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The plot is as irredeemable as the art. Both contain inexplicable additions that don’t make any sense. The art has bad perspectives and sometimes the characters are placed in a glaringly artificial way that makes it obvious they were copy pasted together rather than being a whole image. This is particularly obvious in fight scenes. Perhaps there wasn’t a storyboard?
One of my favorite moments involves an orchid flower who had its vase broken by some relatives. Resolving this is a big deal to impress and build connections with another big business family. The hilarious part of this is that the MC takes this cut flower with no roots home to raise it and pots it in some dirt? It can’t be a cut flower for this plot to work, but that’s what the artist drew. Let’s not even mention the subtle-only-because-it-happens-in-the-background cruelty of closing a woman into a box to be shipped and exiled overseas for attempting to destroy the flower.
I only rated this story as well as I did because the cliches are over the top enough to give me the occasional laugh. For example, there is a scene where some movie directors argue about cliches and the protagonist is internally dissing the mainstream market. The irony is that this manhua is about as mainstream as a CEO romance can get. The only positive message is a strong focus on healing with familial love, with the obvious exception of the villains. Not so positive after all is it?
The plot is as irredeemable as the art. Both contain inexplicable additions that don’t make any sense. The art has bad perspectives and sometimes the characters are placed in a glaringly artificial way that makes it obvious they were copy pasted together rather than being a whole image. This is particularly obvious in fight scenes. Perhaps there wasn’t a storyboard?
One of my favorite moments involves an orchid flower who had its vase broken by some relatives. Resolving this is a big deal to impress and build connections with another big business family. The hilarious part of this is that the MC takes this cut flower with no roots home to raise it and pots it in some dirt? It can’t be a cut flower for this plot to work, but that’s what the artist drew. Let’s not even mention the subtle-only-because-it-happens-in-the-background cruelty of closing a woman into a box to be shipped and exiled overseas for attempting to destroy the flower.
I only rated this story as well as I did because the cliches are over the top enough to give me the occasional laugh. For example, there is a scene where some movie directors argue about cliches and the protagonist is internally dissing the mainstream market. The irony is that this manhua is about as mainstream as a CEO romance can get. The only positive message is a strong focus on healing with familial love, with the obvious exception of the villains. Not so positive after all is it?
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