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Blossoms in Adversity

惜花芷 ‧ Drama ‧ 2024
Completed
SanaRehmat
2 people found this review helpful
Jan 17, 2026
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 10
Rewatch Value 6.5

The Rise of Hua Zhi in a World That Doubted Her : When Intelligence Becomes Power

Blossoms in Adversity tells the story of survival, growth, and love in a society that believes women cannot stand without men. When tragedy strikes the powerful Hua family, the men are exiled and their property confiscated, leaving only women and children behind. Overnight, the once-protected household is pushed into poverty and danger. In the middle of this collapse stands Hua Zhi, who refuses to let her family fall apart.

With intelligence and resilience, she leads the Hua women through rebuilding their lives, restoring their business, and reclaiming their dignity. Along this difficult road, she meets Gu Yan Xi, the Commander of the Security Bureau, whose fate becomes deeply intertwined with hers. From cautious allies to unwavering partners, the two slowly develop a relationship built on trust, loyalty, and quiet affection rather than dramatic clichés.

🌸 Characters & Romance

Hua Zhi (played by Zhang Jing Yi) is one of the strongest yet softest female leads in recent historical dramas.She is a resourceful and intelligent young woman who, after her family faces ruin, uses her hidden talents to lead her female relatives in navigating poverty and social stigma She is capable without being arrogant, gentle without being weak. What makes her special is how naturally her leadership grows. She does not suddenly become powerful; she learns, fails, adapts, and keeps moving forward for the sake of her family. Her business sense, emotional intelligence, and compassion turn the Hua household from helpless victims into independent survivors.

Opposite her is Gu Yan Xi (played by Hu Yi Tian), the feared yet deeply loyal Commander of the Security Bureau. On the surface, he is cold, disciplined, and ruthless to enemies, but with Hua Zhi he is gentle, respectful, and quietly devoted. Rather than controlling her, he believes in her. Their relationship is refreshingly mature. They communicate, trust each other, and walk through danger together instead of creating misunderstandings.

Their romance is a slow burn filled with subtle flirting, emotional support, and mutual sacrifice. There are no dragged-out love triangles or forced separations. Instead, we watch two adults slowly become each other’s strongest allies.

🎭 Acting

Zhang Jing Yi delivers a graceful and emotionally grounded performance as Hua Zhi. She balances softness with authority beautifully. Whether leading her family, negotiating business, or showing vulnerability, her expressions feel natural and sincere. You can see Hua Zhi’s growth not only in dialogue but in posture, confidence, and emotional control.

Hu Yi Tian shines in one of his best historical roles to date. As Gu Yan Xi, he blends stoicism with warmth. His fight scenes are sharp, his presence commanding, and yet his quiet moments with the female lead are full of tenderness. He plays the contrast between savage commander and gentle lover extremely well.

The supporting cast also elevates the drama. The Hua family women, servants, and side couples all feel alive and meaningful. Even the emperor, though frustrating, is performed with nuance and complexity, adding depth rather than simple villainy.

🎬 Execution & Storytelling

The execution of Blossoms in Adversity is polished and engaging. The pacing remains steady across its episodes without dragging. Emotional moments never feel overly melodramatic, and happy moments feel earned rather than exaggerated.

Visually, the drama is beautiful. Costumes, sets, and cinematography enhance the historical atmosphere and make every scene immersive. The production quality supports the storytelling rather than distracting from it.

What stands out most is the balance between romance, family, business, and politics. While the later episodes lean more into political conflicts and slightly away from business development, the emotional core of the drama never gets lost. The ending wraps up character journeys in a satisfying, comforting way that feels complete.

🌼 Final Thoughts

Blossoms in Adversity is not just a romance drama. It is about women discovering their worth, families rebuilding from nothing, and love growing through trust instead of chaos. It delivers comfort without being boring and strength without losing tenderness.

If you enjoy historical dramas with strong female leads, mature romance, emotional intelligence, and meaningful storytelling, this one deserves a spot on your watchlist.

⭐ Rating: 9/10
A heartfelt, empowering drama with beautiful performances, steady romance, and lasting emotional impact.

