I was originally looking forward to KIKO's unit story in the web drama "Detective Chinatown 2", because KIKO's character creation in the movie version is indeed more attractive. The web drama did portray KIKO's childhood as quite tragic. He saw his beloved sister jump off a build

I was originally looking forward to kiko's unit story in the

web drama " Detective Chinatown 2 ", because Kiko's character creation in the movie version is indeed more attractive. The web drama did portray Kiko's childhood as quite tragic. He saw his beloved sister jump off a building and die tragically in front of him. This can almost be said to be a lifelong psychological shadow. (The following contains spoilers)

The "Amusement Park" unit is more like an eye-catching topic and has little to do with the investigation. I even think that web dramas are a bit "unprofessional". Kiko's reasoning seems to be very strong, but in fact, upon closer inspection, the logic is really not strong. Many of them are imagined out of thin air, not things guessed through reasoning.

The story of this unit is "The thunder is loud but the raindrops are small". I have tried my best to exaggerate what a horrific case this is, and it can involve many conspiracies. The case does refer to some prototypes of reality, which can be reminiscent of "Lori Island" and "Room N". In short, the tone at the beginning was very high, but when it came to solving the case, it started to get too high. Although

kiko is a hacker, you should not regard hackers as gods. Kiko uses his mobile phone to charge Fanan's car, and can obtain various driving routes of the vehicle, thereby finding out the "customers" that Fanan has contacted. However, what is said here is very vague. How can we convict others based on GPS positioning? If it was really that simple, why couldn't the police find it? Didn't the police have an undercover agent? How many people could solve such a big case?

Also, Fanan always emphasized that he knew many people. As a result, Kiko and Officer Lin were investigating the case openly and did not see any resistance. Officer Lin's boss just advised him not to investigate, and didn't give him any shoes. In short, Kiko's solution process was so smooth. I feel that the process of solving the case cannot stand up to scrutiny. I can understand you saying that Fanan was caught, but how did the others get convicted?

Also, the abrupt twist at the end of this story also made me feel very strange. Rong Zishan plays neo. I believe that many loyal viewers are familiar with the routine of "Tang Exploring the Universe". The person who is least likely to be the boss is often the boss, so he was suspected of him early on, especially Rong Zi. An actor like Sugi has always performed "hidden bosses".

However, when Rong Zishan starred in "The Hidden Corner", there were details to dig out and logic to explain. He didn't like the half-sister, and the audience could feel it. As a result, in "Detective Chinatown 2", Neo, played by Rong Zishan, has no specific performance except that he loves to lie.

His name, neo, really resembles the founder of "the one" room. After all, just change the positions of the English letters. However, what happened between him and Shao Feifei, and how did Kiko reason about it. The details Kiko deduced lacked a certain basis and seemed more like conjectures out of thin air.

Especially when neo and Feifei don't know each other yet, they want to date each other out of nowhere. This is not a normal person's brain circuit. How did Kiko reason it out? Also, his reason for killing Feifei was too far-fetched. Also, a professional who was familiar with computers had no password on his computer, so Feifei discovered his secret. Computer passwords are a setting that ordinary people can use.

neo I wanted to assassinate Fanan before. I originally thought I was acting for Kiko. As a result, what was not mentioned later in this paragraph is that Neo really wanted to assassinate Fanan single-handedly. This is not in line with Neo's cautious character. He killed Feifei and disguised himself with insulin. He wanted to kill Fanan. He didn't even wear a mask and just used a knife openly. The contrast was too big.

In short, this unit gave me the feeling that the attractiveness of the topic is far greater than the suspense. It's not so much a detective film as it is an idol drama. Kiko no longer wants to be a detective, but more like a narrator who holds a script and tells stories when the time comes.