Can someone spoil me if the ending is happy or sad or open? 🙏
Give me about an hour and a half.
30 minutes until the final episode airs, then an hour to watch it. I’ll let you know after that. But honestly, I’ve watched GMMTV BLs for many years now, and 99% of them end happily, so I’m hopeful.
So hard to rate this one. The cast is stunning and the soul switch concept is unique, but the execution felt messy. Still, I loved the core message: love isn’t about chasing or forcing, but about slowly unfolding and finding the soul within.
Family honor, expectations, and shame linger in every corner of life. For many of us, coming out is not about freedom but about risking everything, even the love of the people who raised us. In Asian culture, where family expectations run so deep, it can feel almost impossible to be honest about who you are.
That is why I loved this episode so much. Seeing Kanade Shinichiro’s mum and sister be so supportive, welcoming, and happy for him was truly moving. Their acceptance felt like a rare light in a world where rejection is often the first fear.
So many people were angry at the dad in the last episode, but if you put yourself in his place, it makes sense. He caught his son kissing another man, and it was a shock. Instead of explaining, Kanade Shinichiro reacted with anger and shouted at his dad. It was painful, but also very human. That is why I am so glad that in this episode they finally had a proper conversation while walking together. The words, the honesty, and the way it tied in with the childhood flashback broke me. It was raw, emotional, and painfully real.
Episode 11 was beautiful in its realism. It showed both the struggle and the hope of being accepted. Now I am looking forward to the final episode next week, though my heart is still heavy from this one.
I think the director is intentionally playing with us here. Remember last week’s ending? We all assumed either…
Oh sorry, I really didn’t mean to reply directly to you! Please don’t take it personally. I was actually going to post my theory as a separate comment. I totally get what you’re saying and respect your take on it. My apologies again
I think the director is intentionally playing with us here. Remember last week’s ending? We all assumed either…
Let’s say my theory is wrong and they really do break up. But honestly, can you name one truly iconic drama or movie, BL or Western, that didn’t have a breakup at some point? It’s part of what makes the love story unforgettable.
Think about Call Me by Your Name or La La Land. Those breakups shattered us, yet that heartbreak is what made the love linger in our hearts even more. Sometimes it’s only when someone is gone that you realize how deeply they matter. 💔
And it’s not just fiction, life works the same way. My sister broke up with her husband because of his gambling. For six months they were apart, and in that silence he realized everything he’d lost, her cooking, her care, her presence. When they found their way back to each other, they were stronger than ever. A real redemption arc.
So even if JunXi and HanTuo do break up, their reunion would be nothing short of explosive. The chemistry, the emotions, the passion, it’ll all come crashing back, overwhelming and undeniable.
Sometimes love needs distance to return fiercer, deeper, and more unstoppable than before.
ugh Tuo is starting to get on my nerves as if a person who selfishly made sure for whole frikkin 10 years that…
I think the director is intentionally playing with us here. Remember last week’s ending? We all assumed either HanTuo or JunXi had a kid when we heard the little boy say “daddy,” but in this episode it turned out to be JunXi’s nephew. Total misdirection.
That’s why I don’t think “let’s break up” should be taken at face value either. The director loves to end episodes on a cliffhanger and keep us guessing. It could mean “let’s take a break until your dad gets better,” or it could be another twist that looks harsher than it really is. Same thing happened in Revenged Love where Chi Cheng said “I hate you” in prison, but we all knew he didn’t actually mean it.
I really believe HanTuo wouldn’t just give up like that after being so obsessed and in love with JunXi for 10 years. This feels more like the director giving us a gut-punch ending to stir emotions, not the actual truth of where their relationship is heading.