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Completed
bojojoti
2 people found this review helpful
Dec 13, 2025
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.5
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Exceptional Female Lead Versus the Toxic Emperor

The FL became one of my favorite leading characters: the actress exuded quiet strength and nobility of character. She was brave, intelligent, kind, and adventurous. I practically cheered when she told the ML that she'd read many instances in romance novels where the couple had silly misunderstandings, but she wanted to eliminate that with communication. How nice to avoid a ditzy FL and nonsensical misunderstandings!

FL's relationship with the ML was built on mutual respect and trust. Their chemistry was so sweet and strong. There was a break-up, but it made sense and wasn't used clumsily to rachet emotion. FL was saddened, but she got on with life. I respect the writer for not trying to wring excess heartache from the situation; restraint was more effective.

The drama highlighted many issues women would have encountered in that era (and even now): abuse, infidelity, lack of free will, etc. It dealt with bullying, poverty, and political oppression. It featured numerous murders and torture scenes. And yet, I'm thinking about putting Blossoms in Adversity in my Fluffy or Low Angst list, because it's so life-affirming and comforting.

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Completed
BecauseMyMemorySucks Finger Heart Award1
2 people found this review helpful
May 5, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 10
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 6.0

Family is the essence.

Blossoms in adversity, this drama was aptly named.

The main theme and plot line that carried us through all 40 episodes of this drama was well done. Watching the Hua family's fall from grace and their eventual comeback through hardwork, preseverance, trust was so uplifting. The relationships between the women of the Hua household and how they worked together was the best part of the series and that is truly the main essence of the drama. This whole aspect was well done, so I rate the drama highly for that mainly.

In terms of the romance, the love between Hua Zhi and YanXi was the healthy and romantic type. Although I didn’t really feel amazing chemistry between the actors, the romance between the characters was great to witness. I loved how they both started out as friends and their relationship grew deeper. It was beautiful to see them be each other's confidants, with HZ feeling safest talking with YX and seeking his opinions on things she wanted to do, especially early on in their relationship.

My main disappointment with the drama is specifically the main lead, Yanxi's, attitude(?). To put it short, he did not stand on business. Despite how physically strong he was and how many times he protected HZ and her family, his character/state of mind/personality as his own person just fell so flat. In terms of personality, I even preferred the Second Male Lead's attitude and how he carried himself. YX acted in ways that went against his own beliefs/desires/morals all because the Emperor ordered it and that was dissapointing. He came across as a weak willed man and that is definitely not a trait I'd like to see from a ML, especially when you compare with the FL who is courageous enough to speak out when she sees something wrong and SML who spoke out honestly without fear for the consequences. This also feeds into why I felt a bit dissatisfied with how the end to all the adversity played out, I wish it was more directly through the hands of the main leads' actions than that of third parties. The fact that at the end of the drama I was rooting for one of the villains to accomplish their revenge plot and was pissed at our main leads for trying to stop them was a new feeling I experienced watching a drama, lmao.

Overall, the main story line being the rise of Hua family was enjoyable and very well done, there are also so many lovable side characters and romantic story lines (ShaoYao x Shen Huan, Uncle Pingyang x Aunt Yu Niang, Empress Dowager x Grandma iykyk lol, etc) that made this very enjoyable, so I still had a good time watching this drama.

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Ongoing 17/40
Kazee05
21 people found this review helpful
Apr 10, 2024
17 of 40 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10
This review may contain spoilers

