The Glory Season 2 Review

For viewers who have been waiting to see the bullies get their due, this season offers a feast. But beyond the revenge fantasy, it is a compelling character study of a woman who refused to let her trauma define her passivity. It is a story of reclaiming dignity in a world that tried to strip it away.

The second installment of Netflix’s delivers a hauntingly precise and profoundly satisfying conclusion to Moon Dong-eun’s decades-long revenge plot. While Part 1 painstakingly built the foundation of trauma and meticulous planning, Part 2 is the "grim sword dance" promised by writer Kim Eun-sook—a fast-paced, high-stakes execution where the perpetrators' own greed and paranoia become their undoing. the glory season 2 review

We also see a deepening of the relationship between Dong-eun and her unlikely ally, the plastic surgeon Joo Yeo-jeong (Lee Do-hyun). Their bond, forged in shared trauma, provides the necessary emotional heartbeat to balance the coldness of the revenge plot. Lee Do-hyun brings a warmth that prevents the show from feeling entirely nihilistic. For viewers who have been waiting to see