Official post from Revenged Love YouTube channel below
Ding! You’ve got a “spoiler” from Revenged Love—please check it out! Dear Revenged Love fans, Thank you for your continued love and support! Over the past week, we’ve released a bunch of behind-the-scenes clips—did you catch them all on time? But this is just the beginning—the real “treasures” are still to come! In the coming days, hundreds of exclusive, exciting behind-the-scenes clips will be exclusively released on the Memefans platform! 🎉
Want to be among the first to unlock exclusive clips? Click the link and leave your email! We’ll send you a special invitation link as soon as the beta test opens. Spots are limited, so don’t miss out! ❤️
Official post from Revenged Love YouTube channel below
Ding! You’ve got a “spoiler” from Revenged Love—please check it out! Dear Revenged Love fans, Thank you for your continued love and support! Over the past week, we’ve released a bunch of behind-the-scenes clips—did you catch them all on time? But this is just the beginning—the real “treasures” are still to come! In the coming days, hundreds of exclusive, exciting behind-the-scenes clips will be exclusively released on the Memefans platform! 🎉
Want to be among the first to unlock exclusive clips? Click the link and leave your email! We’ll send you a special invitation link as soon as the beta test opens. Spots are limited, so don’t miss out! ❤️
Episode 8 broke me in a way I didn’t expect. I had to watch it on GagaOOLala since the iQIYI dub wasn’t available, and maybe that delay only made the emotions hit harder.
Seeing Han Tuo jealous of JunXi’s 5 year-old nephew was the sweetest, purest moment. It showed how much love he carries, how much he wants JunXi to be his and only his. But then those final three words came crashing down: “Let’s break up.”
The silence after those words felt suffocating. It reminded me of Revenged Love when Chi Cheng said “I hate you” in the prison scene not because he meant it, but because the pain was too much to hold. I don’t believe Han Tuo truly wants to end things. His entire being has revolved around JunXi since they were kids. His love is an obsession, a devotion too deep to just walk away from.
To me, those words are a shield. They come from seeing JunXi suffer, from realizing how unbearable it is to hide their love in the shadows. Even though Taiwan has legalized same-sex marriage, culture is not so easily rewritten. Family honor, expectations, shame, they linger in every corner of life. For so many of us, coming out isn’t freedom, it’s the risk of losing the people who raised us, the families we were taught to never disappoint.
Watching this episode felt like staring into my own heart. I know what it’s like to love in silence, to hide, to feel both the warmth of intimacy and the cold weight of fear. Han Tuo and JunXi’s struggle isn’t just fiction, it is reality for so many of us.
This episode wasn’t just sad, it was painfully real.
I wonder why iQIYI hasn't updated the Mandarin version yet.. only the Thai version? Thankfully I can also watch…
Thank God for GagaOOlala as a backup. I tried watching it in Thai but couldn’t stick with it, so I switched to GagaOOlala and it was so much better with their natural voice.
Wow, episode 5 was over 75 minutes and I wasn’t bored for a second. Such a mature BL with mainly experienced actors, it’s such a refreshing change from the usual high school/uni trope. Krailert was a top in episode 3 but a bottom in episode 5, and I love the versatility. My only complaint is that there are only 8 episodes. I really wish it were 12. This show truly deserves more recognition. Honestly, Be On Cloud should’ve released it on iQIYI instead of WeTV. When they put KinnPorsche on iQIYI, it became the number 1 show in over 100 countries.
We both just finished Revenged Love. FYI Because of the different Chinese accents, the male lead Tian Xu Ning, who played Chi Cheng, had his voice dubbed even though he speaks fluent Chinese. It was dubbed to keep the accent consistent.
It’s the same version, but the Taiwan release has their natural voices in Mandarin, while the Thai release is dubbed. Both come with English subtitles. I prefer the Taiwan version since I like hearing their real voices, but I couldn’t wait any longer, so I’m watching the Thai version for now.
No idea what happened to iQIYI tonight, the first 7 episodes were always on time
Episode 8 is already available on iQIYI in the Thai version, but not yet in the Taiwan version. I know it’s a bit frustrating, but I’m watching the Thai one right now. Illegal sites already have it, but I’d rather support them, so I’m sticking with iQIYI.
