Oh My Ghost Clients episode 4 review: When the dead reach out to the living

Cenas from Oh My Ghost Clients | Images via: Netflix | Collage by: Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central
Cenas from Oh My Ghost Clients | Images via: Netflix | Collage by: Beatrix Kondo of Soap Central

There’s a difference between stories about the dead and stories told by them. Oh My Ghost Clients is increasingly leaning into the latter, and episode 4 makes that shift more moving and more powerful than ever.

What began as a procedural with quirky ghosts and unresolved traumas has now evolved into something richer: Oh My Ghost Clients has been telling us a story about how death doesn’t always mark the end of influence, and how the pain left behind can echo louder than any haunting.

Oh My Ghost Clients had already shown glimpses of this transformation. In the second episode, even as the ghost case was resolved, the ripple effects touched real people still stuck in toxic cycles at work. But episode 4 takes things further. The continuation of the nurse’s case goes beyond uncovering past injustices; it leads to real accountability.

The ghost doesn’t seek revenge. She seeks justice, and that makes all the difference. Her story exposes a culture of abuse and indifference, and because of her, the truth comes out. Her voice, once silenced, is now heard.

This time, the consequences are deeper and more widespread. More people are involved. More lives are touched. And one moment in particular hits hard: when Mu-jin stops Nurse Lee from ending her life. That moment alone would’ve made Oh My Ghost Clients unforgettable. But the series doesn’t stop there.

Scene from Oh My Ghost Clients | Image via: Netflix
Scene from Oh My Ghost Clients | Image via: Netflix

The Final Destination energy is getting stronger

It’s no longer subtle. The protagonist is walking a razor’s edge between life and death. He’s been electrocuted, nearly crushed in a factory, and in episode 4, he comes seconds away from being hit by a bus. (Well, does he?) At this point, it’s clear that something bigger is at play.

There's an invisible hand shaping fate, a supernatural design hovering just out of frame. It echoes Final Destination, but instead of inevitability, there’s grace. These near-deaths don’t feel like punishment. They feel like calls. A reminder that he’s caught between worlds for a reason.

And that reason is growing louder. As the team solves more cases, the effects are no longer contained to quiet emotional moments or closed-off families. Episode 4 of Oh My Ghost Clients suggests that the veil between the living and the dead is thinning, and that the stories of those who have passed are beginning to increasingly change things in our world. People are waking up. They're being confronted. And they’re choosing differently.

A team of misfits, made with care

What makes it all work is how deeply we’ve come to care. It didn’t happen overnight. But somewhere along the way, Oh My Ghost Clients stopped being just another ghost-of-the-week drama and became a character-driven story with surprising emotional weight.

The team that once seemed like a bundle of oddballs now feels like family. They’re awkward, flawed, sometimes hilariously bad at human interaction, but they show up. And they heal people, not by fixing the past, but by helping the living confront it.

There’s something genuine in how Oh My Ghost Clients balances tones. It lets itself be silly. It embraces the absurdity of ghost clients and weird workplace setups. But then it turns on a dime, giving us moments of such sincerity and empathy that you can’t help but tear up. It’s not the most groundbreaking series ever written, and it doesn’t need to be. What it offers is honesty. Heart. Care. That’s more than enough.

The next level of Oh My Ghost Clients seems to be coming

The preview for episode 5 hints at even larger consequences. The ghosts are no longer confined to small spaces or individual regrets. They’re starting to ripple through society. Mu-jin and his team are no longer just intermediaries. They’re being pulled into something bigger, something that demands action not just on a spiritual level but on a social one. The injustices they uncover are not just emotional. They’re systemic. They’re real.

And that’s what makes Oh My Ghost Clients matter. In its offbeat, genre-bending way, it’s asking the living to listen. To pay attention. To choose again. Because sometimes, the dead are the only ones brave enough to tell the truth.

Tears shed. Near deaths dodged. Oh My Ghost Clients just keeps getting better.

Rating with a touch of flair: Five out of five plates of justice served.

Edited by Beatrix Kondo