Could you please write your opinion in the comments below.This section is intended only for reviews, and I strongly…
Telling me to watch porn is immature and utterly disrespectful. You are commenting on an R18+ series that clearly includes NC scenes. If adult content offends you so deeply, then perhaps you should not be here in the first place. No one forced you to read my review, and certainly no one asked for your moral lecture.
Your entire comment shows a lack of understanding about storytelling, performance, and the BL genre itself. I have watched over 400 BL dramas and read countless novels. I have reviewed top-tier works like Cherry Magic, Old Fashion Cupcake, and Bad Buddy that prove how love stories can be powerful and meaningful without explicit scenes. But that does not mean intimacy has no place in BL. Many of the most acclaimed series such as KinnPorsche and My Stand-In use NC scenes to express raw emotion, vulnerability, and trust between characters. When done with purpose, intimacy elevates a story, it does not cheapen it.
Wanting NC scenes is not about wanting porn. It is about wanting authenticity. Real relationships include physical and emotional connection. To deny that is to strip away realism and maturity from the story. Some BLs are soft and innocent, others are bold and passionate, both are valid forms of storytelling. You do not get to decide which one is acceptable.
Also, I recently reviewed Kill to Love (Chinese BL) and received over 80+ “useful” likes from the community, highest for that series. You probably even came across my review, since you added it to your “Plan to Watch” list. And here you are trying to tell me how to write a review, yet your own page has no reviews at all. That is like telling someone how to cook when you have never stepped into a kitchen. I have not violated any MDL terms or conditions, so again, you have no right to tell me how I should write my next review.
So do not insult people for having preferences different from yours. BL is not your personal property to gatekeep. It is a diverse genre that embraces many expressions of love. And unless you are an MDL admin, you have absolutely no authority to tell anyone how they should review, what they can say, or what opinions they are allowed to have. I will continue to write my reviews honestly, and I do not need your permission to do so.
If it is easier for both of us, and if you still do not agree with me, then I will simply block you so we do not have to talk to each other again. There is no need for hostility, let’s just move on and enjoy the stories we each connect with.
Just finished this series, and overall, I really enjoyed it. It’s super cute and I liked it even more than High…
We got the finale we wanted, with Nut standing up for himself, and that scene with his father was so powerful. His words finally changed his father’s mind and made him accept his music career. The conversation between Nut and Win in the bedroom was adorable, and I loved seeing happy endings for Chai and Ek, as well as our GL couple, Biu and Lin.
Just finished this series, and overall, I really enjoyed it. It’s super cute and I liked it even more than High School Musical. Everyone got the happy ending they deserved, and it left me smiling. I highly recommend this one as it’s light, fun, and an easy watch.
Two masterpieces are airing right now from One31, Love in the Moonlight and The Wicked Game.
The Wicked Game premiered on iQIYI with English subtitles right on time, while Love in the Moonlight was delayed by a day on GagaOOLala. As an international fan who truly wants to support these shows through legal channels, I can’t help but feel a little disheartened. One day may seem small, but in the world of spoilers, it feels like an eternity. My social media is flooded with scenes and twists before I even get the chance to experience them myself. Unless I turn off the internet entirely, it’s almost impossible to avoid the heartbreak of knowing too much too soon.
Still, that delay is only a small shadow over something extraordinary. This series has been my favorite since the very first episode. Their chemistry is beyond words, a connection that burns softly, beautifully, endlessly. My favorite moments are always when they finally find each other again after being apart for too long, when their longing melts into an embrace, when their kiss feels like coming home after a storm. I could watch them lose and find each other forever.
Many people are hating Pin, but I see her differently. Without her, there would be no story, no forbidden tenderness hidden beneath the surface. She is the spark that gives their love its edge, the reason it feels both fragile and alive. A hero’s story means nothing without its pain, just as a superhero film is empty without a villain.
