The highly anticipated K-drama Dear X premiered on November 6, 2025.
The show arrived with huge buzz. The hype came from its star cast, its dark thriller tone, and its strong production team.
Viewers around the world can stream it on Viki. In many regions, it is also available on HBO Max. Some countries stream it through Disney+.
Season 1 has 12 episodes. The structure is tight and focused. Dear X released two episodes each week. Now the run is almost over. The final episodes, 11 and 12, will drop on Thursday, December 4, 2025.
As the story races toward the end, fans are excited to see how the tension, lies, and moral chaos will finally resolve. Secrets will unravel. Truths will come out. A clean, happy ending is unlikely.
The finale will pull everything together. All the lies, pain, and betrayal will collide. A final reckoning for Dear X is coming.
What to expect from the Dear X finale?

Ah-jin’s public facade might crumble
By Dear X, Episodes 9 and 10, the tension is huge with death, suspicion, and pressure from all sides. So the finale will likely show Ah-jin fully unraveling. Her dual identity won’t hold anymore.
The people closest to her, Jun-seo, Jae-oh, maybe more, may finally see the real Ah-jin. Not the star. Not the perfect icon. But the cold manipulator who lies, betrays, and discards.
A public scandal is very likely. She is a top actress. Any hint of murder, betrayal, or deceit could explode in the media. That could bring legal trouble. Or social consequences.
She may even break emotionally. Her lies and guilt may crush her. She could lose control. She might lash out. Or collapse under the pressure.
So the finale of Dear X will probably end with her mask gone. No more glamor. No more illusion. Everyone, characters and viewers, will finally see who she really is.
Jun-seo and Jae-oh’s possible breakup or showdown
The dynamic with her two closest men is ready to explode.
Jun-seo: He is her childhood friend who loved her and protected her. But now he may see the full truth. Her manipulations. The death she is tied to. The lies she told him. This truth may force a choice. Stay with her toxic and destructive self or walk away to save himself. Dear X finale may show him breaking free at last.
Jae-oh: He has always been her shadow: Loyal, protective, and bound to her by shared trauma. But now everything is falling apart. He may have to choose too. Support her blindly or turn against her. Especially if she harms him or puts others at risk. A confrontation between protector and manipulator is likely.
So expect fallout, lost friendships, broken trust, betrayal, heartbreak, maybe even violence or revenge.

Some payback for past sins
With themes of ambition, manipulation, and abuse, the finale may bring some form of retribution. It may not be a happy ending. But it could feel like justice in its own dark way.
People hurt by Ah-jin may come back. They may expose her or may try to take revenge. There could be public fallout. This would match the weight of her actions.
Some characters who suffered may finally get closure. A kind or honest character might finally feel free. But the justice will not be clean. The show never gives simple answers. So the ending may feel bitter or even messy. Yet it could still feel true to the story.
Tragic downfall, maybe no redemption
Because the story is dark with abuse, sociopathy, and manipulation, the finale may end in tragedy. Ah-jin may lose everything. Her power may vanish. She may end up alone, broken, or may face emotional or mental ruin. It would show the harsh cost of fame, ambition, and trauma.
Jun-seo and Jae-oh may also suffer. They may survive, but not without damage. Being tied to her may cost them too much.
The drama may not give Ah-jin a redemption arc. It may show that some people, shaped by pain and ambition, can reach a point where they cannot return.

Open-ended moral question
Even after the finale, the show may keep its moral questions open. It may not give clear answers.
Is Ah-jin only a villain? Or is she also a victim of her trauma? Are Jun-seo and Jae-oh truly innocent? Or did they also play a part by helping or protecting her? Is justice actually served? Or is the ending just another kind of suffering?
By keeping things unclear, the finale may make viewers think. It may push people to reflect on trauma and manipulation. It may also make them question if punishment or redemption is even possible for someone like Ah-jin.