So refreshing, no cliche pure life lesson and overcome diversity

"Blossom in Adversity" is a refreshing Chinese drama that breaks clichés. Instead of focusing solely on revenge, it portrays the characters' resilience and determination to overcome challenges for their family's future. It's a heartfelt story about life's struggles and the pursuit of hope, making it simply the best.
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Dropped 30/40
forsabrina
4 people found this review helpful
Apr 30, 2024
30 of 40 episodes seen
Dropped 0
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
I'm only leaving a review because while I can see why this drama is so popular, I don't believe it deserves the high rating it got. I remember reading the summary of the plot before it aired and feeling very excited. But from the first episodes I noticed something that became a pattern in every single episode from then on, and basically ruined this drama for me. I felt the potential as well as the hard work the actors put in. However, our protagonist --who is played by an actress I really love by the way-- is a very badly written character to put it plainly. She reacts to every situation in the best way possible. Whenever the viewer senses a typical annoying drama moment coming on, she "surprises" everyone by being unbelievably understanding and exceptionally smart. She never overreacts or makes any serious mistakes. She basically barely has a character of her own. As Hua Zhi, some of her traits really sticked, I'll give the writers that, like her forward way of thinking, her wit, her love for her grandfather. But she didn't feel like an actual leal. Same goes for ML. Just two very dull characters. I swear, I thought this drama had so much it could have done with that storyline. But even if they wanted a non-typical FL, she didn't have to turn out this robotic. Basically, for me the leads just didn't feel human enough. Other characters in this drama were written so much better. I was shocked when I saw the rating because compared to so many other great shows, this got a 8.7 which feels very undeserved for me. Having said that, I enjoyed many of the episodes and I do understand if not many are bothered by the things I mentioned.

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Completed
cwinterbrisk
2 people found this review helpful
May 31, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 5.5
Story 4.5
Acting/Cast 6.0
Music 6.5
Rewatch Value 2.5
This review may contain spoilers

Visually appealing, poor writing, cringe cliches, characters with potential let down by the script

Maybe I'm just not the target demographic for these types of shows. I'm a huge fan of rom-coms and have seen a few chinese/historical shows before, but most of the time I end up dropping costume&period dramas. I stuck through to the end of this one just to see how things play out, but it was difficult.

The show itself is filmed well and looks better than most chinese dramas I've seen. I really liked the character Shao Yao (ML's sister). I think she did a fantastic job portraying her character and every scene with her felt refreshing. Even though her side romance wasn't the most developed, it still felt worth the screentime and I enjoyed the chemistry between her and Shen Huan (at times I felt I enjoyed their chemistry more than the leads). The main romance between the two leads felt okay. I think their on-screen chemistry definitely took a hit with the poor writing and cringe cliche moments, but they did their best and made it kind of work. The progression felt a little slow at first, but it wasn't too bad. Unfortunately it's hard to really feel that connection between the two when the script is so full of cliches.

It kind of seemed like the ML didn't really get that much screentime compared to the other characters. Towards the end he definitely got more scenes, but near the beginning and middle of the show I feel like I barely saw him at all. The show focuses more on the FL I suppose, but it felt weird calling him a ML at times when he just showed up for a few short scenes and then dipped for the rest of the episode. Like he would only show up to remind us that he's the ML, and then disappear again. Him and the FL didn't get as many scenes together until nearing the end, and even then it was kind of on-and-off. They would meet up, have some flirty heart-fluttering moments together, and then separate and go about their individual scenes. Kind of hurt the chemistry in my opinion.

FL is too perfect. I love the actress, so no hate towards her (or any of the actors/actresses for that matter), but I wasn't a huge fan of how they wrote her character. She was supposed to be the "not-you-average-FL", but instead they just made her completely flawless and strong to the point that there was nowhere left for her character to go. The writers couldn't find a way to develop her character because there was nothing to develop. She was forgiving, caring, responsible, everyone looked up to her, she helped others all the time, etc., so she had very little character development throughout the entire show. The ML on the other hand had some potential to be an interesting character, but he didn't get as many scenes and was kind of used as an accessory to the plot most of the time. Sometimes it seemed like he was only there to add the romance into the show but didn't really provide much outside of that despite being a commander. The whole commander plot could have been a very interesting one to pursue, but it was put on the backburner most of the time and not really utilized to its full potential.

Also, sooo many side characters. This wouldn't be bad necessarily if they were actually interesting or if I actually cared about any of them. It seemed like they introduced a new side character with their own problems every couple episodes, in which the FL has to find a way to help them. Many of the side characters over-acted a little too much at times as well. Exaggerated movements, yelling, facial expressions, etc., like that one mother character they introduced at one point (I honestly don't remember her name) who was just crying in every scene she was in. I wish they would have focused more on developing the main characters instead of introducing more side plots.

