Cette critique peut contenir des spoilers
When the university student gets his idol <3
A famous singer gets signed on to represent a video game as the celebrity endorser, but she cannot actually play the game. So she needs a tutor, of course! A university student—yes, the guy is a few years younger—and tech whiz gets connected to the tutoring job via a mutual friend, and although he is a die-hard fan of the singer, he has no idea that she is the terrible player he’s trying to tutor online. Cue friendship-building sequences.
This drama is not particularly gripping, but it is usually engaging and entirely wholesome. There are others vying for the leads’ attention, but these two don’t seriously look at anyone else, and they support each other so beautifully. (What can I say? I’m a sucker for a stable relationship.)
The video-game and real-world interaction is fun and well-filmed! They “enter” any game that they are playing, which makes for many action/adventure scenarios—James Bond, guerilla warfare, zombie soldier attack, etc. The music is fun—the main song that the singer returns to throughout the series is on one of my frequent-listen playlists.
This drama is not particularly gripping, but it is usually engaging and entirely wholesome. There are others vying for the leads’ attention, but these two don’t seriously look at anyone else, and they support each other so beautifully. (What can I say? I’m a sucker for a stable relationship.)
The video-game and real-world interaction is fun and well-filmed! They “enter” any game that they are playing, which makes for many action/adventure scenarios—James Bond, guerilla warfare, zombie soldier attack, etc. The music is fun—the main song that the singer returns to throughout the series is on one of my frequent-listen playlists.
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