“Numbers” just came to an orderly conclusion after joining the small group of K-dramas that highlight the accounting industry. Here are some of the greatest and closest programmes filled with plenty of case files, irate do-gooders, and some really bizarre ones as well! Take a look at these four dramas to help you recover from “Numbers”!
1. Good Manager

An expert at numbers, Kim Sung Ryong (Namgoong Min), utilises his enormous skill to handle money for a gang. The sometimes provocative and ethically dubious Sung Ryong intends to ferret out the corruption inside the corporation when a random incident makes him the head of the accounting division within the TQ conglomerate. The events that follow are increasingly comical as Sung Ryong battles everyone from petty managers to Seo Yool, the star of TQ (Lee Junho).
2. Life

This drama has a lot of the same cast of incredibly outstanding performers, including Yoo Jae Myung, as “Stranger” and is written by the same author. It’s an explosive blend of acting, directing, and writing that illuminates difficult ethical discussions in the medical field, not so much about how patients are treated as such, but rather about how hospitals perceive patients: as humans in need of assistance or as money-making tools.
3. Pied Piper

“Pied Piper” must be included on any list of really well-written tragedies. This drama is excellent yet so underappreciated! Formerly, Joo Sung Chan (Shin Ha Kyun) was a well-known corporate negotiator who was solely interested in one thing: money. That is, until he loses his fiance in a terrorist attack that also resulted in the deaths of many others.
4. Special Labor Inspector Mr. Jo

“Pied Piper” must be included on any list of really well-written tragedies. This drama is excellent yet so underappreciated! Formerly, Joo Sung Chan (Shin Ha Kyun) was a well-known corporate negotiator who was solely interested in one thing: money. That is, until he loses his fiance in a terrorist attack that also resulted in the deaths of many others.