And as with most of these romance shows, there are quite a few cringe cliche moments. Ones that kind of break the immersion for me sometimes, but I suppose it just comes with the genre. I guess you can give this show a try if you think you might be part of the target demographic. If you are then you'll probably love it.

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Completed
CKDramaddicts
2 people found this review helpful
May 17, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.5

A story of hope and resilience in adversity and a joyful fairy tale in wishful thinking

There is something intensely satisfying with stories in which the underdog overcomes unimaginable adversity to succeed against all expectations. Throw in well-paced story arcs, an incredibly smart, sensible, progressive, and courageous protagonist, supported by a cast of flawed but loyal and caring friends and family members, and we have a recipe I can’t resist.

Blossoms in Adversity is a wonderful historical drama that celebrates the strength and resilience of women by putting a spotlight on their incredibly oppressive lives in ancient China through the fall and rise of the once-illustrious Hua Family. I was willing to suspend disbelief and enjoy this magical and joyous fairy tale in wishful thinking, where the value of truth and the power of good will always prevails.

The Hua family patriarch is a high ranking court official of unimpeachable integrity who refuses to speak dishonestly simply to curry favour with the Emperor. Enraged by his subject’s impudence, the Emperor exiles the Hua men to the northern borders to do hard penal labour and confiscates the family’s wealth and home. The remaining family members -- the many wives and concubines of the four Hua sons and their children (boys under the age of 13 and all the daughters) -- are left to fend for themselves. Were it not for a rustic cottage outside the city bestowed many years ago by the Dowager Empress to the family matriarch -- best friends in their youth -- the women and children would have nowhere to go.

With the exception of our heroine, the eldest granddaughter Hua Zhi, who had travelled the realm with her grandfather as a child, the remaining family members are spoiled and pampered and at a complete loss over their reversal of fortune and the harsh realities that come with it.

I was brought to tears more than once by the heartfelt joys and heartaches of this imperfect, but delightful family and their servants. I have never been so moved by the funeral of a secondary character, especially with the arrival of an unexpected, yet pivotal guest. But I spent much of the 40 episodes grinning and cheering in satisfaction and joy over the family’s remarkable successes. Despite grim family circumstances, Blossoms In Adversity is about hope. It also deftly showcases the many ways “hope” is defined for different women: independence, divorce, marriage, love -- even when they are far from ideal.

I have no illusions that the premise is filled with impossibilities. Hua Zhi, played by the lovely Zhang Jingyi (张婧仪), manages to pretty much single-handedly bring the Hua family back to prosperity -- twice -- within the short span of (but generously estimated) three to five years. I can’t describe it any better than kisskh reviewer PeachBlossomGoddess who wrote in her excellent review:

“...no feat is beyond Hua Zhi! She parleys a candied hawthorn business into a pastry and restaurant empire, picks up stray royal children, foils a few palace plots, build schools and a canal, rescues the Hua family men and even manages to find time to fall in love!”

That’s all!

Hua Zhi is a heroine for the ages, a role model in perseverance, unwavering integrity, hard work, with a sharp mind for solving difficult problems and a sharp eye for spotting potential threats and reading her adversaries. There is almost a Mary Sue-like quality about her achievements and seeming perfection. Unlike the ensemble cast of spoiled aunties, sisters, cousins, servants, and friends (such as the endearing Shen Huan) who experience great character development as they learn to adjust to a vastly different quality of life and social status, Hua Zhi undergoes the least amount of growth. Yet if she were so perfect, she would not be so stupid as to speak defiantly to the Emperor, having already previously witnessed the grievous consequences of doing so -- not only with her grandfather, but with the man she loves -- Gu Yanxi, stoically played by Hu Yitian (胡一天).