I like this drama a lot. It's definitely what I would consider "slop," so it's not high-brow entertainment,…
You should definitely check out the behind-the-scenes! Wang, who plays JunXi, actually had his very first kiss in real life while filming, and Chance (HanTuo) was the one who taught him how to kiss. The kisses are real and genuine, and they’re both so cute together off-camera. No wonder it feels so natural and good when we watch it on screen.
Who knew a boring school subject could turn into such a great series? GMMTV really said, “hold my beer, let me show you.” They took something so ordinary and made it feel fresh, fun, and full of heart. It’s simple yet amazing, and I’m absolutely loving it!
Did I just watch an hour of two souls simply existing together, fixing a house, sharing quiet moments, and holding space for one another? It was tender, warm, and filled with a kind of love that felt so real it almost hurt to watch. Their slow journey from separate rooms into one bed was so natural, never forced, just two hearts quietly finding their way to each other.
Jimmy and Sea’s characters are the purest, healthiest couple I have seen, untouched by jealousy, villains, or unnecessary drama. And then came the moment that broke me. In (Sea) finally opened up about the tragedy of losing his parents. His voice carried the weight of years of grief, and in that fragile moment, you could feel his loneliness bleeding through. Thap (Jimmy) didn’t try to fix it, he simply stayed, listened, and became the strength In could lean on. When he wiped away In’s tears and held him while he was breaking, it was love in its truest and most painful form.
And yet, that is the cruelty of love. To see someone so broken and to love them so deeply, knowing that no matter how tightly you hold them, you cannot erase their past, nor can you promise to keep them forever. Watching In cry in Thap’s arms felt like watching love and grief become the same thing. It was beautiful, but it was also unbearably tragic, because sometimes the greatest love stories are the ones that remind us just how fragile happiness truly is.
30 minutes until the final episode airs, then an hour to watch it. I’ll let you know after that. But honestly, I’ve watched GMMTV BLs for many years now, and 99% of them end happily, so I’m hopeful.
Solid 7.5/10 for me.
That is why I loved this episode so much. Seeing Kanade Shinichiro’s mum and sister be so supportive, welcoming, and happy for him was truly moving. Their acceptance felt like a rare light in a world where rejection is often the first fear.
So many people were angry at the dad in the last episode, but if you put yourself in his place, it makes sense. He caught his son kissing another man, and it was a shock. Instead of explaining, Kanade Shinichiro reacted with anger and shouted at his dad. It was painful, but also very human. That is why I am so glad that in this episode they finally had a proper conversation while walking together. The words, the honesty, and the way it tied in with the childhood flashback broke me. It was raw, emotional, and painfully real.
Episode 11 was beautiful in its realism. It showed both the struggle and the hope of being accepted. Now I am looking forward to the final episode next week, though my heart is still heavy from this one.
You just need to join their YouTube channel, it’s $2.99 AUD a month.
But honestly, can you name one truly iconic drama or movie, BL or Western, that didn’t have a breakup at some point? It’s part of what makes the love story unforgettable.
Think about Call Me by Your Name or La La Land. Those breakups shattered us, yet that heartbreak is what made the love linger in our hearts even more. Sometimes it’s only when someone is gone that you realize how deeply they matter. 💔
And it’s not just fiction, life works the same way. My sister broke up with her husband because of his gambling. For six months they were apart, and in that silence he realized everything he’d lost, her cooking, her care, her presence. When they found their way back to each other, they were stronger than ever. A real redemption arc.
So even if JunXi and HanTuo do break up, their reunion would be nothing short of explosive. The chemistry, the emotions, the passion, it’ll all come crashing back, overwhelming and undeniable.
Sometimes love needs distance to return fiercer, deeper, and more unstoppable than before.
That’s why I don’t think “let’s break up” should be taken at face value either. The director loves to end episodes on a cliffhanger and keep us guessing. It could mean “let’s take a break until your dad gets better,” or it could be another twist that looks harsher than it really is. Same thing happened in Revenged Love where Chi Cheng said “I hate you” in prison, but we all knew he didn’t actually mean it.
