My Top Five Dramas of 2024

It has been nearly seven years since I started my k-drama journey, approaching 250 titles as my next milestone. I now feel that I can see the trends from a wider angle, pinpointing which years really nailed their content and which lacked their luster. 2024 was a bit of a “fill in the dots” year. This was my first year since starting this blog series that I had more trouble narrowing down this list, and not from who qualified, but rather who edged their way in.

Not all was lost, and not every year can have a bumper crop. But 2025 is another year, and there are plenty of untapped older dramas to enjoy.

Lovely Runner

Lovely Runner is streaming on Viki

How do you handle finding out that the boy next door had a crush on you in high school but you totally missed it? It takes becoming his fangirl as an adult and getting swept into the quagmire of rewriting history when he suddenly dies one night after she goes to his concert. Can she change the past to save him and take the fangirl love to the next level?

The Atypical Family

Atypical Family is streaming on Netflix

Atypical could not be a more appropriate descriptor for this drama. A family with hidden superpowers can’t seem to get them to work any more, with everyone slowly spiraling the drain as days go by. The mother chances upon Do Do-Hae while getting a massage and invites her to their home for private sessions. Who knew that one small decision could start a chain reaction that doesn’t go as anyone planned.

Family by Choice

Family by Choice is streaming on Viki

This drama would be more appropriately named Mommy Issues, but since it centers on chosen family, the original name stands. After losing her mom as an infant, Yoon Jo-Woon lives alone with her loving, noodle-shop-owning father when a new family moves in upstairs in their apartment building. Jo-Woon latches on to the neighbor boy, having always wanted an older brother. She unwittingly gets a two-for-one deal when her father ends up permanently caring for the his blind date’s son after she disappears and leaves him in his care.

Marry My Husband

Marry My Husband is streaming on Amazon Prime

All it takes to finally realize your self worth is to marry a pathetic mommy’s boy who cheats on you with your so-called best friend and forces you to literally work yourself to death by getting cancer. When an unfair death gives Kang Ji-Won a second chance at life, she takes her situation in her own hands and decides to change her destiny.

Flex x Cop

Flex x Cop is streaming on Hulu

A spoiled rich kid with too much time on his hands shockingly gets himself into trouble and is sentenced to working as a cop as part of his father’s publicity stunt. His boss can’t stand his bravado and tries to bench him, but he manages to be more helpful than she’d care to admit. Maybe the cheeky golden spoon with more than meets the eye can be an asset to the team after all.

Honorable Mention: When the Phone Rings

When the Phone Rings is streaming on Netflix

What happens when a presidential spokesperson refuses to publicly acknowledge his mute wife, confining her in their marriage with no realistic way out? When Hong Hee-Joo is kidnapped in an attempt to blackmail her husband, Hee-Joo takes matters into her own hands to find an escape from her loveless prison.

This drama was demoted to honorable mention purely because of the last episode. From what I’ve seen, the crew ran out of time to fully execute the last leg of the storyline, causing a large portion of the final episode to confuse viewers if they haven’t read the original webtoon. It would have been smarter to adjust the story to fit the schedule for the sake of successfully landing the plane.

My Top Five Dramas of 2023

2023 brought a number of new heavy hitters to my favorites list with each gaining their spot for different reasons. Since too many top tier dramas came out last year, I had to include an honorable mention this time since it deserved to make the cut. As with every year, or so it seems, the K-drama machine continues to duplicate itself and iterate on a theme. Some used those tropes a bit better than the rest, so check them out below.

Twinkling Watermelon

Twinkling Watermelon is streaming on Viki

A story so sweet and refreshing it feels like taking a bite of the title of this drama. Taking a page from the Oscar-winning film CODA, this feel-good tale follows Eun-gyeol as he struggles to be his own person as the only hearing member of his family. After a blow-up between Eun-gyeol and his dad, a mysterious guitar shop takes him back to 1995 right into the path of, well, his 18-year-old dad. Eun-gyeol shapes his own dream while standing up for those without a voice in this reminder of the promise of youth.

Moving

Moving is streaming on Hulu & Disney+

Not your mother’s K-drama. (Even though I made my mom watch it?) But more in the vein of recent gritty dramas (i.e. Squid Game), this grown-up version of Sky High still has the heart of why we love K-dramas through the detailed characterization and beautiful relationships portrayed in this show. A government program recruits “skilled” agents for the off-the-book missions that normal operatives can’t do. When the first generation starts aging out, the offspring of said “skilled” agents are ripe for the taking, after careful observation. But not everyone is happy with their children following in their footsteps. Blossoming romances and fierce stand-offs litter this drama with a second season on the way.