Under the Emperor’s command, it is Gu Yanxi -- as the commander of the much-feared Security Bureau -- who confiscates Hua Zhi’s home and takes away the men. But it is under his own free will that he becomes Hua Zhi’s protector, confident, and love. But this free will rankles and offends the cruel and controlling Emperor, who does not hesitate to demonstrate the lengths to which he will go to wield his absolute power and force his nephew to kowtow to his will. Gu Yanxi’s strength yet helplessness in the face of his uncle, who raised him like a son, makes him a complex and fascinating hero, but one we never get to know as intimately as we do the women in the Hua family.

A LIKABLE ENSEMBLE CAST

This was my first drama with Hu Yitian, and his depiction of a stoic prince really worked for me. I’ve seen some comments criticizing his unflattering period styling and that he can be a bit flat and expressionless in his acting, so perhaps his portrayal would have landed differently and felt more stale had I been more familiar with his previous roles. In any case, Hu Yitian did an especially fantastic job demonstrating his strength as a fighter during climactic fight scenes and evoked a certain presence in this drama. It did not take long for his character to grow on me.

At first glance, Caesar Wu’s (吴希泽) Shen Qi is so honorable and immensely likable that I worried I might develop “second male lead syndrome”. Despite his high billing, however, his character actually disappears for a good chunk of Blossoms. Much of Shen Qi’s character development was done early, so by the time he reappears later in the drama, he is relegated to a likable, but somewhat flat, supporting character. It is his brother, Shen Huan, who takes a surprising turn with the more interesting and very sweet story arc with Gu Yanxi’s sister. Bian Cheng (边程), who has been acting since he was six or seven, is just 19 years old and shined in the role of the earnest but spoiled and lazy rich second son with the kind heart.

Actor Hai Yitian (海一天) delivered an effective performance as the Emperor who ruled with Machiavellian cruelty without turning him into just another two-dimensional evil character. He trusted no one, had no tolerance for soft emotions or having his authority and judgment questioned, and yet he appeared to long for his nephew’s company and unwavering trust.

Among the wonderful ensemble cast of women, Lu Yuxiao (卢昱晓) perhaps stood out a little more as Gu Yanxi’s sister, while Fu Bohan (傅铂涵) stood out the most among the cast of children as the Sixth Prince.

I derived enormous joy and absolute satisfaction witnessing Hua Zhi's preposterous achievements. It didn’t matter if it was realistic or not. (In the real world, would the men of the Hua family have truly accepted their new role as passive husbands and allowed the women to continue to handle the family decision-making? I have my doubts.) Despite these flaws -- or perhaps *because* of them -- I can’t help but give Blossoms in Adversity a high rating as one of the best dramas of the year.

NIT-PICKS AND STRAY THOUGHTS

* My biggest production beef was the unnecessary dramatic echo sound effect whenever a character said something impactful. It was too cheesy even for me and very distracting.
* Similarly, during particularly climactic scenes they would momentarily freeze the frame like a photograph on multiple characters’ faces for dramatic effect, that also felt a bit cheesy.
* The Emperor knows all, yet we never see him actually conducting any court business! How did he have time for everything and still expend so much effort on his poor nephew?
* Given how little the Emperor trusted even those closest to him, it’s a marvel his closest eunuch managed to survive his leadership!
* Was Yanxi stupid for charging into the palace? It seemed too reckless even under the circumstances.
* Pretty sure there were several consistency errors, including one where the sister was shown sitting outside her second floor sanctuary -- after it had already burned down and they moved back to the Hua Mansion.
* Large fires can take a long time to extinguish even with modern firefighting equipment, but the family’s rented city home was already a pile of smoky burnt ashes the very same day and cool enough to walk through.
* The Hua women’s flawless skin and untanned face despite labouring under the hot sun for a year building the canal was hilarious.

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Completed
Aileen Lim
2 people found this review helpful
May 4, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Good storyline, good direction and cinematography and excellent acting

Story that focus on family and rising from scratch and being strong for family in bad times.
No annoying love triangles or troublemaking characters.
Cast suited for their roles. Hu YiTian's height make him the best commander of the secret service because he towers over everyone.
No mushy interactions of the couples. Female characters are strong and did not talk or behave coquettishly.
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Completed
Lynn
2 people found this review helpful
May 31, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

Formidable ML & Feisty FL

I am a (small) fan of both the ML and FL after seeing their outstanding performances in other dramas. Thus, I was more than happy to give this drama a go and boy, it did not disappoint and I am truly delighted about this!

