One of the boldest time-travel romances I've seen. Fresh voice, addictive villain energy, big emotional payoff. Rewatchable and comforting in a twisted way.
2026-03-31 23:23:09
Fiona
Loved the system prompts forcing drama beats. Small scenes showing family reactions were exquisitely handled. Wish for more backstory about the husband's early disability.
2026-03-30 07:20:10
Lucas
Narrative cleverly flips the villain trope into empowerment. 1980s setting adds nostalgic texture without slowing pacing. System mechanics could use deeper explanation.
2026-03-26 13:28:34
Hugo
Voice work feels like noir but sparkly and sly. Jess's moral ambivalence reads like modern tragicomic satire. I adored the dark, playful cadence.
2026-02-05 02:37:14
Harold
I signed up for villainy, not emotional growth classes. Also why does everyone read her brain, uninvited? Still, recommend for chaos addicts 😂.
2026-01-18 16:38:55
Xanthe
I felt small and large alongside this family. Their new closeness grows from forced honesty and warmth. Unexpectedly healing, with spiteful laughter sprinkled in.
2026-01-15 12:32:47
Blake
Jess, play villain more often, seriously. Your family hearing you is the best running joke. Also, her enjoyment of chaos is oddly relatable.
2026-01-14 22:25:01
Logan
The enemies-to-lovers pulse here is addictive. Disabled husband becoming devoted felt tender and believable. Jess's chaos plus his devotion equals messy romance goals.
2026-01-01 04:23:48
Uma
I suspected the husband's 'death' was reversible from early on. Family telepathy might be the author's soft moral reset. If it becomes redemptive, I'll be satisfied.
2025-12-27 02:01:30
Henry
I laughed and cried at Jess's chaotic, wicked fun. Husband's recovery felt like a warm, surprising miracle. Her family hearing thoughts gutted me emotionally.
2025-12-15 11:12:34
Delilah
Stranded in an 80s novel, Jess refuses villainy. Then she embraces chaos while her family hears everything. Sweet, twisted, and oddly wholesome.
Comments
Nora
One of the boldest time-travel romances I've seen. Fresh voice, addictive villain energy, big emotional payoff. Rewatchable and comforting in a twisted way.
2026-03-31 23:23:09
Fiona
Loved the system prompts forcing drama beats. Small scenes showing family reactions were exquisitely handled. Wish for more backstory about the husband's early disability.
2026-03-30 07:20:10
Lucas
Narrative cleverly flips the villain trope into empowerment. 1980s setting adds nostalgic texture without slowing pacing. System mechanics could use deeper explanation.
2026-03-26 13:28:34
Hugo
Voice work feels like noir but sparkly and sly. Jess's moral ambivalence reads like modern tragicomic satire. I adored the dark, playful cadence.
2026-02-05 02:37:14
Harold
I signed up for villainy, not emotional growth classes. Also why does everyone read her brain, uninvited? Still, recommend for chaos addicts 😂.
2026-01-18 16:38:55
Xanthe
I felt small and large alongside this family. Their new closeness grows from forced honesty and warmth. Unexpectedly healing, with spiteful laughter sprinkled in.
2026-01-15 12:32:47
Blake
Jess, play villain more often, seriously. Your family hearing you is the best running joke. Also, her enjoyment of chaos is oddly relatable.
2026-01-14 22:25:01
Logan
The enemies-to-lovers pulse here is addictive. Disabled husband becoming devoted felt tender and believable. Jess's chaos plus his devotion equals messy romance goals.
2026-01-01 04:23:48
Uma
I suspected the husband's 'death' was reversible from early on. Family telepathy might be the author's soft moral reset. If it becomes redemptive, I'll be satisfied.
2025-12-27 02:01:30
Henry
I laughed and cried at Jess's chaotic, wicked fun. Husband's recovery felt like a warm, surprising miracle. Her family hearing thoughts gutted me emotionally.
2025-12-15 11:12:34
Delilah
Stranded in an 80s novel, Jess refuses villainy. Then she embraces chaos while her family hears everything. Sweet, twisted, and oddly wholesome.
2025-11-28 09:19:13