There’s something about supernatural K-Dramas that just hits. The mix of fantasy, romance, and existential reflection makes them addictive in a way few genres can match. Recently, I found myself watching two back-to-back: My Demon and Genie, Make a Wish.
Both were entertaining, emotionally satisfying, and visually beautiful—and yet, I couldn’t help but notice how similar they felt. Not just in plot, but in emotional rhythm. They’re practically mirror images of each other, and somehow, that made the experience both comforting and predictable.
Still, I enjoyed the ride. Sometimes, you just want a story that lets you know where it’s headed—and still makes your heart flutter along the way.
The Familiar Allure of Supernatural Love Stories
There’s a reason K-Dramas that mix romance with the supernatural have become their own beloved subgenre. They tap into something primal: the idea that love can cross time, death, even realms. Whether it’s a ghost, a demon, or a cursed immortal, there’s always a touch of fate woven through the chaos.
In My Demon and Genie, Make a Wish, that familiar thread is unmistakable. Both feature a brooding, supernatural male lead stripped of his powers, and a strong yet emotionally guarded female lead who becomes the key to his salvation. There’s banter, destiny, and of course the gradual realization that love itself is the true magic.
It’s a formula that works. It’s the comfort food of fantasy romance. You know what you’re getting, but that doesn’t make it any less satisfying.
When Comfort Meets Predictability
Let’s be honest: both dramas share a lot of DNA.
In My Demon, we have Jeong Gu-won, the centuries-old demon who feeds on contracts and finds himself suddenly powerless after crossing paths with Do Do-hee, a fierce CEO with trust issues. In Genie, Make a Wish, we meet Jeong Seok, a genie who has spent hundreds of years bound by wishes, until he meets the one woman who can finally set him free.
Both male leads are charmingly arrogant until love humbles them. Both heroines are fiercely independent until they realize they can trust someone again. Both couples must fight fate, power imbalances, and emotional baggage before finding peace.
And honestly? I loved every bit of it.
Yes, it’s predictable. Yes, you can see the redemption arc coming from miles away. But there’s something soothing about watching two flawed people—one immortal, one human—learn to be vulnerable again. Especially when the world around them is as visually stunning as these shows make it.
Pacing: Where the Two Part Ways
Where My Demon and Genie, Make a Wish diverge is in their storytelling rhythm.
My Demon dragged a bit at the start. The first few episodes spent a lot of time setting up the world, establishing power hierarchies, and rehashing the “CEO meets mysterious stranger” dynamic. I almost dropped it halfway, but I’m glad I didn’t, because once it got going, it really got going. The final stretch delivered on both the emotional payoff and the fantasy stakes, and the ending felt earned.
Genie, Make a Wish, on the other hand, took the opposite approach. The early episodes moved quickly, leaning into the humor and romance before grounding the story in a deeper mythology. The backstory, though? It came late. Almost too late. By the time we got the full picture of who Jeong Seok really was and why he was cursed, the show was almost over.
It’s not that it didn’t work—it just made the ending feel heavier than it needed to be. I wanted more time to sit with the emotional revelations instead of sprinting through them.
Still, that final emotional release? Worth it.
Why Similar Stories Still Work
Even though both series follow nearly identical blueprints, I think that’s part of their charm. Not every story has to reinvent the wheel. Sometimes, the familiarity itself becomes part of the appeal—especially in fantasy romance, where the themes of redemption, healing, and eternal love never lose their magic.
Watching My Demon and Genie, Make a Wish back-to-back felt like reading two different versions of the same fairy tale: the same structure, the same heart, but different flavors of heartbreak and hope.
And maybe that’s the point. Each retelling reminds us why we keep coming back to these stories in the first place—to believe, even for a few hours, that love can heal anything, even the wounds we can’t see.
Final Thoughts
If I had to sum up both series:
- My Demon wins for its ending and worldbuilding. It took its time, but once it found its footing, it delivered a satisfying and emotional finish.
- Genie, Make a Wish wins for its energy and early chemistry. The setup was fast and fun, even if the backstory hit a bit late.
Both left me thinking about how comforting predictability can be—especially when it’s wrapped in fantasy, romance, and just enough magic to keep you believing in something more.
So yes, they’re similar. Yes, they follow a formula. But when the formula works, it’s because it speaks to something we all crave: the idea that love—whether human or divine—can bring us back to ourselves.
And honestly? That’s a story I’ll keep watching again and again.
Like Dramas?
Well this is not a K-Drama but a Dominican Drama (I would say D-Drama but that sounds bad)…It has supernatural, family drama, witchcraft, and friends to possibly more tension.
The Ordinary Bruja: Book One of Las Cerradoras Series – Johanny Ortega
Marisol Espinal has spent her life trying to disappear from her family’s whispers of magic, from the shame of not belonging, from the truth she refuses to face. She’s always wanted to be someone else: confident, capable, extraordinary.
But when strange visions, flickering shadows, and warnings written in her mother’s hand begin to stalk her, Marisol is forced to confront her deepest fear: what if she isn’t extraordinary at all? What if she’s painfully ordinary?
Yet Hallowthorn Hill doesn’t call to just anyone. And the more Marisol resists, the stronger its pull becomes. The past she’s buried claws its way back, and something in the mist is watching—waiting for her to remember.
If Marisol cannot face the truth about who she is and where she comes from, the same darkness that destroyed her ancestors will claim her, too.
Somewhere in the shadows, something knows her name.
And it’s time for Marisol to learn why.




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