Confidence Queen episode 10 review — The mural, the kidnapping, and a game that changes everything

Promotional photo for Confidence Queen | Image via: Prime Video
Promotional photo for Confidence Queen | Image via: Prime Video

Confidence Queen reaches episode 10 with its most decisive turn. After episodes filled with daring cons and hints about Yoon Yi-rang’s past, she finally seems to have found the man tied to her childhood kidnapping. The long hunt that has powered the story now feels painfully real.

The episode builds around another elaborate scam, a fake movie screening meant to lure the man Yi-rang has chased for years. James helps her sustain the illusion, while Myung Gu-ho stays uneasy and suspicious. He senses there’s more at stake than another payday.

The moment that defines the hour happens away from the flash of the con. Yi-rang stands alone before the painting connected to her kidnapping.

“Everything I’ve done until now was just a small game to get near you. The game we’ve been playing isn’t over yet. The real game begins now.”

It’s the clearest signal so far that the chase has become deeply personal and that she’s ready to face the truth.

Secrets erupt inside Confidence Queen

When Myung Gu-ho steps into the mural room, everything shifts. He sees his father’s photograph among the evidence and realizes every con they have pulled together ties back to a past he never knew existed. The trust between him and Yi-rang fractures instantly.

James remains the experienced voice who warns Yi-rang that secrets eventually cost more than any prize. The scene drives home what Confidence Queen has suggested all along: every con, no matter how clever or glamorous, is born from pain. Here, that pain finally spills into the open.

Confidence Queen struggles with style and sincerity

Confidence Queen has always leaned into excess. The scams sparkle with theatrical visuals, the costumes demand attention, and every reveal tries to stun. That style can be fun, and it is part of what makes the series entertaining, but here it starts to drag the story down.

When the narrative turns serious, especially about Yi-rang’s kidnapping and the grief driving her revenge, the over-the-top style weakens the emotional core. The show wavers between psychological revenge drama and playful crime caper, and that imbalance keeps its darkest moments from landing with the force they deserve.

Confidence Queen heads toward its endgame

Only two episodes remain for Confidence Queen, and the board is finally set. Yi-rang’s true enemy is no longer a shadow but a man she seems to be ready to confront. Myung Gu-ho’s trust has been damaged, and the bond that once held their team together is breaking under the weight of long-buried secrets.

James seems to understand better than anyone that every hidden truth has a price. His warnings hang over Yi-rang’s next move as she steps closer to the man who stole her childhood and shaped every scam she ever played. The coming finale promises betrayal, retribution, and the possibility that justice will demand even more sacrifices.

Rating with a touch of flair: 4 out of 5 dazzling tricks that crack under the weight of hidden pain.

Edited by Beatrix Kondo