NAE CHOEAENEUN MAKCHAREUL TANDA
STATUS
RELEASING
VOLUMES
Not Available
RELEASE
December 14, 2024
CHAPTERS
Not Available
DESCRIPTION
Every night, Yeo-Un takes the last train home—same route, same time, same routine. But one thing keeps catching his eye: a girl with a guitar and a presence that lingers in his mind. When a shared love for the indie band Long Afternoon sparks a conversation, their late-night encounters begin to turn into something more. But Hae-In isn’t just another fan—she’s the voice behind the band, a secret she can’t afford to reveal. As music draws them closer, the truth may threaten to pull them apart. When the final note plays, will their story end in harmony… or heartbreak?
(Source: WEBTOONS)
CAST
Hae-In Sin
Yeo-Un Lee
CHAPTERS
REVIEWS
Alfredknight
90/100A rare Real emotionally investing story.Continue on AniListi really loved reading My Bias Gets on the Last Train. it’s one of those quiet, late-night reads that creeps up on you, you think you’re just gonna check one chapter and suddenly it’s past midnight and you’re still there, because the world it makes feels small and honest and kind of sticky in your head. the story is simple on the surface — two people keep meeting on the last train and little things happen — but it doesn’t need fireworks to be memorable. it’s the kind of comic people want to talk about, the kind you send to a friend with a one-line, you have to read this.
what grabbed me first was the pacing. it moves slow, but not in a boring, padded way. i hate when a comic wastes pages throwing in new characters just for noise, this one resists that. it introduces folks one at a time and lets them exist. that restraint means when something small happens, a shared look, a song lyric, a late-night text, it actually lands. it feels like eavesdropping on actual people, not watching characters perform romance for the plot. people keep saying the same thing in the threads, that the communication between the leads is surprisingly good, and honestly that’s not a small compliment in romance manhwa spaces.
the leads are easy to care about. they are not shiny archetypes, they are messy and polite and sometimes clumsy. they talk like people do when they’re nervous, with pauses and half-sentences and awkward honesty. i liked that misunderstandings don’t get stretched into five-chapter tragedies; when things go sideways it’s short, awkward, and then they actually fix it. that kind of directness makes the relationship feel adult and grounded, like two people choosing to be decent to each other. this is the reason i kept coming back, it’s a romance that trusts conversations to carry weight and it works.
and the art, wow the art. it’s not showy, but it’s sharp where it matters. expressions are subtle but precise, a tiny twitch of the mouth or a look away says more than paragraphs of inner monologue ever could. paneling gives breathing room too, there are quiet, wide panels that let moments stretch and tighter panels that make a small interaction sting. the chapter covers are lovely in a moody, aesthetic way. i keep seeing edits and wallpapers from those covers all over pinterest and insta, which proves the visuals stick with people the way the story does. those covers alone are worth bookmarking.
i’ll be honest about what bothered me, because i want to be fair. the pace, while a strength, might annoy you if you want constant plot movement. sometimes i found myself wanting a chapter that just punched the air, a scene that knocks the wind out of you. this doesn’t really do that, it prefers small domestic beats and slow character reveals. also the small cast is a double-edged sword. i love the focus but a couple of side characters feel more like vibes than full people right now, and i hope they get more texture later because that would make the main pair shine even brighter. another thing is the localization and access bit, which is irritating; some readers talk about trouble finding translations or regional blocks and that makes it harder for international fans to support the series properly.
what surprised me, in a good way, was how the music thread, the indie band that comes up here and there, works as more than just backdrop. it shows up the way music does in life, as shorthand for memory and mood. scenes where they connect over a song feel lived-in, not scripted. the comic uses that to deepen the quiet intimacy between them, and it’s the kind of detail that makes the whole thing feel handcrafted. there’s a warmth to the pacing and the visuals together that made me want to slow down and savor each chapter instead of rushing through.
there are moments that stick with me, tiny details i find myself thinking about later. a look that lasts half a beat longer than polite, the way someone tucks hair behind an ear when nervous, the way a song lyric lands and surfaces months later. those little things are the marrow of the story, they are why i went back to earlier chapters and found new lines i missed. rereading feels rewarding, because panels hide small gestures and the comic trusts you to notice them.
i also appreciate that the conflicts so far are human-scale. there aren’t world-ending stakes, it’s mostly jealousy, career choices, and private fears. those are enough to make my chest tighten sometimes because they feel plausible. when characters argue it’s not because the author needs a cliff, it’s because two people are figuring out how to share a life. that feeling of watching people learn to be kind is almost a genre on its own now, and this series does it very well. a few blog posts i read picked up on the same warmth and realism, which made me feel less alone in liking it.
the reading experience is friendly. you can re-read a chapter and notice tiny things you missed, the panels are full of gestures and background details that matter. it’s not perfect, but the flaws feel human not sloppy. there are small moments that could be tightened and a few background figures who could be given a line or two more often, but none of that ruins the core — the romance, the feeling, the art. honestly i’ll forgive a lot because the story gives me those small, true moments i don’t get in more melodramatic series.
so yeah, if you like slow-burn, character-driven romance with nice art and chapter covers you’ll want on your phone, give this a try. if you prefer your stories loud and twisty, this might frustrate you, but for me this was a welcome kind of calm. it’s the kind of comic i’ll recommend when a friend asks for something that feels real not staged. i’ll probably come back to it again, just to sit with those soft moments and to see the little world keep growing at its own unhurried pace.
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SCORE
- (4.15/5)
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