This review may contain spoilers
Qing Ye isn’t worth Xing Wu’s Love At All
In short: Dazzling is gorgeous production sabotaged by its own abhorrent screenplay.
The female lead, Qing Ye, simply wasn't worth the male lead Xing Wu's endless attempts. I said what I said, and people need to hear me out because I will gladly explain why.
For starters, this drama establishes a highly compelling premise. We follow a city girl forced to relocate to a small coastal town, where she must learn valuable life lessons. There that she crosses paths with Xing Wu — a brilliant young man who dropped out of school despite his exceptional mind and is now working himself to the bone to support his family. He is not at his best in life when they meet, and that's precisely what makes the setup sing. It’s a bit over spoiled good girl/local bad boy vibes. The foundation is chef's kiss. But the script? Absolutely horrendous. The writers managed to do almost everything else right for every other character in the drama, but they completely fumbled the romance and made baffling structural choices that I will never understand. Let's get into it.
Production Quality
Let me give credit where credit is due, because this drama is genuinely beautiful to look at. The camera work is stunning — cinematic, intentional, and atmospheric in a way that makes you feel the salt air and the golden-hour light of that coastal town. Visually, this is top-tier work. The music, while not groundbreaking and not my favorite, lands well in the moments where it counts. It complements the emotional beats. For a drama set in a small seaside town with this kind of coming-of-age energy, the soundtrack does its job.
The cast across the board is solid. Guan Xiao Tong as Qing Ye did really well in her high school years portraying a young girl, and there was a noticeable and impressive shift in the way she portrayed a grown woman — you could feel the maturity settle into her performance. I actually thought Guan Xiao Tong was a new face because I’ve never seen anything with her before. I had to look up her age. She is 28. So that proves that she landed the part of her younger self well. The supporting characters were actually quite interesting to watch. I enjoyed most of them and their stories because they don't hoard the screen. Sure there were some scenes that I did skip, but it wasn’t too much. They only have enough screen time to make the rest of the story meaningful, and that's exactly how it should be done. The contribute without overstaying their welcome. The development of the supporting cast wasn't hurt or hindered by the pacing issues, which honestly makes the main couple's treatment even more frustrating. But I'll get there.
Chemistry
Here's the thing that makes everything else sting even more: Guan Xiao Tong and Li Yun Rui have phenomenal on-screen chemistry. Like, genuinely electric. The kind of chemistry that makes you lean forward in your seat and root for these two idiots with your whole chest. The big issue - and again I will address this - is that writers under utilize that chemistry. The subtle power dynamics, the push and pull, the way they exist in each other's space — it's all there. These two actors did the work. They showed up. They delivered. The camera did the work too. The writers, however, did not match their energy. Not even close. And that's what makes this whole situation so infuriating — because the raw material was right there, and the screenplay just... wasted it.
Pacing
The first 12 episodes are amazing. Full stop. They build a great setup for a small-town romance between young people on the cusp of adulthood. The storytelling is tight, the character introductions are compelling, and I was genuinely invested. Everything was moving. Everything had purpose. I was having a great time. There was a lot of comedy as well which made it a very fun watch.
Then episode 13 happened, and it's like the writers collectively decided to take a nap. The pacing slowed to a crawl — and I mean a painful, excruciating crawl. Every episode between 12 and 25 was a chore to get through. There was no new information, no interesting plot points, nothing to justify why we were still sitting in this era except for Xing Wu’s return to school. It was filler dressed up as storytelling, and I genuinely believe everything that happened in that stretch could have been easily condensed and folded into the first 12 episodes without losing anything of value. We wouldn't have wasted so much precious time in the high school era, and the drama would have been infinitely better for it.
And then we get to the final three episodes, where suddenly the writers remembered they had an entire adult timeline to cover and just hit fast-forward on everything. Years of separation, a reunion, the development of an adult relationship — all crammed into three episodes like they were packing for a flight they were already late for. The whiplash is unreal. We go from 26 episodes of slow-drip high school content to a full-speed sprint through the part of the story that actually matters. The contrast is jarring, and it makes the entire viewing experience feel unsatisfying.