Pin can be annoying at times, maybe because she loves Prince Saenkaew too deeply. But love, when unreturned, becomes a quiet ache, a shadow that lingers long after the light fades. She cannot see what he already knows within himself, that his heart belongs elsewhere, that he is gay and cannot love her the way she loves him.
Pin is Sasin’s only remaining family. He made a promise to her mother before she passed, to protect her no matter what. And that promise, that sense of duty tangled with desire, is what makes this story so hauntingly beautiful. If she were just a stranger, love would come easy. But she isn’t. And that’s why this series breaks me every week, because love here is not simple, it is sacrifice. It is fire held in trembling hands.
Wow, that escalated quickly! This time it was Wave who initiated the kiss and he completely devoured his Lava. I can’t wait for the next episode. The romance is heating up, and it feels like they’re finally about to open their hearts to each other.
I liked episode 1 more than I expected, the plot is really interesting. My only question is, if I had an idol I truly admired, and Chiaki clearly has AE’s posters all over his room, wouldn’t he remember every detail like his facial features, voice, and everything? If AE and Enaga are the same person, how come Chiaki doesn’t recognise his idol? I know the hat is meant to be a disguise, but surely he’d notice the height, face, and voice. Still, it’s such an intriguing story, and I’m really enjoying it so far. Japanese BLs just hit differently.
I hate to say this but wow, GMMTV really can’t direct a fight scene to save their lives. That human versus vampire fight in episode 8 looked like a high school drama club rehearsal. If you’re going to make a vampire show, at least pretend to know what you’re doing.
And then there’s Pokpong. He joins Hunter, trains like he’s preparing for war, and gets taken down in literally two seconds. The doctor saves him, Pokpong throws a tantrum, and suddenly everything’s fine again.
GMMTV really needs to stick to what they do best, romance and high school dramas. This whole vampire action experiment clearly isn’t their thing. One31 should’ve directed this instead; at least then the plot might’ve made sense and the fight scenes
I haven’t read the novel, but I’ve watched all 10 episodes so far, and I still don’t understand why Ramphueng wants to harm Khem. Her story was truly heartbreaking, but Khem wasn’t the one who hurt her. So when did she start taking it out on him? Can someone please explain? Thank you.
oops..it might be a spoiler...so sorry I forgot the tag🙏🙏
I agree with you too. He nearly died, and his dad’s like, “Why don’t we let him recover in another country all by himself with no friends or family? He’ll get better that way, lol.”
And don’t be sorry., we’re here to talk about the show, not the weather!
Wow, this series is so good. Maybe not the best, but it is still beautiful and deeply addictive. Nawa treats Phraphai like a brother, yet Phraphai’s eyes tell another story. There is longing there, quiet and undeniable. It feels like we are slowly drifting into a love triangle, one that will break hearts before it heals them. I hope these mermaids have more power than just breathing underwater. I want to see them rise, protect themselves, and show the strength that comes from love and survival. There is something magical about their world, shimmering with secrets and tenderness. The NC scene was soft, gentle, and filled with emotion, a moment where time seemed to stop, where every touch spoke louder than words. I cannot wait for the next episode, to dive back into the ocean of their love, where danger and desire move together like the tide.
Poor Pheem, once a gentle boy, watched his life crumble in a single, merciless moment. His stepmother’s car crushed his mother before his eyes, her screams swallowed by the night. Before his tears could fall, that same woman pushed him down the stairs, trying to erase him as if he were nothing more than an obstacle between her son and the family empire.
His father, the one person who should have fought for him, turned his back instead. No warmth, no mercy, only exile. He was sent away like a secret to be buried, left to rot in a foreign land with no love, no family, and no name. That night became his birth into darkness, the moment a child’s heart was replaced with a void filled by rage and sorrow.
The scar on his back never healed. He tattooed over it, not to hide the pain, but to immortalize it. Every drop of ink whispered a promise: one day, they will pay. Every breath he took was a vow to make them bleed as he once bled, to return not as the forgotten boy, but as the storm they created. Now, the prodigal son returns, not for forgiveness, but for vengeance. His stepmother and half-brother live in comfort built on the bones of his past. But the child they buried has risen, sharper, colder, and far more dangerous than they ever imagined.
