2025
16 eps
Netflix
Romance Comedy Historical
A sharp-tongued modern food critic accidentally tumbles into Joseon and finds herself navigating royal kitchens and palace intrigue — while the Crown Prince is …
If you loved Live Up to Your Name's fish completely out of water — comedy and heart in equal measure, Bon Appétit, Your Majesty delivers exactly that. The emotional territory — time travel — is the same. The pacing is genuinely warm without tipping into saccharine.
2012
16 eps
tvN
Romance Fantasy Historical
A Joseon-era scholar facing execution discovers a mysterious talisman that transports him to modern-day Seoul each time he opens it. In the present, he meets a …
If you loved Live Up to Your Name's fish completely out of water — comedy and heart in equal measure, Queen In-hyun's Man delivers exactly that. Same funny and romantic energy throughout.
2018
16 eps
tvN
Romance Comedy Historical
An amnesiac crown prince becomes a village husband in a commoner marriage decree, discovering real love.…
If you loved Live Up to Your Name's fish completely out of water — comedy and heart in equal measure, 100 Days My Prince delivers exactly that. Same adventurous and romantic energy throughout.
2017
16 eps
tvN
Fantasy Romance Comedy
The water god Habaek descends to the human world to retrieve divine stones — and by ancient prophecy, a human woman named So-ah is destined to serve as his guid…
If you loved Live Up to Your Name's fish completely out of water — comedy and heart in equal measure, The Bride of Habaek delivers exactly that. At its core, it's about the slow, non-linear work of healing — done with real tenderness. The pacing is romantically charged — the tension is everywhere, even when nothing's happening.
2022
12 eps
tvN
Historical Medical Romance
A disgraced royal physician exiled for using unorthodox methods finds new purpose in a remote village, treating patients' emotional and psychological wounds in …
If you loved Live Up to Your Name's fish completely out of water — comedy and heart in equal measure, Poong, the Joseon Psychiatrist delivers exactly that. At its core, it's about the slow, non-linear work of healing — done with real tenderness. The pacing is genuinely warm without tipping into saccharine.
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