The plot is more brain-burning, not a brainless drama, you can understand it if you watch it carefully.
The setting is that there are two parallel worlds, one is the monarchy, the Korean Empire, where the male protagonist is, and the other is the Republic of Korea, where the female protagonist is.
In the first episode, the uncle of the male protagonist wants to rebel and grab the national treasure - Dizi. He killed the male protagonist's father and almost killed the male protagonist. The person who saved him pulled the female lead's work card, thinking that the female lead saved him. The villain did not succeed in rebelling. He took half the flute and traveled to the Republic of Korea, killing himself, his younger brother, younger brother and sister, and nephew (probably not dead) in this world. Then he threw the body of the Republic of Korea into the Korean Empire and pretended to be dead. More than ten years later, the male protagonist grew up and was led by a black rabbit (should be the female protagonist of the Korean Empire) to the bamboo forest with the gate of space, and then traveled to the Republic of Korea and met the female protagonist.
Attention! ! ! At the beginning, the heroine interrogates the villain. The villain has not changed for more than ten years. It is the time in the Republic of Korea that is not sensitive to him, which means that the years have not happened to him.
View more about The King: Eternal Monarch reviews