Yet fate, cruel and tender, plays its own game. Than, his Thunderman from childhood, has reappeared, now as his protector. Once, Than was his hero, the light that shielded him from nightmares. Now, he becomes the only man capable of softening the darkness within him. Amid vengeance and chaos, love begins to bloom, fragile but fierce, a flicker of warmth in a heart long frozen.
Episode 3 is a solid 10/10 and has everything....lies, betrayal, framing, a bride in tears, family chaos, burning romance, and siblings fighting to the death. Every scene feels like a storm waiting to explode. The tension, emotion, and madness blend into something unforgettable. I cannot wait to see what the future episodes bring, because if this is only the beginning, the fire ahead will be unstoppable.
We cannot always have a perfect ending, not in stories and not in life. ABO Desire reminded me of that truth with a beauty that aches. The main couple found their light, but the second was left in shadow, and somehow that feels real. Because in real life too, some loves find their forever, while others fade like whispers in the wind. Some hearts heal together, others break in silence and learn to keep beating through the pain.
So many shows and series end in sorrow, with love torn apart and dreams left unfinished. But at least this one did not fall into tragedy. It gave us hope, a fragile but precious kind of peace. It showed that love, even after all the storms, can still bloom.
For me, I am grateful. This story will linger, soft and heavy, like a memory I do not wish to forget. I will carry it with me, the warmth, the heartbreak, the sacrifice. My Saturdays will no longer feel the same. They will feel a little emptier, yet somehow fuller too, because ABO Desire left behind not just an ending, but a feeling that will stay with me for a very long time.
Odajima’s childhood shatters my heart into pieces. No child should ever carry that kind of pain. To grow up under the same roof as an abusive father and a mother who turned her face away is unbearable. His mother gave him life, yet could not protect it. Instead of laughter and warmth, his home became a battlefield where love died too soon. When he killed his father, it wasn’t out of hate, it was survival. And then, the woman who should have saved him asked to die by his hands too. That moment broke something inside him forever. How could a boy like that grow up and know what love feels like?
At the hospital, when Odajima trembled under the weight of his memories, Kataoka’s hand reaching out to hold his was more than comfort, it was salvation. Now the title makes sense, A Journey to Kill You. Odajima was sent to end Kataoka’s life, yet along the way, Kataoka became the only person who taught him how to live. Kataoka’s warmth, his teasing affection, his careless talk of marriage, it all filled the void Odajima’s parents left behind. His mission tells him to kill Kataoka, but his heart rebels, screaming no. The man who was never loved has finally found someone who does. And that is the cruelest kind of pain, to be torn between duty and love.
Then came the hospital scene. The nurse asked, “Mr. Kataoka, do you have permission to leave the hospital?” and Kataoka, barely alive, smiled and said, “If I stay here, my wife will get jealous.” I swear, this man could be on life support and still flirt like it’s his full-time job. But wait, the chaos doesn’t stop there. When the news broke that Kirii’s father, the gang leader, had died, Kataoka showed up, put on lipstick, and kissed the dead man. I just sat there like, excuse me, what? And judging by the faces of the hundred bodyguards in the room, they were all thinking the same thing. Japanese BL really said, “You thought you understood us? Think again.” And honestly, I think I’m falling in love with how wonderfully weird this series is.
Wow, so young and talented! Hard to believe he landed the role of a king in I’m the Most Beautiful Count at just 17-18. I’m really looking forward to seeing his future projects.
Wow, episode 2 was so good! I love the miscommunication and misunderstandings between them, the acting and plot are absolutely on point. Even after seven years in a relationship, they still have flaws, which makes this drama feel so real and mature. Sometimes these short 10-minute episodes are more powerful than full 50-minute ones. I honestly can’t wait for the next episode!
