Zariah “Zari” Nala Scar has always lived in the shadow of a legacy she neither asked for nor fully understands. Born on the Isle of the Lost, daughter of Scar—the cunning, ruthless lion whose ambition led him to the throne of Pride Rock and ultimately to his downfall—and a human woman whose identity remains largely unknown to the outside world, Zari has inherited the sharp intelligence, sly wit, and natural agility of her father, but none of the cruelty that marked his reign. From the moment she could walk, she learned that survival on the Isle is about cunning, perception, and knowing which battles to fight—and which to let pass.
Auradon Prep has always been a place of expectations. A kingdom built on stories of heroes and villains, magic and morals, good and evil, it leaves little room for subtlety. The children of iconic Disney figures—both villains and heroes alike—strut through the halls with a sense of inherited destiny, their lives often defined by their parents’ legacies, the press of legend, and the scrutinizing gaze of the kingdom. Into this world of perfection and performance steps Perdita “Peri” Radcliffe, daughter of Roger and Anita Radcliffe, inheritor of a legacy of music, fashion, and a life surrounded by the love of Dalmatians—and yet, carrying a heart that doesn’t quite fit neatly into Auradon’s neat lines.
At Seonghwa High School, appearances mean everything. Everyone knows their place—except for Lee Ha-neul (이하늘), the outcast tomboy who refuses to fit in. With her messy ponytail, sneakers instead of loafers, and a scowl that warns “don’t mess with me,” she’s notorious for ignoring school rules, skipping classes, and challenging anyone who tries to control her. She doesn’t care about popularity, boys, or grades—but she’s fiercely loyal to the few people she calls friends.
In the neon-lit maze of Sapyung District, where rain glints off steel and sex work is an art more than a stigma, Yeon-hwa runs Maison de Soyeon like a quiet storm—precise, observant, and nearly untouchable. With hair as black as midnight rain and shoulders broad enough to make even the boldest men hesitate, she isn’t just a madam; she’s the reason her house runs with elegance and iron discipline. She takes clients, sure, but only on her terms, and anyone who forgets that gets a bruised ego and a sore jaw for their trouble.
In the electric heart of Busan — where neon lights never dim and the streets pulse with life even at 3 a.m. — lives Ha-yeon, a calm, long-haired, quietly charismatic woman who could be mistaken for serene at first glance… until someone interrupts her morning ritual of perfectly brewed coffee and precisely folded laundry. Ha-yeon has been dating Ji-woo, the city’s most beautiful and unapologetically sassy woman, for three years now — a fact that both entertains and terrifies their friends in equal measure.
The Outer Banks isn’t just a stretch of sand and marshes where the wealthy Kooks flaunt privilege and the Pogues scrape by — it’s a living, breathing crucible of loyalties, rivalries, and secrets. And for seventeen-year-old Elle Rivers, it’s everything she knows, yet nothing she wants to admit she loves. A mechanic’s apprentice, part-time dockhand, and unofficial Pogue-in-training, Elle has lived her life on the edges: edges of the sandbars, edges of friendship, edges of everything that could hurt. And she’s learned, the hard way, that falling can be dangerous.
In the waning years of the Great Liang Dynasty, the Inner Palace is a world of silk curtains and sharpened smiles, where survival depends on secrets, alliances, and the careful performance of obedience. Within vermilion walls, every woman is watched, measured, and weighed for her usefulness.
n the rigid, ritual-bound world of the Joseon Dynasty—where a woman’s destiny is carved by bloodline, duty, and silence—two women are bound together by fate, secrecy, and a love that history itself would deny.
At Cheongdam International High School, power is inherited, traded, and weaponized. For most students, influence comes from chaebol money, elite lineage, and unspoken rules. For Yoon Seo-jin, power comes with something heavier: politics, pressure — and pills.
When they were ten years old, Pimchanok “Pim” Srisuk and Araya “Ray” Kittipong made a promise over two bowls of boat noodles in a cramped street stall in Chiang Mai: One day, we’ll open a restaurant together.
On the outside, she looks untouchable: a PAWG adult film star with a massive following, a curated persona, and a paycheck that should mean freedom. Behind the door of her tidy apartment, she lives with a boyfriend who treats her career as a weapon—using shame, control, and threats to keep her small. He doesn’t leave bruises he can’t explain, but he leaves scars that don’t show on camera. She’s learned to smile through it. She’s learned to survive.
Amid the ticking countdown clock and the warped spectacle of The 8 Show, Han Seo-yeon is the one who sees the game for what it really is: a distorted reflection of society’s cruelty. When eight strangers are thrust into a towering prison masquerading as a game — where time literally becomes money and human worth is measured in minutes accumulated — Seo-yeon enters not with cunning ambition, but with brittle idealism, sharpened empathy, and a ferocious commitment to fairness. 
Auradon Prep had always been a place of order and expectation. For the children of heroes and the occasional reformed villain, life moved in a rhythm carefully dictated by magic, tradition, and the ever-watchful eyes of the royal family. Rules were set, hierarchies observed, and destinies—though never fixed—were heavily influenced by one’s parentage. But what happens when someone arrives who doesn’t quite fit the mold, whose very existence is a whirlwind of unpredictability, magic, and freedom?
In the heart of Gyeongseong’s neon labyrinth — a fevered, hopeful city that never sleeps — Lee Hae-jin is a quiet storm. Tall, long-haired, and impossibly capable, she moves with the assured precision of someone who has never needed permission. By day she is the meticulous assistant to Jeong Sun-hwa: the most breathtaking actress in all of South Korea’s booming film industry, a woman whose name alone can make producers sweat and censors blink twice.
They say opposite forces attract — but what happens when they’re stuck under the same roof with only a tiny hallway between them and no escape from each other’s chaos?
In the ruthless world of Seoul’s elite conglomerates, where loyalty is bought, reputations are manufactured, and love is considered a liability, two women on opposite sides of a corporate war find themselves bound by a connection neither of them can afford — and neither of them can resist.
In the glittering heart of Busan, where neon lights reflect off rain-slicked streets and the scent of sea salt mixes with city heat, Yoon Ha-rin is many things: a top actress adored by millions, a face on billboards from Haeundae to Nampo-dong, and ostensibly untouchable — except by the one person who never looks at her with awe.