Show gives no explanation whatsoever for this, so we’re forced to assume that this is just part of Rogue Game’s evolving insanity (or writer-nim’s evolving insanity, if you’re REALLY mad at Show’s ending, heh). He’s a player, just like Se Joo the previous Master was – and Se Joo isn’t considered a bug. He’s not a NPC created in the image of a dead person, likes Bugs 1, 2 and 3. There is literally nothing in the rest of the show that backs this up. My biggest issue with the entire (rather fragmented, rather slow-moving) finale is the big question of why Jin Woo’s considered a bug. Jin Woo’s tears and his desperate hug, as the image of Secretary Seo shatters and dissolves, made my heart bleed a little. Augh.Įven though I know that Bug 3 isn’t really Secretary Seo in the flesh, it’s still heartbreaking to see him destroyed. The moment that really gets me this episode, is when Jin Woo (it took me 16 friggin’ episodes to finally realize that Zinu is a play on Jin Woo’s name. It made no sense that Professor Cha would appear as Jin Woo’s ally because according to in-game rules, these dead allies appear only when Jin Woo’s in mortal danger, and he wasn’t in mortal danger when Professor Cha (with no weapons to speak of) appeared.ĪNYWAY. I was a little less mad when I saw that he erased other bugs first, even though I had to rationalize that he was able to take over Emma’s job of deleting bugs because he’d been made the new game Master (coz otherwise all we know is that it’s Emma’s job to delete bugs). Who’s to say that after righting it this time, that it won’t go rogue again? Hello?” This game has gone so rogue, so hard, that it’s taken several lives. “If he thinks that sacrificing himself will save the company and its employees, I hope he realizes that there is no guarantee. I really didn’t think it was a good idea for Hee Joo to give him her heart, especially since he was actively trying to leave her behind. Plus, the fact that he would leave without warning. Not to mention the fact that he’s keeping an emotional distance most of the time (except when he’s drugged or in mortal danger), and therefore sending a whole bunch of mixed signals, blowing hot and mostly cold. He’s uncommunicative unless it suits him he treats her like a beck-and-call girl, asking her to leave when it suits him, and making her go everywhere, when he needs her. Seriously, when you stack it up, she should run from Jin Woo, and fast.Įven if we give him a pass (which he completely doesn’t deserve) for the horrible way he treated her when he first met her, and if we discount the deception of how he bought the hostel without giving her full information (because she still doesn’t know about it), there are so many other things she should take as serious signs that he’s bad news. In episode 6, her feelings for Jin Woo are clear to see, but I was absolutely not on board with it. As frustratingly insensitive as he can be, he doesn’t take life and death lightly.Įven though Professor Cha’s working to take him down to the lowest low, he still hesitates to form the in-game alliance with Professor Cha, because it would put Professor Cha’s life at risk. I must also say, Jin Woo’s not a bad person. Since Professor Cha is so convinced that Jin Woo is crazy and that he himself is right, it would look stupid for him not to perform the task, which is so simple and straightforward.Į12. That’s smart of Jin Woo, to dare Professor Cha (Kim Eui Sung) to log in and form an alliance with him. Well that’s the nicest thing I’ve seen Jin Woo do go to keep Min Joo (Lee Re) company because he knew that she was scared on her own, and then make toast for her so that she wouldn’t go to school hungry. Although, he had used the amount to pressure Hee Joo, with the dropping offer price. I’ll give Jin Woo some credit for paying the same price for the hostel, that Cha Hyeong Seok (Park Hoon) was offering Se Joo (Chanyeol).
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