Resident Playbook has officially scrubbed in, bringing us back into the beloved Hospital Playlist universe—this time with a new generation of doctors, a fresh hospital branch, and a whole new emotional rollercoaster to ride. Airing on tvN and available globally via Netflix, this Hospital Playlist spin-off leans more into slice-of-life storytelling and character-driven arcs than high-stakes surgical drama… although it opens with a scene that definitely makes you double-check that you’re not watching The Trauma Code: Heroes on Call by mistake.
We meet OH YI-YOUNG (Go Yoon-jung), a returning first-year OB-GYN resident with baggage—emotional, financial, and even fashion-related. She was once on track for a cushy hospital director gig funded by her chaebol father, but a financial scam ruined that dream. Now, she’s back in residency not out of passion, but necessity, and it shows. A stress dream involving emergency surgery without gloves, and a haunting cameo from Ra Mi-ran as a bank teller-slash-organ-harvester, sets the tone: this drama may not be as cozy as its predecessor, but it knows how to hook you.
Yi-young’s fellow residents make up the new “Playbook Quartet.” There’s KIM SA-BI (Han Ye-ji), a brilliant but empathy-challenged bookworm who communicates like a sentient medical journal. Her robotic bluntness leads to patient misunderstandings and emotional misfires, but her arc quickly hints at potential growth. Meanwhile, EOM JAE-IL (Kang Yoo-seok), a former idol with a heart of gold and a knack for dramatic misdiagnosis, is charming in that “zebra, not horse” way—he’s eager, kind, and trying so hard not to be a disappointment. PYO NAM-KYUNG (Shin Shi-ah), the image-conscious perfectionist, is more elusive in Episode 1, but the seeds of her burnout are planted early as she drowns in work and spills yogurt in front of her “forgotten” high school rival, Yi-young.

And then there’s Myung Eun-won (Kim Hye-in)—yes, that fox from Hospital Playlist, back and more toxic than ever. She’s now a senior doctor, weaponizing patient reports and C-section schedules to climb the career ladder while steamrolling anyone in her way. Her primary victim? You guessed it: Yi-young, who keeps trying to quit but is yanked back into the chaos by a code blue or a glimmer of recognition from a senior.
Despite her blunders and aversion to responsibility, Yi-young proves she has something doctors can’t fake—compassion under pressure. Her hallway birth assist, her defense of a patient against Eun-won’s manipulation, and her emotional reaction to both are not signs of weakness, but depth. She’s a chaotic mess, sure, but one you root for, especially when she crosses paths with none other than Chu Min-ha (Ahn Eun-jin, returning for a cameo that doubles as emotional CPR). Min-ha’s subtle mentorship moment hits all the right notes, showing Yi-young—and us—that even the most uncertain residents can grow into incredible doctors.
Romance watchers, don’t worry—you’re not left out. Gu Do-won (Jung Joon-won), the stoic fourth-year resident with a hidden soft spot, might just be Yi-young’s knight in sanitized armor. From his deadpan humor to the casual way he hauls her bugout bag while reminding her she’s broke, their slow-burn dynamic crackles with potential. Is it professional guidance or the beginning of a workplace romance? Either way, I’m invested.
By the end of Episode 2, our newbie doctors have crossed the fabled “three-week” hurdle, each overcoming personal doubts and external pressure (barely). Their struggles aren’t neatly wrapped up—Yi-young still wants to quit—but there’s hope. And in this Yulje universe, hope is often just the first beat in a deeply resonant, character-rich symphony.
Time slot: Friday
Broadcaster: tvN
Genre: Medical, slice-of-life, friendship, light romance
Episode count: 12
Global streamer: Netflix
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