What is the plot?

I can't provide a reliable beat-by-beat spoiler for episode 9, "Fox VS Fox," from the information available here because the search results do not contain the episode's actual full plot, only general show/background material and a video upload listing. The sources provided do not support a complete, factual chronological recap of every major event in the episode.

What I can confirm from the available results is that Love Alarm Clap! Clap! Clap! is a 13-episode series built around a dating/game format where contestants use the Love Alarm app to send anonymous hearts, gain advantages, sabotage rivals, and compete for a cash prize alongside romance. The results also suggest the series uses Love Alarm mechanics similar to the earlier franchise, but they do not describe the specific events, decisions, confrontations, or outcome of episode 9.

If you want, I can still help in one of two ways: - give you a concise spoiler summary based only on the episode title and series premise, clearly marked as uncertain, or - help you find a more complete episode synopsis if you can provide subtitles, a transcript, or screenshots from episode 9.

What is the ending?

I can't reliably tell you the ending of that specific episode from the search results provided. The results only confirm that episode 9 exists and include a very brief, incomplete IMDb plot fragment, but they do not provide a full scene-by-scene account of the ending.

If you want, I can still help in one of these ways: - Give you a short spoiler-style ending summary based only on the limited available information. - Help you identify the correct episode if the title or numbering may be off. - Summarize the ending if you paste a transcript, recap, or screenshots from the episode.

Is there a post-credit scene?

There is no reliable source in the provided results confirming a post-credit scene for episode 9, so I cannot verify that one exists. The available episode listings and video sources only confirm the episode itself, not any post-credit content.

If you want, I can still help by inferring from episode structure whether the episode likely ends normally or by checking additional sources for a scene-by-scene recap.

Why does Sae-roi Ahn feel betrayed in episode 9, "Fox VS Fox"?

In episode 9, Sae-roi Ahn is shaken when he learns that Cha-cha did not choose him through the Good Alarm app, and the episode emphasizes his inability to hide that sense of betrayal.

What exactly does Cha-cha do in episode 9 that changes Sae-roi Ahn’s feelings toward her?

The key plot point is that Cha-cha's choice through the Good Alarm app does not go to Sae-roi Ahn, which directly triggers his emotional reaction in the episode.

Who is involved in the conflict around Cha-cha’s decision in episode 9?

The central emotional conflict in episode 9 focuses on Sae-roi Ahn and Cha-cha, with the episode specifically framing Sae-roi Ahn's response to her not choosing him.

How does Sae-roi Ahn react emotionally after finding out Cha-cha did not choose him?

He cannot hide his betrayal, so the episode presents him as visibly hurt and emotionally unsettled rather than calm or accepting.

What is the specific plot event in episode 9 that drives the tension between Sae-roi Ahn and Cha-cha?

The tension comes from the reveal that Cha-cha did not select Sae-roi Ahn through the Good Alarm app, which becomes the episode's main character-driven turning point.

Is this family friendly?

No verified parental-guide data is available for this specific episode, but based on the show's premise as a romance/dating reality program, it is not likely to be fully family-friendly for very young children because it may include dating-focused conversations, crush/relationship tension, emotional jealousy, and flirtatious content.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements to watch for: - Romantic or flirtatious interactions between cast members. - Emotional stress, embarrassment, rejection, or jealousy tied to dating competition. - High-school/young-adult relationship themes that may be awkward for sensitive viewers. - Mild-to-moderate reality-show conflict or interpersonal tension, which can be upsetting for children or viewers who dislike confrontation.

I cannot confirm episode-specific scenes without a detailed content guide for episode 9, so this is a general caution rather than a scene-by-scene rating.