I really believe HanTuo wouldn’t just give up like that after being so obsessed and in love with JunXi for 10 years. This feels more like the director giving us a gut-punch ending to stir emotions, not the actual truth of where their relationship is heading.
Ding! You’ve got a “spoiler” from Revenged Love—please check it out!
Dear Revenged Love fans,
Thank you for your continued love and support! Over the past week, we’ve released a bunch of behind-the-scenes clips—did you catch them all on time?
But this is just the beginning—the real “treasures” are still to come!
In the coming days, hundreds of exclusive, exciting behind-the-scenes clips will be exclusively released on the Memefans platform! 🎉
Want to be among the first to unlock exclusive clips?
Click the link and leave your email! We’ll send you a special invitation link as soon as the beta test opens. Spots are limited, so don’t miss out! ❤️
Reservation link: https://www.wjx.cn/vm/rbLPIk1.aspx
Ding! You’ve got a “spoiler” from Revenged Love—please check it out!
Dear Revenged Love fans,
Thank you for your continued love and support! Over the past week, we’ve released a bunch of behind-the-scenes clips—did you catch them all on time?
But this is just the beginning—the real “treasures” are still to come!
In the coming days, hundreds of exclusive, exciting behind-the-scenes clips will be exclusively released on the Memefans platform! 🎉
Want to be among the first to unlock exclusive clips?
Click the link and leave your email! We’ll send you a special invitation link as soon as the beta test opens. Spots are limited, so don’t miss out! ❤️
Reservation link: https://www.wjx.cn/vm/rbLPIk1.aspx
Seeing Han Tuo jealous of JunXi’s 5 year-old nephew was the sweetest, purest moment. It showed how much love he carries, how much he wants JunXi to be his and only his. But then those final three words came crashing down: “Let’s break up.”
The silence after those words felt suffocating. It reminded me of Revenged Love when Chi Cheng said “I hate you” in the prison scene not because he meant it, but because the pain was too much to hold. I don’t believe Han Tuo truly wants to end things. His entire being has revolved around JunXi since they were kids. His love is an obsession, a devotion too deep to just walk away from.
To me, those words are a shield. They come from seeing JunXi suffer, from realizing how unbearable it is to hide their love in the shadows. Even though Taiwan has legalized same-sex marriage, culture is not so easily rewritten. Family honor, expectations, shame, they linger in every corner of life. For so many of us, coming out isn’t freedom, it’s the risk of losing the people who raised us, the families we were taught to never disappoint.
Watching this episode felt like staring into my own heart. I know what it’s like to love in silence, to hide, to feel both the warmth of intimacy and the cold weight of fear. Han Tuo and JunXi’s struggle isn’t just fiction, it is reality for so many of us.
This episode wasn’t just sad, it was painfully real.
Krailert was a top in episode 3 but a bottom in episode 5, and I love the versatility.
My only complaint is that there are only 8 episodes. I really wish it were 12.
This show truly deserves more recognition. Honestly, Be On Cloud should’ve released it on iQIYI instead of WeTV. When they put KinnPorsche on iQIYI, it became the number 1 show in over 100 countries.
No idea what happened to iQIYI tonight, the first 7 episodes were always on time
Jimmy and Sea’s characters are the purest, healthiest couple I have seen, untouched by jealousy, villains, or unnecessary drama. And then came the moment that broke me. In (Sea) finally opened up about the tragedy of losing his parents. His voice carried the weight of years of grief, and in that fragile moment, you could feel his loneliness bleeding through. Thap (Jimmy) didn’t try to fix it, he simply stayed, listened, and became the strength In could lean on. When he wiped away In’s tears and held him while he was breaking, it was love in its truest and most painful form.
And yet, that is the cruelty of love. To see someone so broken and to love them so deeply, knowing that no matter how tightly you hold them, you cannot erase their past, nor can you promise to keep them forever. Watching In cry in Thap’s arms felt like watching love and grief become the same thing. It was beautiful, but it was also unbearably tragic, because sometimes the greatest love stories are the ones that remind us just how fragile happiness truly is.