Writing and Arc Distribution
This is where I need to have a serious conversation with whoever greenlit this script structure. I do not understand — and I mean this genuinely — why the writers chose to spend 85% of this drama on the characters' high school years and leave literally three episodes for their adult lives. Who made this decision? What was the logic? Because from where I'm sitting, there is none.
The romance is supposed to be the central pillar of this drama because our main couple gets a lot of screen time. And by a lot, I mean a lot. And yet by choosing to camp out in the youth arc for 25 episodes, the writers ensured that the relationship never actually goes anywhere meaningful. In fact, it regresses. After episode 12, Qing Ye and Xing Wu share fewer and fewer romantic moments as the episodes progress. Their dynamic starts resembling a sibling relationship more than a love story, which is the exact opposite of what should be happening in a romance drama. Before their separation, they don't even share a kiss or express — even vaguely — that the feelings they have for each other are more than pseudo brother and sister and mutual. Because we can tell that Xing Wu liked Qing Ye since early on, but her feelings remain very ambiguous toward him until the day she has to leave.
I also need to address the cousin thing. Why did the writers decide to brand them as cousins at the beginning and have them call each other brother and sister? If they were going for that trope, they needed to explore it more. They needed to show the awkwardness, the realization, the shift. But no. Nobody bats an eye when the two of them suddenly start dating as adults. No one questions it. No one reacts. It's just accepted. So what was the point of establishing that dynamic in the first place? It was a missed opportunity that adds nothing and confuses everything.
Because the writers chose to burn 85% of their runtime in the youth era, the payoff in the last three episodes — when our leads finally meet again as adults — doesn't carry the emotional weight it should. The impact is gone. You can't build longing for 26 episodes and then resolve it in a sprint. That's not romance. That's a scheduling conflict.
The Romance (or Lack of Proper Development Thereof)
Now let's talk about the separation itself, because this is where I truly lost it. First, I hate the separation C-dramas in general because most don’t do it very well. I’ve seen only one drama where the couple separation was meaningful and made total sense and I didn’t skip through any scenes during that separation. But let’s get back on track with Dazzling. The writers build Qing Ye really well up until episode 25 — until her father comes to pick her up and take her back to the big city, back to her luxury life. And what does she do? She deletes their contacts from each other's phones. She just... erases him. I'm sorry, what?
This is extremely selfish and I will die on this hill. Xing Wu was in danger so many times because of her. He carried so much weight on his shoulders while also being there for her. And she didn't even give him the grace of supporting him through the distance. There was absolutely no need for her to delete the contact from his phone and just leave him hanging. The way it comes across is devastating, and not in a romantic way — in an enraging way. She's essentially telling him: "You're too poor for me. My dad doesn't approve of you. You don't have a good family background. But hey, if you try really hard, maybe you'll make it someday — but don't expect me to be there for you while you're killing yourself trying." That is how her character reads. It was selfish. It was mean. It was giving "I only care about you when it's convenient for me." If I were Xing Wu, I would forget about her entirely and get on with my life because oh my God, this poor man deserved so much better than that.
I understand that the writers needed to create a separation, but it was absolutely not believable. They needed high stakes — real, earned, gut-wrenching high stakes — to justify this couple being out of touch for five or six years. I would have believed it if her father paid Xing Wu’s family off and covered all their expenses just so they'd leave her alone. For a guy like Xing Wu, I could see him agreeing to let Qing Ye go so he doesn't hold her back — that tracks with his character. I would have believed a serious argument where they fundamentally disagreed on something. I would have believed an external circumstance. Just not this forced, manufactured separation that the writers clearly cobbled together because they wrote themselves into a corner and couldn't figure out how to get from point A to point B.
So after five or six years apart, they finally meet again. And she doesn't even say two words to him. At the dinner when they reunite, she doesn't offer to catch up after they get out from the restaurant. She just goes home. She gives him absolutely nothing after telling him to do his best to catch up with her. It’s inconsistent with her stubborn and outspoken character at all. Especially because she’s been waiting for him. Then, when they meet at the beach again, he just runs up and kisses her. Yes I could understand him. It does works with his character. But they don't discuss anything. They haven't been talking for five years. How does he know she still likes him? How does he know they're compatible? They've never kissed before! None of this was believable. None of it was earned. The writers skipped the entire reconciliation process and exploration of their romance as adults and just went "trust us, they're in love" and expected us to be satisfied. No. I am not satisfied. I am annoyed.