What I Loved:
- ML was so tall, so handsome, so cute, so goddamn powerful and strong. I loved that he wielded such authority and yet, he did not abuse his power (in general). The fight scene where he walloped the previous Commander of the Security Bureau was extremely cathartic as well as both jaw-dropping and mind-blowing. Wow! That punch punch punch punch punch!!! Loved it!
- I loved that ML was also devoted and sincere to his lady love.
- Good chemistry between ML and FL. I loved seeing ML as well as both of the love birds on screen.
- I always love a feisty and intelligent FL and FL in this drama did not disappoint. (Of course, I suggest gently to suspend all disbelief and just enjoy the drama and the powers of what a FL can do.) She was supremely capable and plucky. She was highly intelligent and modern in her thinking. She was confident and yet, human.
- Acting was great from everyone in the drama. The supporting cast of four women acted by veterans was awesome. They definitely understood their assignment and was beyond great. Everyone else in the show like the lackeys from the Security Bureau, FL's grandmother, Shen Huan, Shen Qi, the maids, the children and so on delivered great performances. Thumbs-up!
- I liked that everything was paced very well. There was nothing draggy and there was nothing that was too quick that it was, to me, considered not properly explained or accounted for.
- Riveting and intriguing plot which made me want to watch on and on. So many interesting and suspenseful things were happening. There were elements of cute too. Great plot! Well directed!
- The music sounded very modern and catchy. I liked the tunes.
- Happy ending!

What I Didn't Like:
- The king was all sorts of crazy and had his own selfish agenda. He was also so paranoid about losing his throne and was so very bloodthirsty.
- Hua Jing was absolute nutcase number 1. She should have leveraged on herself and not constantly blamed others and desire for things out of her control.
- All the bad people such as all the abusive husbands.
(I mean I get the memo from the script writer. I'm just saying.)

Overall, Blossoms in Adversity is a superbly wonderful drama and I highly recommend it! <3
It is well-made and the cast is all great! There is also a bit of a moral in place too that we should all blossom in adversity. Adversities abound in life. How we respond/ react to adversities and how we overcome them are more important. Problem-solve and continue to blossom and grow in adversity and despite adversity. <3

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Completed
dlfw87
2 people found this review helpful
Apr 27, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

Best Cdrama that i have watched

Its really a nicely made drama. I found myself waiting day by day for the next episode. Great OST too. now that it has ended, i have no other drama to watch. tried watching those highly rated/ popular drama (e.g. the untamed) but couldnt even stay more than three episodes. Unlike this blossoms in adversity. really a whole new level.
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Completed
Veronwie
2 people found this review helpful
Apr 26, 2024
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 10
Story 10
Acting/Cast 10
Music 10
Rewatch Value 10

It's WORTH

The storyline is not complicated but impressive.

A beautiful family story that teaches you not to give up . After experiencing difficulties together, it can be felt that Hua's family is the best. The entire family could feel Hua Zhi's struggle and finally very love her.

All the artists played their roles very well. ❤ Zhang Jing Yi. Perfect lead couple and sweet second couple!


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Completed
Little-Drama-Queen
2 people found this review helpful
Aug 11, 2025
40 of 40 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 10
Music 4.0
Rewatch Value 10

Ten straight to the point checklist

Ten straight to the point checklist (or what I want in a drama)

1.) Happy/Sad/Satisfying: Happy
2.) Female Empowerment: yes
3.) Historical drama: yes
4.) ML/FL who do not look like teenagers: yes
5.) Strong, clever, kind FL: yes
6.) Bingeable: yes
7.) Angst/tragedy: enough to make you want to see what happens next, but not enough to depress you
8.) Romance: it is a small part of the story and is more about sisterhood
9.) Acting: excellent
10.) Rewatchable: yes
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  • Score: 8.6 (scored by 13,433 users)
  • Ranked: #323
  • Popularity: #850
  • Watchers: 28,849

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