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The First Night with the Duke

Reincarnated as a minor character within a novel, Cha Seon-taek unexpectedly shares a night with Prince Kyungsung, igniting an intense and unforeseen romance.

Director(s)

Lee Woong-hee

Cast & Crew

Nam Kee-ae

Nam Kee-ae

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Jung Hee-tae

Jung Hee-tae

Do Bae-myeong

Yun Yoo-sun

Yun Yoo-sun

Yoon Deok-jeong

Chi Hae-won

Chi Hae-won

Do Hwa-seon

Kim Ah-young

Kim Ah-young

Sul Gi [Shaman]

Seohyun

Seohyun

Cha Seon-chaek / K

Yoon Jung-hoon

Yoon Jung-hoon

Cha Se-ho

Lee Sang-un

Lee Sang-un

Cha Jang-ho

Ju Seok-tae

Ju Seok-tae

King Seoljong

Jung Ho-bin

Jung Ho-bin

Jeong Moon-seok

Seo Hyun-chul

Seo Hyun-chul

Cha Ho-yeol

Seo Bum-june

Seo Bum-june

Jeong Su-gyeom

Ok Taec-yeon

Ok Taec-yeon

Prince Kyungsung / Lee Beon

Kim Shin-bi

Kim Shin-bi

Cha Du-ho

Lee Woong-hee

Lee Woong-hee

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Kwon Han-sol

Kwon Han-sol

Cho Eun-ae

Kim Young-woong

Kim Young-woong

Cho Byeong-mu

Lee Tae-seon

Lee Tae-seon

Prince Seonghyeon

Song Yeong-jae

Song Yeong-jae

-

Details

GenresSci-Fi & Fantasy, Comedy, Drama
Seasons1
Episodes12
Languageko
Produced InSouth Korea
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Reviews

Yohan Yukiya Sese Cuneta 사요한

8/10

**Moral lesson: Unless one can do better, maybe skip the nasty comments** This is a story about a reader who went after an author because the story did not go the way she wanted. She hated how it progressed, hated how it ended, and decided it was perfectly fine to throw around rude comments in public. Hiding behind that old excuse of "we're entitled to our opinion", but the message in this story was pretty clear: "If it's really that easy, then write and produce something better." There is a massive gap between criticism that helps and comments that just attack. Some authors speak out, many just stay quiet. Some do not even bother reading feedback anymore. And there will always be those who lose heart, those who stop writing, those who even lose their jobs—because of words meant to hurt, not help. This story was written for those types of readers. The main character? A woman who decided to let loose an ugly comment. Unfortunately for her, the author fought back. She was challenged to rewrite the story. Not just rewrite it—rewrite it well enough to save her life. She tried. Only to end up dying by execution. In the end, the author gave her one last option: write a proper ending using only three sentences, to save yourself from execution. After wasting hours trying to pull off something epic, what did she come up with? A bee. A ridiculous bee. Her "genius" twist boiled down to the most random thing imaginable—a bee. In fairness, despite almost dying and her ridiculous bee, she actually came up with a better version of the story she trashed. One that worked, nonsense twist and all. She learnt her lesson. Sometimes it is not about liking or hating a story. Sometimes it is about understanding that writing is never as easy as it looks. Not every twist will be loved, not every ending will satisfy. And attacking someone for it helps no one. The question is—did you learn the lesson?

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