Both of these dramas are similar generally. This is because:
· The female lead is from another world
· The female lead hides some things about herself from the male lead.
· The male lead is from an influential/wealthy background.
· The male lead is not interested in others but is sweet and caring with the female lead.
If you liked Legend of the Blue Sea I recommend you watching My Girlfriend is an alien
· The female lead is from another world
· The female lead hides some things about herself from the male lead.
· The male lead is from an influential/wealthy background.
· The male lead is not interested in others but is sweet and caring with the female lead.
If you liked Legend of the Blue Sea I recommend you watching My Girlfriend is an alien
Both dramas haven the same elements:
- It's primarily a romance, with very little secondary plots or 'story of the week' plots
- A modern mystery with evil families plus supernatural elements including a reincarnation plot (and of course a serial killer!)
- The hero is a prankster and struggles to do the right thing, but his protective side ultimately wins out
- They both have big budgets and are well produced
I would 100% recommend The Legend of the Blue Sea. The characters had a fun, teasing chemistry, and there was a more 'epic feel' to the romance with the reincarnation plot integrated strongly from the start. The actors are excellent, and the drama sticks with you.
- It's primarily a romance, with very little secondary plots or 'story of the week' plots
- A modern mystery with evil families plus supernatural elements including a reincarnation plot (and of course a serial killer!)
- The hero is a prankster and struggles to do the right thing, but his protective side ultimately wins out
- They both have big budgets and are well produced
I would 100% recommend The Legend of the Blue Sea. The characters had a fun, teasing chemistry, and there was a more 'epic feel' to the romance with the reincarnation plot integrated strongly from the start. The actors are excellent, and the drama sticks with you.
- Both deal with girls who are unfamiliar with the modern world trying to live in it: in LotBS FL is a mermaid, in MFaMR the female lead is a queen of a tribe in a forest
- Both are enjoyable series and have comedic aspects
- Both have male leads that do some undercover bad boy stuff
- Both have oblivious female leads who learn to adapt to the world in a comedic way
- Both have likeable second lead females
- Both have cute chemistry between leads
- Both are enjoyable series and have comedic aspects
- Both have male leads that do some undercover bad boy stuff
- Both have oblivious female leads who learn to adapt to the world in a comedic way
- Both have likeable second lead females
- Both have cute chemistry between leads
Both dramas feature "fish out of water" naïve non-human FLs who don't understand the human world. They meet the ML (in bare feet) who is kind hearted (JAF more obviously than TLOTBS) and helps them. In both, the FL can only love/be attached to one man in her lifetime. Both have seaside settings, umbrellas, and a similar tone and feel.
Quiet and gentle, Min Jae Yi is everything a good daughter of a prominent family should be. Engaged to the son of the Second State Councillor, Jae Yi knows that the only way to bring herself and her family honor is to accept her fate, which she does with grace and charm. Devoting herself to learning everything she needs to know to become a good wife and mother, Jae Yi dutifully prepares for the future. Sadly, destiny has other plans for her future. Four days before her wedding, Jae Yi’s family is murdered. With no one else to blame for the unexpected tragedy, Jae Yi soon finds herself the object of baseless and horrifying accusations. Blamed for the death of her family, Jae Yi might not have had much of a future at all, if fate hadn’t decided to intervene. Bringing the lonely crown prince, Lee Hwan into her life at just the right moment, Jae Yi is saved from a dismal fate, but her salvation comes at a price. Plagued by a mysterious curse, Lee Hwan agrees to help Jae Yi, but only if she agrees to help him break his curse in return. Unable to refuse such an offer, Jae Yi agrees to the prince’s terms, setting them both on an unexpected path toward love. But what chance does their love have of surviving when one of them is a former murder suspect and the other is a cursed prince?
During the Joseon Dynasty, a young woman named Hong Chun Ki is a painter – a true rarity in Joseon Korea, where Confucian values dictate that such pursuits are unsuitable for a woman. She was born blind but somehow managed to acquire a sense of vision. And now she has been accepted to the most prestigious art college in the land. One day, she meets Ha Ram, an astrologer whose fate is the polar opposite of her own: Although he was born sighted, he lost his vision in a childhood accident. Regardless, he is also in possession of an astounding talent that allows him to read the future by tracing the movement of the sky at night despite the fact that he is blind. The duo is sucked into the machinations of the royal court, particularly those involving two princes, the free-spirited Prince Yang Myung and the cruel, scheming Prince Joo Hyang – a man who longs to become the next Joseon king.