Despite not premiering until November, Dynamite Kiss is already in conversation as one of the best K-dramas of 2025. The year has been chock-full of Netflix original K-dramas ranging from subpar to sublime, including the historical fantasy of Bon Appétit, Your Majesty, and the classic romance of Melo Movie. Regardless, few titles have pushed the genre’s boundaries like Dynamite Kiss.
Netflix’s release model makes for immensely bingeable K-dramas, and Dynamite Kiss is no different. Rather than drop a single weekly episode, Netflix K-dramas typically span two days (Wednesday and Thursday, in Dynamite Kiss’ case) to add higher stakes and even bigger cliffhangers. There are plenty of traditional rules Dynamite Kiss adheres to, but it nonetheless maintains its refreshing, unique personality.
Dynamite Kiss Is A Strong Contender For Best K-Drama Of 2025
The Netflix Original Is Off To A Great Start
Dynamite Kiss has captivated audiences since the K-drama’s first episode, thanks to its talented cast, beautiful camerawork, and original plot. At the center of the action is Go Da-rim (Ahn Eun-jin), a down-on-her-luck woman who desperately needs to get a job after her little sister finds herself in trouble with loan sharks. Additionally, her mother collapses from hearing the news.
Unfortunately, Da-rim has no special skills or credits to her name, making the job search practically impossible. On the flip side, Gong Ji-hyeok (Jang Ki-yong) is a thriving entrepreneur who detests his father and the family business. To free his depressed mother from a loveless marriage, however, Ji-hyeok agrees to run a new task force composed solely of working mothers.
The basic set-up is compelling enough, but Dynamite Kiss adds another layer to further complicate Ji-hyeok and Da-rim’s relationship — prior to the formation of the Mothers Task Force, the pair met by chance on a trip to Jeju Island. Their attraction to each other proved electric, and the two spent one perfect day together before Da-rim flees like Cinderella.
While its intriguing conflicts initially pulled viewers in, the streaming success of Dynamite Kiss is thanks to its continual high quality and hidden depth. There are just enough rom-com tropes to pull in casual fans, but Dynamite Kiss adds real substance to its characters and storytelling, making it much more than a typical love story.
Why Dynamite Kiss Has Been So Compelling So Far
The Central Love Story Is Putting A Twist On Well-Worn Tropes
What truly sets Dynamite Kiss apart from the other new dramas of 2025 is how it deals in shades of grey. It could have been easy to root against both Ji-hyeok and Da-rim, but their palpable chemistry as a couple and nuanced motivations as individuals made both of them feel like tragic heroes (who sometimes act more like complex anti-heroes).
Furthermore, Dynamite Kiss is a family-focused K-drama hiding in plain sight. At the most basic level, Da-rim and Ji-hyeok are driven purely out of love and concern for their mothers. For Da-rim, there’s the added pressure of her missing little sister. For her fake child, Jun, he’s the only kid in his class without a mother.
Dynamite Kiss will run for 14 episodes, concluding its Netflix release on December 25, 2025.
The task force itself overtly analyzes the prejudice against mothers who try to rejoin the workforce. While many workers in the company look down on them, Da-rim’s coworkers are the living embodiment of the sacrifices you make for love. As episode 3 even reveals, most of them lost their very sense of identity aside from being a mother.
Arguably, the most intriguing aspect of Netflix’s newest romance is how Dynamite Kiss breaks K-drama rules. At first glance, the show is overflowing with common tropes like enemies-to-lovers, workplace relationships, and second-chance romances, but Dynamite Kiss subverts the viewer’s expectations whenever possible. So far, it’s been the perfect storm of levity and realism, grounding its romance in tear-jerking yet relatable circumstances.
Will Dynamite Kiss Stick The Landing?
The Future Looks Promising For Netflix’s Newest Romance
Dynamite Kiss still has a long way to go before it can be called a K-drama masterpiece, but the Netflix romance has built itself a sturdy foundation. After four episodes, multiple major plots have been primed, including the battle for dominance at the company, the little sister’s debt, and Ji-hyeok’s trauma surrounding his father’s infidelity.
Unlike the frustrating titles of K-drama past, there are obvious reasons why the leads can’t be together yet. Ji-hyeok fell in love at first sight, but he refuses to pursue a woman he believes is married with a child, as he doesn’t want to repeat his father’s mistakes. Similarly, Da-rim can’t confess that she’s single without losing her job.
There are obvious subplots forming, like Ji-hyeok’s arranged fiancée, Yoo Ha-young (Woo Da-vi), falling for Da-rim’s fake husband, Kim Sun-woo (Kim Mu-jun), but only time will tell if Dynamite Kiss has the bandwidth to juggle its overlapping storylines without losing its sense of direction. That said, the first four episodes instill confidence that the drama will succeed.
By the series finale, Go Da-rim and Gong Ji-hyeok may be lauded as one of the best K-drama couples of all time. Just as easily, unfortunately, the trending K-drama could fall from grace and come to a disappointing ending. There’s no telling what the future holds, but Dynamite Kiss is at least off to a promising start.
- Release Date
-
November 12, 2025
- Network
-
SBS
- Directors
-
Kim Jae-hyun
- Writers
-
Ha Yoon-ah
-
Jang Ki-yong
Gong Ji-hyeok
-










![‘Our Hero, Balthazar’ Thwarts a Would-Be School Shooter in First Images For Wild Satire Starring Noah Centineo and Asa Butterfield [Exclusive] ‘Our Hero, Balthazar’ Thwarts a Would-Be School Shooter in First Images For Wild Satire Starring Noah Centineo and Asa Butterfield [Exclusive]](https://static1.colliderimages.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/untitled-design-70.jpg)