Li Yun Rui Deserves Better
I need to talk about Li Yun Rui specifically because this man is the reason I kept watching. I really don't want to rate this show low because of him. This very talented actor has been playing supporting roles for so long and is finally getting good-budget dramas, but he just cannot catch a break — much like his character, honestly. He'll get a promising project and then end up with a crappy script, or there's the disaster that was Rebirth. The universe keeps testing this man's patience, and frankly, mine too.
I continued watching Dazzling largely because of Li Yun Rui and his character, and I had to stop and take several days' worth of breaks multiple times just to push through because of the mess of the script. He has a very simple but elegant face, and he could literally fit into any role — contemporary or historical. He is extremely flexible and adaptable, and that's what I appreciate about him. Give this man the script he deserves. Give him a romance where the female lead actually matches his energy. Give him a project where the writers don't fumble in the second half. He's earned it. I'm begging.
Final Thoughts
I'm extremely torn about the rating. This drama is visually gorgeous, well-acted, and carries a genuinely compelling story at its core. The first 12 episodes had me fully invested. Guan Xiao Tong and Li Yun Rui have the kind of chemistry that should have carried an iconic romance. But the distribution of the youth arc versus the adult life and reunification arc makes absolutely no sense. Because we don't have enough episodes of them as adults, everything is rushed into three episodes, and that compression makes everything that happened during the high school years feel less impactful. They're not given any time to actually learn about each other as adults and explore the romance they've been yearning for since they were young.
The writing choices are genuinely baffling. The pacing is wildly uneven. The separation is contrived. The reunion is unearned. And the female lead's actions in the final stretch make her deeply unsympathetic at the exact moment she should be at her most vulnerable and relatable. This drama had every ingredient for greatness — the cast, the visuals, the setting, the premise — and the screenplay just refused to let it be great. I'm still mad about it. I might be mad about it for a while.
The female lead, Qing Ye, simply wasn't worth the male lead Xing Wu's endless attempts. I said what I said, and people need to hear me out because I will gladly explain why.
For starters, this drama establishes a highly compelling premise. We follow a city girl forced to relocate to a small coastal town, where she must learn valuable life lessons. There that she crosses paths with Xing Wu — a brilliant young man who dropped out of school despite his exceptional mind and is now working himself to the bone to support his family. He is not at his best in life when they meet, and that's precisely what makes the setup sing. It’s a bit over spoiled good girl/local bad boy vibes. The foundation is chef's kiss. But the script? Absolutely horrendous. The writers managed to do almost everything else right for every other character in the drama, but they completely fumbled the romance and made baffling structural choices that I will never understand. Let's get into it.
Production Quality
Let me give credit where credit is due, because this drama is genuinely beautiful to look at. The camera work is stunning — cinematic, intentional, and atmospheric in a way that makes you feel the salt air and the golden-hour light of that coastal town. Visually, this is top-tier work. The music, while not groundbreaking and not my favorite, lands well in the moments where it counts. It complements the emotional beats. For a drama set in a small seaside town with this kind of coming-of-age energy, the soundtrack does its job.
The cast across the board is solid. Guan Xiao Tong as Qing Ye did really well in her high school years portraying a young girl, and there was a noticeable and impressive shift in the way she portrayed a grown woman — you could feel the maturity settle into her performance. I actually thought Guan Xiao Tong was a new face because I’ve never seen anything with her before. I had to look up her age. She is 28. So that proves that she landed the part of her younger self well. The supporting characters were actually quite interesting to watch. I enjoyed most of them and their stories because they don't hoard the screen. Sure there were some scenes that I did skip, but it wasn’t too much. They only have enough screen time to make the rest of the story meaningful, and that's exactly how it should be done. The contribute without overstaying their welcome. The development of the supporting cast wasn't hurt or hindered by the pacing issues, which honestly makes the main couple's treatment even more frustrating. But I'll get there.
Chemistry
Here's the thing that makes everything else sting even more: Guan Xiao Tong and Li Yun Rui have phenomenal on-screen chemistry. Like, genuinely electric. The kind of chemistry that makes you lean forward in your seat and root for these two idiots with your whole chest. The big issue - and again I will address this - is that writers under utilize that chemistry. The subtle power dynamics, the push and pull, the way they exist in each other's space — it's all there. These two actors did the work. They showed up. They delivered. The camera did the work too. The writers, however, did not match their energy. Not even close. And that's what makes this whole situation so infuriating — because the raw material was right there, and the screenplay just... wasted it.
Pacing
The first 12 episodes are amazing. Full stop. They build a great setup for a small-town romance between young people on the cusp of adulthood. The storytelling is tight, the character introductions are compelling, and I was genuinely invested. Everything was moving. Everything had purpose. I was having a great time. There was a lot of comedy as well which made it a very fun watch.
Then episode 13 happened, and it's like the writers collectively decided to take a nap. The pacing slowed to a crawl — and I mean a painful, excruciating crawl. Every episode between 12 and 25 was a chore to get through. There was no new information, no interesting plot points, nothing to justify why we were still sitting in this era except for Xing Wu’s return to school. It was filler dressed up as storytelling, and I genuinely believe everything that happened in that stretch could have been easily condensed and folded into the first 12 episodes without losing anything of value. We wouldn't have wasted so much precious time in the high school era, and the drama would have been infinitely better for it.
And then we get to the final three episodes, where suddenly the writers remembered they had an entire adult timeline to cover and just hit fast-forward on everything. Years of separation, a reunion, the development of an adult relationship — all crammed into three episodes like they were packing for a flight they were already late for. The whiplash is unreal. We go from 26 episodes of slow-drip high school content to a full-speed sprint through the part of the story that actually matters. The contrast is jarring, and it makes the entire viewing experience feel unsatisfying.
Writing and Arc Distribution
This is where I need to have a serious conversation with whoever greenlit this script structure. I do not understand — and I mean this genuinely — why the writers chose to spend 85% of this drama on the characters' high school years and leave literally three episodes for their adult lives. Who made this decision? What was the logic? Because from where I'm sitting, there is none.
The romance is supposed to be the central pillar of this drama because our main couple gets a lot of screen time. And by a lot, I mean a lot. And yet by choosing to camp out in the youth arc for 25 episodes, the writers ensured that the relationship never actually goes anywhere meaningful. In fact, it regresses. After episode 12, Qing Ye and Xing Wu share fewer and fewer romantic moments as the episodes progress. Their dynamic starts resembling a sibling relationship more than a love story, which is the exact opposite of what should be happening in a romance drama. Before their separation, they don't even share a kiss or express — even vaguely — that the feelings they have for each other are more than pseudo brother and sister and mutual. Because we can tell that Xing Wu liked Qing Ye since early on, but her feelings remain very ambiguous toward him until the day she has to leave.
I also need to address the cousin thing. Why did the writers decide to brand them as cousins at the beginning and have them call each other brother and sister? If they were going for that trope, they needed to explore it more. They needed to show the awkwardness, the realization, the shift. But no. Nobody bats an eye when the two of them suddenly start dating as adults. No one questions it. No one reacts. It's just accepted. So what was the point of establishing that dynamic in the first place? It was a missed opportunity that adds nothing and confuses everything.
Because the writers chose to burn 85% of their runtime in the youth era, the payoff in the last three episodes — when our leads finally meet again as adults — doesn't carry the emotional weight it should. The impact is gone. You can't build longing for 26 episodes and then resolve it in a sprint. That's not romance. That's a scheduling conflict.
The Romance (or Lack of Proper Development Thereof)
Now let's talk about the separation itself, because this is where I truly lost it. First, I hate the separation C-dramas in general because most don’t do it very well. I’ve seen only one drama where the couple separation was meaningful and made total sense and I didn’t skip through any scenes during that separation. But let’s get back on track with Dazzling. The writers build Qing Ye really well up until episode 25 — until her father comes to pick her up and take her back to the big city, back to her luxury life. And what does she do? She deletes their contacts from each other's phones. She just... erases him. I'm sorry, what?
This is extremely selfish and I will die on this hill. Xing Wu was in danger so many times because of her. He carried so much weight on his shoulders while also being there for her. And she didn't even give him the grace of supporting him through the distance. There was absolutely no need for her to delete the contact from his phone and just leave him hanging. The way it comes across is devastating, and not in a romantic way — in an enraging way. She's essentially telling him: "You're too poor for me. My dad doesn't approve of you. You don't have a good family background. But hey, if you try really hard, maybe you'll make it someday — but don't expect me to be there for you while you're killing yourself trying." That is how her character reads. It was selfish. It was mean. It was giving "I only care about you when it's convenient for me." If I were Xing Wu, I would forget about her entirely and get on with my life because oh my God, this poor man deserved so much better than that.
I understand that the writers needed to create a separation, but it was absolutely not believable. They needed high stakes — real, earned, gut-wrenching high stakes — to justify this couple being out of touch for five or six years. I would have believed it if her father paid Xing Wu’s family off and covered all their expenses just so they'd leave her alone. For a guy like Xing Wu, I could see him agreeing to let Qing Ye go so he doesn't hold her back — that tracks with his character. I would have believed a serious argument where they fundamentally disagreed on something. I would have believed an external circumstance. Just not this forced, manufactured separation that the writers clearly cobbled together because they wrote themselves into a corner and couldn't figure out how to get from point A to point B.
So after five or six years apart, they finally meet again. And she doesn't even say two words to him. At the dinner when they reunite, she doesn't offer to catch up after they get out from the restaurant. She just goes home. She gives him absolutely nothing after telling him to do his best to catch up with her. It’s inconsistent with her stubborn and outspoken character at all. Especially because she’s been waiting for him. Then, when they meet at the beach again, he just runs up and kisses her. Yes I could understand him. It does works with his character. But they don't discuss anything. They haven't been talking for five years. How does he know she still likes him? How does he know they're compatible? They've never kissed before! None of this was believable. None of it was earned. The writers skipped the entire reconciliation process and exploration of their romance as adults and just went "trust us, they're in love" and expected us to be satisfied. No. I am not satisfied. I am annoyed.
Li Yun Rui Deserves Better
I need to talk about Li Yun Rui specifically because this man is the reason I kept watching. I really don't want to rate this show low because of him. This very talented actor has been playing supporting roles for so long and is finally getting good-budget dramas, but he just cannot catch a break — much like his character, honestly. He'll get a promising project and then end up with a crappy script, or there's the disaster that was Rebirth. The universe keeps testing this man's patience, and frankly, mine too.
I continued watching Dazzling largely because of Li Yun Rui and his character, and I had to stop and take several days' worth of breaks multiple times just to push through because of the mess of the script. He has a very simple but elegant face, and he could literally fit into any role — contemporary or historical. He is extremely flexible and adaptable, and that's what I appreciate about him. Give this man the script he deserves. Give him a romance where the female lead actually matches his energy. Give him a project where the writers don't fumble in the second half. He's earned it. I'm begging.
Final Thoughts
I'm extremely torn about the rating. This drama is visually gorgeous, well-acted, and carries a genuinely compelling story at its core. The first 12 episodes had me fully invested. Guan Xiao Tong and Li Yun Rui have the kind of chemistry that should have carried an iconic romance. But the distribution of the youth arc versus the adult life and reunification arc makes absolutely no sense. Because we don't have enough episodes of them as adults, everything is rushed into three episodes, and that compression makes everything that happened during the high school years feel less impactful. They're not given any time to actually learn about each other as adults and explore the romance they've been yearning for since they were young.
The writing choices are genuinely baffling. The pacing is wildly uneven. The separation is contrived. The reunion is unearned. And the female lead's actions in the final stretch make her deeply unsympathetic at the exact moment she should be at her most vulnerable and relatable. This drama had every ingredient for greatness — the cast, the visuals, the setting, the premise — and the screenplay just refused to let it be great. I'm still mad about it. I might be mad about it for a while.
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