Spoiler Alert
If you're reading this, you're probably already watching Oh My Ghost Clients (노무사 노무진) or thinking about starting it. Either way, welcome—and let me say right up front: you’re in for something meaningful. This is not just a “fun” comedic show with a bit of a horror twist. It’s a show that wants to leave a mark.
This review continues my thoughts from Episode 6, which you can read here ( Oh My Ghost Clients Episode 6 Review ). And honestly, Episodes 7 and 8 have deepened my admiration for this drama even more.
About The Drama
Oh My Ghost Clients (also known as Labor Attorney Noh Moo-jin) is a Korean fantasy-action comedy starring Jung Kyung-ho, Seol In-ah, and Cha Hak-yeon. Directed by Yim Soon-rye and written by Kim Bo-tong and Yoo Seung-hee, the drama centers around No Mu-jin, a cold-hearted labor attorney who suddenly gains the ability to see and talk to ghosts—specifically, ghosts of workers who died in workplace tragedies that were swept under the rug.
It premiered on May 30, 2025 and airs every Friday and Saturday at 21:50 KST on MBC. You can also stream it via Netflix, Viu, and Vidio.com. The drama is expected to have 10 episodes in total.
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Episode 7: Burnout and the Choice to Stay Alive
This episode hit home.
We follow Yun-jae, a quiet and diligent young man Mu-jin met at the convenience store near his office. This young man finally lands a full-time job after living only with part-time jobs that didn't pay well, only for it to destroy him from the inside out. The work pushes him to collapse, and his soul literally detaches from his body. He was taken to the hospital, and his ghost meets No Mu-jin—and instead of clinging to life, Yun-jae is ready to give up. He’s just… tired.
And that hit me hard.
This feeling of trying to always do everything “right,” working hard, being good, and still ending up burned out and overlooked without getting equal reward is something so many young people carry in silence.
Mu-jin, as always, doesn’t try to guilt him into hope. Instead, he shows Yun-jae the love around him—his sister, his nephew, the people cheering for him after his story reaches the public through Gyeonjjang TV viral video. Eventually, Mu-jin takes him to the sea—not to say goodbye, but to remember beauty and to regain hope. That moment? Simple, but powerful.
In the end, Yun-jae chooses to live. Not because life magically got better, but because now, he sees that his existence means something. And then comes the turning point—Mu-jin encourages him to study and become a labor attorney, too.
It ends with a warm picnic—and a happy reveal: Hui-joo and Gyeon-u are finally dating.
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Episode 8: The Warehouse Fire - and The Most Clients No Mujin Ever Had
Episode 8 brings us back to rage and injustice.
Mu-jin visits a friend in the hospital and meets a whole crowd of factory workers screaming for help. The weird thing is, no one noticed their existence except for No Mu-jin. Apparently, they are victims of a horrific warehouse fire caused by blatant safety violations. Sprinklers didn’t work. Extinguishers exploded. Emergency exits were welded shut. The saddest thing is, among them, there's a young dad, just 21 years old, who never made it home. And the CEO? He ran.
Watching this unfold made my stomach twist. Because we know this isn't just a fiction—real people live and die in unsafe workplaces, forgotten by systems that never see them as human.
The company tries to silence everything, even offering hush money to victims’ families. Meanwhile, Mu-jin and his team face dead ends: the media won’t help because the company is a sponsor, and the public doesn’t yet care.
Eventually, Gyeon-u uploads a risky video to provoke the CEO, and it works. The CEO reaches out, terrified. In a dramatic and haunting scene, the ghosts almost killed him out of rage. But Mu-jin stops them: If you kill him, you lose the only eyewitness who can help you seek justice.
It’s a stunning reminder that revenge and justice are not the same.
The episode ends with a chase—Mu-jin and the CEO on the run, trying to preserve evidence hidden in the CEO's office fridge (yes, a fridge) while being chased by the real villains.
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Why This Drama Matters - And Not Just to Me
I watched these episodes with some people who don’t really watch K-dramas, and even they were moved.
They said something that stuck with me:
“This isn’t just entertainment. This drama opens people’s eyes. People who think they’re alone in this world, people who feel like they can’t speak up when they’re being disrespected—this show tells them subtly that they matter. That they can fight back.”
And they're right.
That’s what makes Oh My Ghost Clients special. It doesn’t sugarcoat things. It doesn’t give easy answers. But it reminds us:
- You’re not crazy for being tired.
- You're not weak for needing help.
- You’re not invisible.
Even if the system tries to silence you, you still have a voice.
And let's all have hopes. Let's hope that someone like No Mu-jin will hear it.
Final Thoughts
Oh My Ghost Clients started as a quirky legal drama with a supernatural twist that's actually comedic at first, but now it’s so much more.
I don’t know where the last two episodes will take us, but I know this: I’m not watching just to be entertained anymore.
I’m watching because this show is telling stories that deserve to be told.
If you're already watching—let’s learn and reflect together. If you haven't started yet, maybe it's time. I believe you won’t regret it.
Which moment hit you the hardest in Episodes 7 and 8? Let me know in the comments! Also, visit our website for more Kdrama Updates.
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