Potato Lab: Can You Grow the Perfect Potato?

cmoneyspinner

What does the Fox say?
Staff member

“Potato Lab” was released in 2025, has 12 episodes, is categorized as Office or Workplace, Romance, and Comedy (Rom-Com); and is streaming on Netflix.​

SUMMARY: There is a lot that goes into creating the perfect potato and the perfect romance.

♦​

In “Potato Lab”, Kim Mi-Kyung is a researcher and her company's ultimate goal is to grow the “perfect potato”. What is the perfect potato? A potato that can still grow regardless of the weather, is resistant to attacks by insects, makes the perfect potato chip, and tastes great! Kim Mi-Kyung is a researcher, so she doesn't realize that the company she works for is about to go under.

So Baek-Ho is responsible for strategic planning in a different company and his company acquireds the potato company where Kim Mi-Kyung works and that includes the potato lab. She used for work for that company and when she left it was not pretty. Since then the mere mention of the company's name provokes her ire. You can imagine her reaction when she realized that she is now working for that company AGAIN! So Baek-Ho is her new boss.

So Baek-Ho is kinda hot! AND cold. Judging by his external appearance, he can make women weak in the knees. But his attitude toward Kim Mi-Kyung and the other workers is extremely professional and he keeps his distance. There is no mixing of work with personal. Most of the time he is strictly business. He was sent to the potato company as a “temporary” general manager because the person they hired for the position had not yet arrived.

While Kim Mi-Kyung and her team had gone to Seoul to the new company's personnel office to get their badges, So Baek-Ho was already at their workplace inspecting the premises. They got a phone call and were told that “somebody” was there inspecting their workplace. The team panicked and immediately drove back to the old company, now under the management of the new company. She confronted So Baek-Ho immediately assuming that he was there to close down the potato lab. Their working relationship got off to a bad start.

However, to his credit, he told her he takes his job as a strategic planner very seriously. He doesn't make hasty decisions and always performs thorough evaluations before submitting recommendations to executive management. Then So Baek-Ho added that they had tried about 2000 times to make the “perfect potato”. He wondered if their research would ever be successful. For now, the potato lab is safe.

Meanwhile, back at the new company's offices in Seoul, Park Ki-Se, the executive director, realized he made a serious error in his “strategy”. He was trying to eliminate his “competition” AT WORK by sending So Baek-Ho on that “temporary” general manager assignment. But he did not know that was where Kim Mi-Kyung worked. He and Kim Mi-Kyung once worked together and had been in a romantic relationship. But they broke up and she left the company and him. He climbed the corporate ladder of success, got married and divorced, and was now available to pursue her again. But! … So Baek-Ho is HOT! Kim Mi-Kyung might get attracted to him and that would ruin Park Ki-Se's chances of ever getting back together with her. In strategic planning circles his error is called “Oops!”

TRAILERS/TEASERS:

Netflix K-Content. “The Potato Lab.” YouTube, 25 Feb. 2025,
.


 
Last edited:
I actually really enjoyed Potato Lab! I know it follows a familiar rom-com formula, but sometimes that’s exactly what I want—something light, charming, and easy to watch. Kim Mi-Kyung and So Baek-Ho have great chemistry, and their love-hate dynamic kept me engaged. Plus, I love when a show takes the time to develop the workplace aspect properly. The idea of growing the perfect potato made for a surprisingly interesting backdrop. It’s definitely not groundbreaking, but it’s a solid feel-good drama for a weekend binge.
 
Honestly, I found Potato Lab pretty average. It’s not bad, but it didn’t bring anything new to the table. The whole "cold boss and passionate employee" trope has been done so many times that I kept predicting what would happen next. Also, Park Ki-Se’s subplot felt unnecessary. If they focused more on the research and business struggles instead of love triangles, it would have been more compelling. The cinematography was nice, though. Gangwon Province looked stunning!
 
The romantic tension was decent, and I liked the balance between workplace drama and personal conflicts. But I agree with the review—Netflix has been pushing a lot of similar rom-coms lately. I don’t mind familiar tropes if they’re executed well, but this one felt like it was playing it too safe. I’d give it a 7/10 too, enjoyable but not particularly memorable.
 
Forget the romance—I was here for the food! The scenes of potato dishes looked amazing, and I immediately went down a rabbit hole of Korean potato recipes. It’s cool how they tied agriculture into the story. I never realized how important potatoes were to Korea’s history and economy. It would have been even better if they incorporated more details about the research side of things. But I have no complaints about watching a drama that makes me hungry!
 
I had fun watching this! It’s not the best K-drama I’ve ever seen, but it was an easy watch after a long day. The comedy parts were funny, and the romance was sweet, even if it was a little predictable. Sometimes I just want to watch two attractive people bicker and fall in love, and Potato Lab delivered exactly that. It’s not something I’d rewatch, but I don’t regret checking it out.
 
I had fun watching this! It’s not the best K-drama I’ve ever seen, but it was an easy watch after a long day. The comedy parts were funny, and the romance was sweet, even if it was a little predictable. Sometimes I just want to watch two attractive people bicker and fall in love, and Potato Lab delivered exactly that. It’s not something I’d rewatch, but I don’t regret checking it out.
I liked the male lead better than the female lead. The main female character was a tad bit annoying. I wish scriptwriters wouldn't do that. But hey! Love overlooks character flaws. If that's the message the writers wanted to communicate, then I got it!
 

how to help support popgeeks, popgeeks, pop geeks

Latest News & Videos

Latest News

Back
Top