Details

  • Last Online: 6 hours ago
  • Gender: Female
  • Location: JAPAN
  • Contribution Points: 0 LV0
  • Roles:
  • Join Date: January 3, 2026

Friends

Ongoing 10/10
Dare You to Death
11 people found this review helpful
Jan 23, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 7.0
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 7.5
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 6.0
This review may contain spoilers

Dare You to Death (2025) – EP.10 Final

The final episode reveals that Fai, who was believed to be dead, is actually alive and behind the entire revenge plot together with her doctor boyfriend.

Her motivation is undeniably tragic, and the confrontation scene forces Jay into an impossible moral choice. The emotional weight of Fai’s backstory adds depth, and the hostage sequence carries genuine tension.

However, the “Fai is alive” twist, while shocking, feels somewhat abrupt. A bit more foreshadowing would have strengthened the reveal and made the suspense feel more earned. The mystery elements — especially the “Truth or Dare” envelopes and the masked figure — had strong potential, but the overall structure feels slightly uneven toward the end.

After the case is resolved, the tonal shift to Kamon and Jade enjoying a romantic vacation feels very GMMTV — comforting for fans, though somewhat detached from the emotional aftermath, particularly for Jay.

As always, the chemistry between Joong and Dunk remains the highlight of the series. Dunk’s screen presence is undeniably strong — he looks effortlessly charismatic in this role. While some emotional scenes could have carried more nuance, his visual impact and natural pairing with Joong continue to anchor the show.

Overall, a decent finale with solid chemistry, though the suspense writing could have been tighter.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Burnout Syndrome
6 people found this review helpful
Jan 22, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

Burnout Syndrome – Episode 10 (Final) Review | Spoilers

Despite its title, Burnout Syndrome is a story about people who have not burned out.

No one here has collapsed completely.
They can still work, still love, still argue, still choose.
And that is precisely why this story is painful.

Ko’s attempt to digitize Jira’s art is not simply a technical mistake—it is an act that crushes an artist’s dignity.
The long-standing conflict between creation and production, haute couture and prêt-à-porter, is placed directly inside an intimate relationship.

Jira and Ko are looking at entirely different horizons.
Pheem, however, stands on the same ground as Jira.
To stay together hurts.
To separate is suffocating.

These are the kinds of couples people around us often whisper about:
“Why don’t they just break up?”

The ending appears calm, almost settled.
But I can clearly imagine Jira exploding and walking out again—many times in the future.
This is not resolution; it is simply where the camera stops.

That is why the title feels strange in hindsight.
This is a drama about people on the verge of burnout, not those who have reached it.
Burnout Syndrome feels less like a diagnosis of the characters and more like a quiet question directed at the viewer.

The story does not end.
The camera is simply turned off.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Let Me into Your Heart
3 people found this review helpful
Jan 22, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0

Let Me Into Your Heart — EP.10 – Final

There were no subtitles for this episode when I watched it.
Only Thai.

And yet — I cried.

That alone says something about how strong this finale was.

Jack’s debut stage was almost empty because of the scandal.
Only a few people were in the audience.

But he still sang.

I didn’t understand every word of the lyrics.
I didn’t need to.

The emotions were clear in his voice, in Jaa’s eyes, and in the way the troupe stood behind him without hesitation.

This series never relied on shocking twists.
Instead, it focused on effort, growth, and sincerity.

Jack didn’t impulsively abandon his idol career.
He earned his place in the Likay troupe.
He respected the art. He respected Jaa.

And in the final moments, Jaa loses his eyesight.

Yet he is not alone.

Jack stands beside him — and Jaa smiles.

It is not a tragic ending.
It is a quiet one. A tender one.

Is it idealistic? Perhaps.

But it feels earned.

Even without subtitles, the story reached my heart.

And that is why this ending stays with me.e series so far.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 10/11
Countdown to Yes
4 people found this review helpful
Jan 20, 2026
10 of 11 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 8.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.5
Rewatch Value 8.5
This review may contain spoilers

Shinyu no “Dousei Shite” ni “Un” te Iu Made (2026) – EP.10

This episode isn’t about big drama or plot twists.
It’s about something much quieter — and much harder to keep.

Minato is constantly being led around by Wataru, yet he never really lets go.
That balance between irritation and affection is what makes them feel real.

Small moments stay with you:

“Don’t make that face when the camera isn’t on.”
Holding hands like children, swinging them without thinking.
Talking about what they will — or won’t — do years from now.

