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The Epoch of Miyu chinese drama review
Completed
The Epoch of Miyu
1 people found this review helpful
by Sidneylandsam
18 days ago
38 of 38 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.5
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 7.5
This review may contain spoilers

Ji Feng runs a five-star hotel. Miyu runs Ji Feng.

I logged in for Wallace Chung. Four dramas in and I have apparently made peace with this being a personality trait. So when his name appeared on a 2026 hotel romance, resistance was never really on the table.

Xu Miyu starts out genuinely likeable. Warm, perceptive, the kind of woman who notices what others miss. Then the show reveals that her entire personality is built around being incapable of saying no to anyone, ever, and my patience began its slow departure. She lets everyone walk over her. She lets Lu Zhenzhen bulldoze into her personal space. She smiles through situations that would have a normal person flipping tables. Mrs Goody Two Shoes has her charm for maybe two episodes. By episode twelve I was exhausted on her behalf.

Ji Feng sees it too. His quiet expectation that she’ll eventually grow a backbone is honestly the most relatable thing about him. Get out of that shell, girl!

Now. The hotel.

The Purong is supposedly a five-star establishment. A functioning luxury hotel with departments, senior staff, years of institutional structure. And yet, somehow, the whole operation would apparently collapse without the providential intervention of a woman who was folding bedsheets a few months ago. VIP scandals, PR disasters, interpersonal crises, and at some point, Chinese pastries. The writers keep throwing emergencies at Miyu like she’s the only person with a pulse in the entire building. It is funny the first time. By the fifth it starts feeling like the hotel is less a workplace and more a helpless creature that only she can feed.

The saving grace is that the romance is genuinely fun to watch unfold. Ji Feng lashing out at her only to quietly reckon with the fact that it came from jealousy was delicious. The conveniently pre-stocked bandage for her hurting foot made me roll my eyes so hard I saw my own brain, and yet. The WeChat exchange moment had me screaming. The confrontation between Ji Feng and Mr Tang, where someone finally had the audacity to ask him in what exact capacity he was inserting himself into Miyu’s life, was some of the best television this drama produced

The accidental kiss trope however can retire at any time. It did not fit Ji Feng’s character. It never fits anyone’s character. The laws of physics do not support it.

But when this show gets it right, it really gets it right. Two people circling each other, one too stubborn to admit what he feels, the other too busy saving a five-star hotel from its own incompetence to notice. Wallace Chung makes Ji Feng worth every contrived plot detour. Controlled, warm in spite of himself, and still aging like a problem.

I am deeply annoyed by this drama. I have not missed a single episode.
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