In “SF8: The Prayer”, Gan Ho-Joong is a robot caregiver, required to take care of a terminally ill patient, the mother of Yeon Jung-In. The robot is an excellent caregiver for the patient, but she also strives to understand the daughter of the patient. Perhaps evolving and becoming more “human-like” it part of her programming.
In ‘Korean Peninsula’, North and South Korea have reunited as one country. Seo Myung-joon is a South Korean scientist who became the president of a reunified Korea. He took over the job when the president who was serving ended up in the hospital and could no longer perform his official duties.
This series was a supernatural/fantasy about Do-ha, a warrior and aristocrat from Silla, who died at the hands of Han Ri-ta, his loving wife. Well! He thought she loved him. For thousands of years, his spirit traveled through time because he wanted to take vengeance on her. But each time Han Ri-ta was reincarnated she was killed before he could do anything.
Seo Bok is the first and the only successfully cloned specimen created through stem cell cloning and genetic manipulation. He or rather “IT” is or is not human and who either can or can not die.
“Connect” is an urban legend. People say it’s a legend because they have never met anybody who was a real Connect. But what is it? A Connect is a person who does not die. That must be a legend. That can’t be real. Right?
“Pandora: Beneath the Paradise” begins with a major announcement which is much like real news about Elon Musk and Neuralink. In real life, it’s a brain chip and in this fictional K-drama series, it’s a brain patch. Pyo Jae-Hyun, CEO of Hatch, announced that their research team had created a VR small patch that allows the direct input of unlearned data into the human brain.
There is the human Nam Shin and then there is Nam Shin III, an android, AI robot. The human Nam Shin was separated from his mother, Oh Ro-Ra, at a very young age. It was said that his father committed suicide, but he was taken from his living mother by force.
Kim Min-Kyu is a reclusive millionaire. He has to live by himself and when he does come out in public he covers himself including wearing gloves and carrying a baton. The baton is to make sure that people keep their distance and don’t touch him. It’s not that he is antisocial. It’s just that he’s allergic to humans. If a human touches him he has an extreme allergic reaction and it could even result in death.
GIO Labs deserves high praise for being the first to invent an AI humanoid that passed the Turing Test (a test that scores how well a machine can imitate a human talking). A representative for GIO Labs made an excellent presentation of the hologlass prototype; a pair of eyeglasses that will give a human access to a personal hologram of their own.
Han Tae-Sul (played by Cho Seung-Woo) is a genius computer engineer and the CEO of Quantum & Time. Han Tae-Sul invented the uploader which allowed people to time travel. Gang Seo-Hae (played by Park Shin-Hye) is a woman who time travels from the future to the past BEFORE the uploader has been invented. Seo-Hae’s mission is to protect Han Tae-Sul and to prevent a nuclear war. In the time period she came from there was a war and South Korea had been destroyed.
Ellen Ripley, the next iconic survivor in Dead by Daylight’s horror lineup, joins the ranks. Known as the quintessential protagonist of Alien, she stands tall as one of the best-crafted female characters in horror and science fiction. The Xenomorph, announced months ago as the killer for the Alien Chapter, initially sparked excitement. However, my disappointment arises from BHVR decision not to secure Sigourney Weaver’s likeness for Ellen Ripley’s character model. It’s possible they allocated their budget to the Nicolas Cage DLC, which dropped a few months ago. Tackling the likeness of two renowned actors back-to-back might not have been feasible. Despite of having a different face, She still looks like Ellen Ripley because of her uniform and hair. When we had a Halloween chapter, Laurie Strode dont look like Jamie Lee Curtis.
The purpose of this series is to find the answer to the question: Even if time travel is possible, should it be permissible? The physicist who finally figured out how to accomplish time travel thought it was good. She thought that you can go back to your past and experience wonderful memories again. What a pity that others found more sinister and pernicious ways to take advantage of time traveling.