Talk:Gyeongseong Creature

Synopsis
This is the current encapsulation provided for what the series is about: "In the spring of 1945 in Gyeongseong, during the Japanese occupation of Korea, two young adults confront a strange creature born of greed and battle against it for survival." I watched all episodes and what I saw is, in a nutshell: Tokyo is being bombed and the Imperial Japanese Army realizes it is going to lose the war; the Japanese military in China is frantically destroying all evidence of inhumane medical and chemical experiments on Chinese civilians; one Japanese officer (Colonel Kato), however, departs the compound with several vials containing fluids; he takes charge of continuing the experiments at an underground facility in Gyeongseong, where Korean civilians have been kidnapped and held against their will as prisoners; he selects two women and watches as they drink a clear liquid from a cup; both women soon begin to feel agony; one kills herself by banging her head repeatedly against the walls and floor of her cell, while the other woman begins to heave in pain; meanwhile, the top Japanese surgeon (Director Ichiro) at the facility is performing vivisection on a Korean man, and a horrified Japanese artist (Ryu Sachimoto) is expected to sketch all the procedures; the location where these cruel, cold-blooded crimes against humanity are taking place is in Onseong Hospital and the experiments are being funded (we later find out) by a noblewoman from a high-ranking Japanese family (Yukiko Maeda) who is in a marriage of convenience with the commander (Commissioner Ishikawa) of Gyeongseong's Japanese police force; Ishikawa has a Korean mistress (Akiko) that has gone missing and he wants her to be found; Korean businessman Jang Tae-Sang must find Akiko or he will lose all his business and holdings; Korean sleuth Yoon Chae-Ok and her father Yoon Jung-Won are searching for missing mother and wife Choi Seong-Sim, who has been turned into the Gyeongseong Creature by Colonel Kato. The underlying plot of brutal human experimentation is based on Unit 731. Suffice it to say, there is a hell of a lot more about the synopsis of this series than "" Pyxis Solitary   (yak yak). Ol' homo. 14:57, 6 January 2024 (UTC)

English language sources
This may be a Korean series, but it is an exclusive Netflix production. The article needs more English-language sources. Pyxis Solitary  (yak yak). Ol' homo. 08:51, 12 January 2024 (UTC)


 * @Pyxis Solitary: Then just do it yourself. 98  𝚃𝙸𝙶𝙴𝚁𝙸𝚄𝚂  12:02, 12 January 2024 (UTC)
 * It's not that I don't know I can do it, it's that I've deliberately held back from doing it based on personal experience with editing K series articles. Pyxis Solitary   (yak yak) . Ol' homo. 12:01, 13 January 2024 (UTC)

Adding Season 2 sections before season premieres
MOS:TVUPCOMING states: "" Except for development and production information about Season 2, editors cannot jump the gun and create stand-alone sections about a season that will be released in the future. Per MOS:TV, I've removed the following S2 sections from the article:

Season 2
Set in present-day Seoul, it is about the story of Ho-jae, who resembles Jang Tae-sang, and Yoon Chae-ok, who meet and explore the unfinished relationship, fate, and evil relationship of Gyeongseong.

Season 2

 * Bae Hyun-sung
 * Lee Moo-saeng

Pyxis Solitary  (yak yak). Ol' homo. 07:50, 15 January 2024 (UTC) "" The guidance gives "Michael Gaston as Mark Sampson" as example of how to add an actor/character, and in the Notes also links to this Cast and characters section as example of how cast is listed by season and new cast added to the list. Here are two more examples of how cast and characters are listed: Wynonna Earp (TV series) (4 seasons), Peaky Blinders (TV series) (6 seasons). Pyxis Solitary  (yak yak). Ol' homo. 09:16, 17 January 2024 (UTC)
 * @Pyxis Solitary I'm perplexed about how TVUPCOMING, which is nested under "Episodes listing", is relevant to MOS:TVCAST, located under "Parent ... article structure". Additionally, I don't understand how TVCAST is considered a "List of" when we haven't split off the section into a standalone list which the entire "List of ... structure" is dedicated to this, and neither does MOS:TVCHARACTER, also nested under "List of ... structure", overwrite or conflict with TVCAST".  — Paper9oll  (🔔 • 📝)  13:39, 15 January 2024 (UTC)
 * I understand what you are saying. It has been my understanding and experience with TV articles that a forthcoming season does not have plot/synopsis and cast sections for the future season until it has actually premiered. However, cast changes, new cast, showrunner change, etc. — everything about the production of the forthcoming season — is included in the Production section. I may be wrong. It might be a worthwhile idea to get input about creating plot and cast sections for a future season in MOS:TV's talk page. Pyxis Solitary   (yak yak) . Ol' homo. 10:07, 16 January 2024 (UTC)
 * @Pyxis Solitary I'm not particularly focused on the plot section; instead, my concern lies more with the cast section. I'm happy to chip in to the discussion on Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style/Television to gain better clarity, even though I personally find the MOS:TV guidelines in its current form to be clear and straightforward.  — Paper9oll  (🔔 • 📝)  13:24, 16 January 2024 (UTC)
 * Actually, I didn't say it initially, but cast and characters are not supposed to be listed by separate seasons. There is only one Main cast list, one Supporting/Recurring cast list, and one Guest cast list, with new main, supporting, and guest actors and their characters added to the end of each respective list. MOS:TVCAST states:

Rotten Tomatoes average score
When I updated the Rotten Tomatoes rating (from 83 to 91) on 31 March 2024, I could not access the average score to check if it had changed. It's available for films, but not TV shows. Don't know if this is a temporary or permanent change. I've brought it up at MOS:TV. Pyxis Solitary  (yak yak). Ol' homo. 23:20, 2 April 2024 (UTC)