In a year dominated by dark thrillers, emotionally heavy revenge dramas, and serious prestige storytelling, two Korean series are suddenly winning viewers over in a completely different way: by being unapologetically weird.
Tving’s ‘The Legend of Kitchen Soldier’ and SBS drama ‘My Royal Nemesis’ are quickly becoming two of 2026’s most unexpected breakout hits thanks to their chaotic “B-grade comedy” energy a style built on exaggerated reactions, meme humor, absurd parody, and intentionally ridiculous storytelling.
And surprisingly, audiences seem completely hooked.

One of the clearest examples of this trend is ‘The Legend of Kitchen Soldier’ starring Park Ji-hoon.
The military cooking drama follows rookie soldier Kang Sung-jae, who starts as an overlooked recruit before gradually becoming a legendary military cook. But instead of presenting food in realistic or emotional ways like traditional cooking dramas, the series treats every meal like a bizarre fantasy battle sequence.
The reactions have become one of the drama’s biggest viral points online.
In one scene, soldiers eating terrible soup are portrayed as if they have fallen into volcanic lava. In another, soldiers who eat bean sprout soup suddenly charge into battle holding bean sprouts instead of weapons. One particularly viral moment even parodied Michelangelo’s “The Creation of Adam” using seaweed soup.
More recently, a scene featuring a North Korean defector dramatically transforming into a rock star after tasting pork cutlet exploded across Korean short-form platforms and meme pages.
Rather than trying to appear polished or realistic, the drama fully embraces absurdity and viewers are rewarding it for exactly that reason.
SBS fantasy-romance drama ‘My Royal Nemesis’ is finding success through a slightly different form of B-grade comedy.
The series follows a Joseon-era villainess who possesses the body of a struggling modern actress and collides with a cold-hearted chaebol heir. While the premise itself already sounds chaotic, the drama’s real strength lies in how aggressively it parodies Korean pop culture and internet meme culture.
Fight scenes intentionally reference classic Korean dramas like ‘Rustic Period,’ while dialogue and reactions openly mimic famous internet memes and viral K-drama moments. One scene even recreated the emotional rhythm of ‘The Glory’ in an intentionally exaggerated comedic way.
What makes these dramas work is that they are not accidentally ridiculous. They fully understand internet humor.
Rather than resisting meme culture, both series actively build their storytelling around how modern audiences consume entertainment online through reaction clips, short-form edits, viral screenshots, and exaggerated emotional moments.

The success of these shows may also reflect changing audience fatigue.
In recent years, Korean dramas have increasingly focused on darker themes including revenge, trauma, corruption, violence, and psychological suffering. While many of those series achieved critical and commercial success, audiences now appear more eager for lighter, stranger, and more chaotic forms of entertainment.
That is where these “B-grade comedies” seem to be thriving. Instead of asking viewers to emotionally suffer with the characters, these dramas encourage audiences to laugh at how absurd everything becomes.
And in today’s internet-driven entertainment environment, absurdity travels fast.
Both ‘The Legend of Kitchen Soldier’ and ‘My Royal Nemesis’ are proving that viewers no longer always want “perfect” storytelling. Sometimes they want unpredictability, chaos, parody, and moments so ridiculous they immediately become memes.
The real challenge now will be whether these dramas can maintain strong storytelling underneath the comedy as their plots continue developing.
But for now, one thing is clear: K-drama audiences are laughing again.