These are not dramatic scenes, but they feel deeply intimate.

This story reminds us that
finding someone you want to stay with is already rare —
and continuing to stay together is even rarer.

There is no grand conclusion here.
Just the quiet realization of what it means to love someone over time.

And maybe… that’s enough.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Melody of Secrets
3 people found this review helpful
Jan 24, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.5
This review may contain spoilers

Title: Back to the Beginning — D.C.

For ten years, he lived as someone else.

When Thontarn learned that the life he had been living as Photleng was never truly his own, he chose to walk away — even from Tankhun, the person who loved him the most. Not because he stopped loving him, but because he needed to find himself first.

What makes this finale powerful is not the resolution of the murder mystery, nor the answers to the long-buried secrets.

It is about identity.

Thontarn’s entire life had been shaped by other people’s sacrifices, lies, and desperate attempts to protect him. He carried guilt for surviving. He carried the weight of a name that was never meant to be his.

But when the truth finally surfaced, he also discovered something else:

He had never been alone.

Photleng tried to save him.
Mrs. Kang loved him as her own son.
His father committed an unforgivable act to protect him.
And Tankhun — from the very beginning — loved him as himself.

Not as a replacement.
Not as a shadow.
But as Thontarn.

The title of the final episode, “D.C. (Da Capo)”, means “back to the beginning.” It is not about returning to the past — it is about starting again, properly this time.

The previous episodes were heavy with revelations, almost overwhelming in their pace. But looking back, that density existed to clear the stage for this quiet, emotional restoration.

Tankhun does not rescue Thontarn.

He waits.

And that choice — to wait — might be the most romantic gesture in the entire series.

The lake that once witnessed tragedy now witnesses rebirth. The melody that once carried secrets now carries acceptance.

This drama was never simply about suspense. The murders and memory loss were mechanisms — painful ones — that forced the characters to confront who they truly were.

The ending is not a fairy tale. Loss remains. The past cannot be erased.

But Thontarn chooses to live as himself.

And that is enough.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
The Boy Next World: My Destiny
2 people found this review helpful
Feb 1, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 6.5
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 6.0
This review may contain spoilers

The Boy Next World 〜並行世界の恋人〜 (Episodes 9-10)

I finished this remake with mixed feelings.

The core twist — that the “parallel world” premise was actually a lie born from long-time unrequited love — is bold. However, for me, the transition from SF mystery to emotional deception never fully landed. Even knowing the twist in advance (since I watched the Thai version), the narrative still felt structurally uneven.

What kept me watching until the end was Hamaya Takuto’s performance as Kaede. He portrayed confusion, vulnerability, and emotional conflict with sincerity. His soft expressions and tearful restraint added depth that the script itself sometimes struggled to provide.

The drama explores themes of obsession versus love, emotional dependency, and the need to choose one’s own heart. Those ideas are interesting on paper, but the execution felt somewhat difficult to emotionally connect with.

I appreciate the attempt at something different, but overall, this story simply wasn’t for me.

I am curious about the announced spin-off, though — especially since it seems to expand on the remaining parallel-world concept.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 9/10
Cat for Cash
4 people found this review helpful
Jan 20, 2026
9 of 10 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.5

Cat For Cash (2026) – EP.9

(Jumbo’s POV)

My name is Jumbo.
I’m one of the young and handsome cats in this café.

After Mom Miao passed away, Lynx became my new “dad.”
But lately… something feels wrong.

He got a boyfriend. His name is Tiger.

And I think…
he loves Tiger more than me now.

So I tried everything.

I knocked over drinks.
I messed with the food.
I made sure everyone noticed me.

But it didn’t work.

They just kept being close.
Even meeting Tiger’s parents.

At that moment, I thought—
maybe I’m not needed anymore.

(…But between us, this is actually very normal cat behavior 😿
When we feel insecure, we act out.)

Still, I keep watching them.

Lynx, who isn’t sure if he deserves to be loved.
Tiger, who understands him anyway.

They’re strange… but warm.

And maybe—

maybe “family” doesn’t disappear
just because love grows bigger.

I’m still here.

And I think…
my two dads love each other.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Contrast
1 people found this review helpful
4 days ago
8 of 8 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 7.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 7.5
This review may contain spoilers

Two Lonely Boys Standing on Opposite Sides

This is a quiet high school BL drama about two boys who seem completely different on the surface but share similar emotional wounds underneath.