See You in My 19th Life

See You in My 19th Life is streaming on Netflix

It’s hard to pinpoint exactly what makes this drama feel like the secure embrace from a loved one you haven’t seen in a long while. Maybe it’s the cinematography, the music, or the writing, but what truly sells this drama’s atmosphere is the astounding performance of Shin Hye-Sun. Don’t be deceived by her youthful appearance, her character Ban Ji-Eum radiates an old soul with 19 lives’ experience walking in a 24-year-old’s body. When her 19th life begins differently from the previous lives she remembers, Ji Eum sets out to reconnect with her best friend in her last life but discovers that the forgotten past might be repeating itself.

Daily Dose of Sunshine

Daily Dose of Sunshine is streaming on Netflix

Don’t take this drama at face value: one will need to up their daily dose of sunshine after watching this drama. The beauty and complexity of friendship interweave with facing one’s fears and what lurks in the depths of one’s mind. A nurse in her final year of residency makes an abrupt turn from internal medicine to the psychiatric wing of the hospital, forcing herself to face the reality that she’s more like her patients than she knew. As the varied cast of characters confront their issues and support one another, the viewer comes along for the ride of discovering how life can get just a little bit better by finding those they can trust so that they never walk through the darkness alone. Another day is coming and sunshine is just around the corner.

The Good Bad Mother

The Good Bad Mother is streaming on Netflix

Confusing title modifiers aside, this drama is a masterclass in acting. A hard-working mom loses everything and moves her son to deep in the countryside to start a new pig farm. She forces her son to study night and day in order to become a prosecutor, at the cost of his own desires, and for what? The threads slowly unravel to reveal the true motivation: is she the “good” bad mother her son sees her as or has she been a good “bad” mother all along?

Honorable Mention: Castaway Diva

Castaway Diva is streaming on Netflix

Sometimes being a fangirl actually pays off in mysterious ways. After an incident leaves Seo Meok-ha stranded on a desert island for 15 years, she is reunited with civilization and runs into her favorite singer, Yoon Ran-joo, who has been through the gambit since Meok-ha last saw her. Despite a rocky childhood and intense time alone, Meok-ha exudes hope and still dreams of becoming a singer. This hope rubs off on Ran-joo, jumpstarting her own dying career and inspiring her to help Meok-ha follow her dream. With reality checks and ghosts from the past, this drama reminds the viewer that it’s never too late to take a chance on a dream. Sometimes it will work out better than one hoped or a door will open to an even better path.

My Top Five Dramas of 2022

Having watched quite a number of dramas last year, I’ve selected my favorite five 2022 dramas for this list. There would be quite a list of honorable mentions but these five piqued my interest the most for various reasons. I even changed this list at the last minute after finishing one drama, check out my next blog post for my thoughts on that one.

business proposal

Why not take the tropes and run with it? Business Proposal helped start the year out with a light-hearted, genuine romantic comedy centered on food. A nice, solid bite of twelve episodes leaves no room for wasted time, although many viewers wished for just one more episode to push the love lines of both couples just a bit further. Be sure to have snacks while watching!

Gaus Electronics

Chaotic co-workers, unlikely romance, and amazing puns. Two of those three things fit my own work environment. Another twelve-episode series packs a punch without going on too long, with great characterization and unexpected antics that keep viewers glued to the screen. What could go wrong when a wealthy chaebol heir wants to work at his family’s rival company? He couldn’t possibly end up on the black sheep team of the company…

Tomorrow

Hope still needs to be let out of Pandora’s box in this afterlife drama focused on rescuing souls on the brink of suicide. The afterlife has been modernized to have an app monitoring the happiness levels of souls, alerting grim reapers to be ready to guide people to their final destinations. But why must despairing people be left so alone to be pushed to the brink of what they can handle? A solitary team of grim reapers is not satisfied with seeing people who choose to take their own life as evil, but as desperate and in need of a helping hand.

Yumi’s Cells 2

Ba-bi or ba-bo? The second entry in the series of Yumi’s love life brings in a new boyfriend in the form of Ba-bi, a fellow writer in Yumi’s new department at work. But what happens if her ex-boyfriend is still hung up on her and is now wildly successful after she dumps him for not having his life together? Yumi’s (brain) cells certainly don’t know what to do.

Bad Prosecutor

Kyungsoo with a sword, kicking ass and taking names in the name of the law. Say less.