Your entire comment shows a lack of understanding about storytelling, performance, and the BL genre itself. I have watched over 400 BL dramas and read countless novels. I have reviewed top-tier works like Cherry Magic, Old Fashion Cupcake, and Bad Buddy that prove how love stories can be powerful and meaningful without explicit scenes. But that does not mean intimacy has no place in BL. Many of the most acclaimed series such as KinnPorsche and My Stand-In use NC scenes to express raw emotion, vulnerability, and trust between characters. When done with purpose, intimacy elevates a story, it does not cheapen it.
Wanting NC scenes is not about wanting porn. It is about wanting authenticity. Real relationships include physical and emotional connection. To deny that is to strip away realism and maturity from the story. Some BLs are soft and innocent, others are bold and passionate, both are valid forms of storytelling. You do not get to decide which one is acceptable.
Also, I recently reviewed Kill to Love (Chinese BL) and received over 80+ “useful” likes from the community, highest for that series. You probably even came across my review, since you added it to your “Plan to Watch” list. And here you are trying to tell me how to write a review, yet your own page has no reviews at all. That is like telling someone how to cook when you have never stepped into a kitchen. I have not violated any MDL terms or conditions, so again, you have no right to tell me how I should write my next review.
So do not insult people for having preferences different from yours. BL is not your personal property to gatekeep. It is a diverse genre that embraces many expressions of love. And unless you are an MDL admin, you have absolutely no authority to tell anyone how they should review, what they can say, or what opinions they are allowed to have. I will continue to write my reviews honestly, and I do not need your permission to do so.
If it is easier for both of us, and if you still do not agree with me, then I will simply block you so we do not have to talk to each other again. There is no need for hostility, let’s just move on and enjoy the stories we each connect with.
The Wicked Game premiered on iQIYI with English subtitles right on time, while Love in the Moonlight was delayed by a day on GagaOOLala. As an international fan who truly wants to support these shows through legal channels, I can’t help but feel a little disheartened. One day may seem small, but in the world of spoilers, it feels like an eternity. My social media is flooded with scenes and twists before I even get the chance to experience them myself. Unless I turn off the internet entirely, it’s almost impossible to avoid the heartbreak of knowing too much too soon.
Still, that delay is only a small shadow over something extraordinary. This series has been my favorite since the very first episode. Their chemistry is beyond words, a connection that burns softly, beautifully, endlessly. My favorite moments are always when they finally find each other again after being apart for too long, when their longing melts into an embrace, when their kiss feels like coming home after a storm. I could watch them lose and find each other forever.
Many people are hating Pin, but I see her differently. Without her, there would be no story, no forbidden tenderness hidden beneath the surface. She is the spark that gives their love its edge, the reason it feels both fragile and alive. A hero’s story means nothing without its pain, just as a superhero film is empty without a villain.
Pin can be annoying at times, maybe because she loves Prince Saenkaew too deeply. But love, when unreturned, becomes a quiet ache, a shadow that lingers long after the light fades. She cannot see what he already knows within himself, that his heart belongs elsewhere, that he is gay and cannot love her the way she loves him.
Pin is Sasin’s only remaining family. He made a promise to her mother before she passed, to protect her no matter what. And that promise, that sense of duty tangled with desire, is what makes this story so hauntingly beautiful. If she were just a stranger, love would come easy. But she isn’t. And that’s why this series breaks me every week, because love here is not simple, it is sacrifice. It is fire held in trembling hands.
I can’t wait for the next episode. The romance is heating up, and it feels like they’re finally about to open their hearts to each other.
My only question is, if I had an idol I truly admired, and Chiaki clearly has AE’s posters all over his room, wouldn’t he remember every detail like his facial features, voice, and everything? If AE and Enaga are the same person, how come Chiaki doesn’t recognise his idol? I know the hat is meant to be a disguise, but surely he’d notice the height, face, and voice.
Still, it’s such an intriguing story, and I’m really enjoying it so far. Japanese BLs just hit differently.
And then there’s Pokpong. He joins Hunter, trains like he’s preparing for war, and gets taken down in literally two seconds. The doctor saves him, Pokpong throws a tantrum, and suddenly everything’s fine again.
