![]() ![]() Which is why it always a breath of fresh air when characters have proper communication throughout a series.Īlso to when the love interest is horrid to the other. It so overdone most of the time especially in the romance section on webtoons. Yes to both, I cannot stand unnecessary misunderstanding. If I caught up with even just those, I'm sure this list would be massive. And I ditched A LOT of webtoons I was enjoying in the past which I know I'm unlikely to like anymore. So in-story problems are ones I'm not too exposed to anymore. I don't read a lot of webtoons anymore though. But I get some artists struggle so if the plot/characters holds up, I try my best to ignore it (with the slight hope it'll improve again). I liked WMMAP, but in general, I hate this concept and majority of what comes with it.Īrtstyle changing in a negative way. Characters tend to be 2-dimentional, they have the rose-coloured-shoujo filter on 24/7, does a lot of "tell, not show" and I REALLY don't understand why the girl had to have come from the normal world in the first place? And it goes without saying, it's overdone at the moment. Both in how it pays its artists and in how it takes money from consumers in such a messy way. That the Webtoon platform has it's own issues. ![]() You can make whatever arguments you want about Seungcheon as a person, but I actually deeply related to this aspect of his character (not for the exact same reasons, but for something similar). His anger is actually born of love for his mother. His dad is a nice person, but Seungcheon is mad at him for "pursuing his dream" when it comes at the expense of his mom's comfort - his mom has to work twice as hard and often gets sick because his dad's dream doesn't bring in any money. But reading between the lines, you can understand why he's like that. ![]() This is something I really appreciated about The Golden Spoon - Seungcheon is not very nice to his parents, his dad in particular. Your parents can really love you and you can still have a difficult relationship with them. I know plenty whose parents don't just change their mind like that - and it's hard to reconcile that with the fact that those parents still love you. It doesn't really work that way for a lot of us, though. Sometimes there's a "good" parent who holds a "bad" perspective at first (e.g., Brass & Sass - Beth's Mom forces her into piano and later on realizes that she was wrong to do so) but then they become "good" thereafter. I've noticed that in a lot of stories, if the parents are "good," they have a perfect relationship with their child + their child will do anything to make them happy. Not really a pet peeve (well, sort of), but I'd like to see more nuanced portrayals of parent-child relationships rather than the standard. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |