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10 too_much_tv
March 9, 2024 at 8:23 PM
Thanks, @unit. Your summaries were better than the show. Did Kang Ki-young steal the director's parking space? Did he eat all the head writer's snacks? Who did he annoy to have the job of standing around reciting lines slowly while the FL looked away from him into the middle distance? Also, what was up with that extremely strange couple of scenes where the entire Solutions team stands around reciting their lines while watching someone else dig up a field? How could a show in which the FL's ex husband cheated on her, secretly divorced her, had her unjustly imprisoned and disbarred, stole her child for more than a year, and killed her mother (!) be so incredibly dull?
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Kodra aka Qanon something
March 10, 2024 at 6:30 AM
"..FL's ex husband cheated on her, secretly divorced her, had her unjustly imprisoned and disbarred, stole her child for more than a year, and killed her mother..."
I didn't watch the show but I think that the writer was not feminist enough, she (I assume id a women) could have added some more, like beating her and raping her, killing all of her dear ones including her child, making her criple, plocking an eye, etc. For sure this character will be included in the DB end of year article about the men in kdramas.
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too_much_tv
March 10, 2024 at 8:48 AM
In this particular drama, the terrible husband has a terrible mother who is shown to be motivating his evil actions. She might have even been responsible for the entire "we secretly divorced you and are sending you to prison" plot. I seem to recall that the protagonist asked her about borrowing her seal or something? I believe this was done precisely in anticipation of your complaint.
The MIL is also the person who requires the FL to shower after she's been to visit her mother. The mother runs a restaurant and the MIL insults her that the food smell clings to her when she comes back to the family manse. It was pretty similar to the way that Marry My Husband dealt with the evil husband--blaming his mother's bad parenting for his badness--except Marry My Husband was significantly more subtle about it. (Marry My Husband was not subtle at all, so that's saying something.)
The MIL was played with great style and verve by Na Young-hee, who seemed to constantly sneer/gnash her teeth. She is so beautiful at 62 that she overshadowed most of the rest of the cast.
I am so sorry that I conveyed the idea that a male villain was male in order to undermine the hideous sexism of intentional patriarchy. For a show about divorce, this series was weak sauce on feminism. They tried to do the same ending as my beloved (and actually quite feminist) Because This is My First Life, with the renegotiation of the terms of marriage etc., but it just came out super lame.
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too_much_tv
March 10, 2024 at 8:57 AM
I'm not sure that dashing villains are characteristic of feminist critique in script writing anyway. (I think feminism is a good phenomenon myself, so I don't automatically attribute all lazy writing to feminism.) It's definitely worth thinking about. This show isn't worth watching, but maybe some people will make gifs of the MIL character for us all to enjoy.
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 9:59 AM
I feel we need an end of year article about the terrible writers of dramas here. I'm naming whoever wrote that pile of w*nk...
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 10:00 AM
by pile of w*nk, I mean the k-drama, not any Beanie's comments!
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too_much_tv
March 11, 2024 at 11:40 AM
Was the problem the writing, or the direction? I never thought about this because it's almost never an issue, but it really kills the pacing of a scene where the characters are supposed to be frantically active for them to be standing around explaining the plot. (While mysteriously not looking at each other!)
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Cecee is done DramaQueening
March 11, 2024 at 1:21 PM
I was wondering about it. Was it the writing? Was it the direction? Was it a combined effort?
11 Xococo
March 10, 2024 at 5:34 PM
Wait, Kang Ki Young was in this drama? I didn’t notice…
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12 Annie
March 10, 2024 at 5:45 PM
So their final solution relied a lot on chance! Sa Ra went to see her husband without any fear (again!) and she had just one device to record him, which he promptly found (why not get 2, in case he finds one and destroys it, he doesn't think there might be a spare one?). And luck was on her side that he forgot to turn off the recording when talking to his mom, that's what helped them in the end.
I don't remember the other instances when things were solved by pure chance, that's how dull the final episode where. And the characters were utterly stupid.
Also, I wish we were told about the relationship they had in their youth and why she chose the bad guy (apart from the surprise pregnancy. Frankly, I hoped they'd tell us that she had been mistaken and the kid is Ki-joon's, so that he doesn't inherit grandma's and dad's murderous genes.
And a final wish: I hope that Oh Min-seok will soon get a role as a good guy, a puppy-like type who is so flustered around his crush!
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13 vienibenmio
March 11, 2024 at 6:13 AM
God, this was such a waste of my time. Kang Ki-young deserved better. The romance had SO much potential and was just squandered. I did like the secondary couple though.
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