@32oiru you gave me a lot to talk about for sure.
First of all, this is MangaDex, if I wanted to review something I wouldn't be doing it here. There's a difference between an actual critique and a rant, as you said. Comments aren't meant for critiques, so you're wrong for even trying to argue against something which, in the end, is MY opinion.
For the first point you gave me, if you look at any villainess manga, you will always see confusion and regret. I know they're common emotions if you're going to die, but the writers present it as something very impactful, which is not after you have read the same line more times than you can count. I'm going to take examples from my favorite in the villainess genre, https://mangadex.org/title/17720/koushaku-reijou-no-tashinami, where rather than starting us off with regret, it becomes acceptance and her trying to make the best of the situation. It also didn't start her off before her doom, but rather during it, which made for an interesting scenario which felt fresh.
For you talking about real life, this is not real life, this is a manhwa. Life is generic, and that's why we (at least me) read these kinds of things. I don't want to be dropped into something generic if I'm trying to escape from my own generic life.
For the second point, there was nothing outstanding about this plot that deserves it, especially since every manhwa does it. Because of what I've seen in the comments, people here are rating this well not because it has a good story, but rather because of the copious amounts of melodrama it has appeals to the readers emotions. Again, going back to Koushaku Reijou no Tashinami, it doesn't have nearly as much drama, but rather it opens up with enough worldbuilding to draw you in to the story and it doesn't even fall into the cliché of either a doting or uncaring father. They managed to create 3-dimensional characters rather than use common tropes. It's sort of like lust vs. love, whereas this manhwa just attempts to appeal through cheapshot attempts of emotion and good character art, Koushaku draws you in with full characters that you want to follow and learn more about.
With your third point, I already explained this but the emotions are just cliche. It's a sob story, with nothing making it impactful since it's been overused and I haven't gotten invested in the character to care, example being the "How could you do this to me?!" Since you wanted to compare to real life, it's like hearing that someone I never knew died and one of my close family members dying on me. With Koushaku, we didn't get her backstory until we were already invested in her, which only made us love her character more. This manhwa is lackluster in story and you probably just enjoy the melodrama too much to notice.
Why did you add the recs? What purpose did they serve? I've read Beware of the Villainess and I did enjoy it, but it serves no purpose towards your argument. It took itself on as a parody comedy which is not at all representative of this manhwa. Also Death is the Only ending turned it into a game with limited chat options which added enough for intrigue, since she can't take any other options. This manhwa doesn't have any of the thoughtfulness to compare to those titles, which brought their own unique characters and ideas into the mix instead of a copy of all the other villainess stories.
One thing about your response which I found hilarious was the fact that you had the balls to diss me for not making a critique but you decided to attack me, saying stuff like "I'm sheltered" and whatnot even though I'm not. That doesn't seem very professional for someone who's complaining that I'm not being professional in a comment section.
All in all, I can give a critique if I really wanted to, but this is a comment section and not MyAnimeList. The story was bland and the characters were just tropes with no real depth towards them. The art being good and the sob stories they included are the only reason why this is able to entice readers, which is not a characteristic of good writing, but instead of someone trying to milk the genre. This is just a wholly lackluster work.