GMMTV really needs to stick to what they do best, romance and high school dramas. This whole vampire action experiment clearly isn’t their thing. One31 should’ve directed this instead; at least then the plot might’ve made sense and the fight scenes
And don’t be sorry., we’re here to talk about the show, not the weather!
I hope these mermaids have more power than just breathing underwater. I want to see them rise, protect themselves, and show the strength that comes from love and survival. There is something magical about their world, shimmering with secrets and tenderness.
The NC scene was soft, gentle, and filled with emotion, a moment where time seemed to stop, where every touch spoke louder than words. I cannot wait for the next episode, to dive back into the ocean of their love, where danger and desire move together like the tide.
His father, the one person who should have fought for him, turned his back instead. No warmth, no mercy, only exile. He was sent away like a secret to be buried, left to rot in a foreign land with no love, no family, and no name. That night became his birth into darkness, the moment a child’s heart was replaced with a void filled by rage and sorrow.
The scar on his back never healed. He tattooed over it, not to hide the pain, but to immortalize it. Every drop of ink whispered a promise: one day, they will pay. Every breath he took was a vow to make them bleed as he once bled, to return not as the forgotten boy, but as the storm they created.
Now, the prodigal son returns, not for forgiveness, but for vengeance. His stepmother and half-brother live in comfort built on the bones of his past. But the child they buried has risen, sharper, colder, and far more dangerous than they ever imagined.
Yet fate, cruel and tender, plays its own game. Than, his Thunderman from childhood, has reappeared, now as his protector. Once, Than was his hero, the light that shielded him from nightmares. Now, he becomes the only man capable of softening the darkness within him. Amid vengeance and chaos, love begins to bloom, fragile but fierce, a flicker of warmth in a heart long frozen.
Episode 3 is a solid 10/10 and has everything....lies, betrayal, framing, a bride in tears, family chaos, burning romance, and siblings fighting to the death. Every scene feels like a storm waiting to explode. The tension, emotion, and madness blend into something unforgettable. I cannot wait to see what the future episodes bring, because if this is only the beginning, the fire ahead will be unstoppable.
So many shows and series end in sorrow, with love torn apart and dreams left unfinished. But at least this one did not fall into tragedy. It gave us hope, a fragile but precious kind of peace. It showed that love, even after all the storms, can still bloom.
For me, I am grateful. This story will linger, soft and heavy, like a memory I do not wish to forget. I will carry it with me, the warmth, the heartbreak, the sacrifice. My Saturdays will no longer feel the same. They will feel a little emptier, yet somehow fuller too, because ABO Desire left behind not just an ending, but a feeling that will stay with me for a very long time.
At the hospital, when Odajima trembled under the weight of his memories, Kataoka’s hand reaching out to hold his was more than comfort, it was salvation. Now the title makes sense, A Journey to Kill You. Odajima was sent to end Kataoka’s life, yet along the way, Kataoka became the only person who taught him how to live. Kataoka’s warmth, his teasing affection, his careless talk of marriage, it all filled the void Odajima’s parents left behind. His mission tells him to kill Kataoka, but his heart rebels, screaming no. The man who was never loved has finally found someone who does. And that is the cruelest kind of pain, to be torn between duty and love.
Then came the hospital scene. The nurse asked, “Mr. Kataoka, do you have permission to leave the hospital?” and Kataoka, barely alive, smiled and said, “If I stay here, my wife will get jealous.” I swear, this man could be on life support and still flirt like it’s his full-time job.
But wait, the chaos doesn’t stop there. When the news broke that Kirii’s father, the gang leader, had died, Kataoka showed up, put on lipstick, and kissed the dead man. I just sat there like, excuse me, what? And judging by the faces of the hundred bodyguards in the room, they were all thinking the same thing. Japanese BL really said, “You thought you understood us? Think again.” And honestly, I think I’m falling in love with how wonderfully weird this series is.