
PlotTwistLover
63 posts

PlotTwistLover
@LoverPlot5248
Toxic abusive tops deserve a generous whipping. I'm not kidding😈















#Wetsand I feel like this is the first time I’ve seen a love triangle where the “endgame”… is the emptiest character out of the three. And I’m not saying this out of hate, I’m saying it because if you actually look closely, it’s very obvious. In Jo’s case, we saw everything. His mother, his father, his brother, his aunt, his cousins, his friends… basically his entire circle. We even saw Ian interact with them, spend time with them, become part of that space. There was a direct connection between the protagonist and Jo’s world. In Ian’s case, there was also development. We were shown his mother, their dynamic, his background… even small details like Guillaume (his mother’s boyfriend). We saw how he grew up, where he comes from, what shaped him. But in TJ’s case… what do we actually have? We don’t even know who his parents were. We don’t know their names. We don’t know what really happened with the accident. His adoptive family is mentioned… but never shown. There’s no real development, no depth, no context. And that’s what’s shocking. Because even side characters have more structure: Jason, for example, has a brother (Big boss), a wife (Suji), a son (Jihu), a niece (sumin)… But the character who ends up being the “endgame” feels empty. And it’s not just about family. We didn’t even get real remorse. There was no genuine apology. No honest conversation. No moment where you truly felt like “okay, he understands what he did.” Everything felt rushed. Vague. Surface-level. So you can’t help but ask… why give so much weight, so much development, and so much emotional connection to other characters… if the one who ends up staying doesn’t have that same depth? Why build so much around Jo? Why make Ian connect with his entire world… if that wasn’t the final path? It’s strange. And the more you analyze it… the emptier it feels. And that’s the most impactful part: it’s not a small detail… it’s a huge gap that completely changes how the ending is perceived.














show me a fictional character who deserved a better ending


