Shota is an outgoing, seemingly carefree boy who has lost his passion for soccer after being overshadowed by his talented younger brother and dealing with a past injury. Akira, on the other hand, is a quiet and introverted student from the advanced class who prefers solitude and old rock music played on a portable CD player.

Despite having almost nothing in common, they keep noticing each other. Their relationship slowly grows through small moments—meeting on the stair landing to the rooftop, sharing music, and spending quiet time together. Through these interactions, they gradually begin to understand each other's loneliness, insecurity, and hidden frustrations.

What this drama does well is portraying the emotional distance and gradual connection between the two boys. Their personalities create a strong contrast—one outwardly bright but internally empty, the other deeply withdrawn and negative—but that difference is exactly what draws them together.

However, there is one element in the story that personally didn’t work for me. A subplot involving an older character taking advantage of a younger boy’s emotional vulnerability felt uncomfortable and slightly undermined the otherwise delicate portrayal of adolescence.

Even so, the series succeeds in capturing the fragile emotional world of teenagers and the quiet way two lonely people can begin to understand each other.

The performances are strong, especially Atsuyo Akune, whose calm and beautiful presence adds depth to the role of Akira.

The series consists of 8 episodes and is currently available for streaming on FOD (Fuji TV On Demand) in Japan.

Overall, a thoughtful coming-of-age BL drama that focuses more on emotional healing than romance.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 8/8
Mandate
1 people found this review helpful
Feb 8, 2026
8 of 8 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 9.0
Story 8.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

kisskh Review

MANDATE The Series is a rare Thai drama that uses BL not as its core attraction, but as a lens to examine politics and power.

Non, a dedicated rural doctor in his late 30s, has no interest in politics. His life revolves around saving patients in an understaffed medical system—until a tragic accident involving his sister forces him to confront the limits of medicine alone.
Motivated by a desire to protect rural healthcare workers, he steps into politics with the support of Ui, a sharp political strategist and the son of a party leader.

The first half resembles My Fair Lady: Ui refines Non’s blunt idealism and turns him into a viable local candidate.
As the story progresses, the tone darkens. Non is forced to accept political compromises, balancing party interests, regional benefits, and corporate pressures. The drama portrays these struggles with surprising realism.

By the final arc, Non chooses to remain in politics despite personal loss and responsibility for failure, while Ui moves to a rival party—an ending that rejects idealism in favor of harsh political truth.

This is not a romantic BL in the conventional sense.
It is a serious political drama that questions whether “clean politics” is ever truly possible.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Dropped 9/10
Peach Lover
2 people found this review helpful
Feb 1, 2026
9 of 10 episodes seen
Dropped 0
Overall 7.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 7.5
Rewatch Value 7.5
This review may contain spoilers

Peach Lover (2025) – Episode 9

At first, I thought this series might be a bad purchase…
but it’s actually getting better.

Despite its 18+ premise, the story is now shifting into pure romance.

What began as a relationship between a porn site owner and a performer
has turned into something emotional and sincere.
Both Sasom and Po were trying to fill their inner emptiness,
and that’s why they became so attached to each other.

When Sasom asks Po to become his life partner,
Po hesitates—afraid that happiness like this won’t last.

He suggests taking distance…
but of course, he can’t handle the separation and ends up calling him again.

The series has clearly changed direction.

From intense scenes to
👉 a softer, more “normal” love story.

And honestly, it works.

Sasom might not be as “abnormal” as he thinks 😂

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
Kateikyoshi no Kishi Knight desu.
2 people found this review helpful
Jan 20, 2026
10 of 10 episodes seen
Completed 4
Overall 7.0
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 7.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 5.5

Review – I’m Your Tutor, Kishikishi

At first glance, this drama seems like a simple slapstick comedy. Toru is a typical delinquent high school student, and the story begins when his unusual private tutor arrives. The tutor’s name is Knight, but Toru affectionately calls him “Kishikishi,” which becomes a charming nickname throughout the series.

Kishikishi has an elegant, almost aristocratic aura and works as a highly capable tutor who patiently supports Toru. In the early episodes, the tone feels rather chaotic and comedic, and it can honestly seem a little hard to keep watching.

However, if you stay with the series, it gradually reveals a surprisingly sincere coming-of-age story. Toru initially has no real goals in life, but through his interactions with Kishikishi, he slowly begins to develop curiosity and motivation toward learning. Eventually, Toru even reaches a point where he begins to think that he would like to become a teacher like Kishikishi himself. That development feels unexpectedly touching.

This is the kind of drama that becomes more rewarding the longer you watch. If you don’t drop it halfway, it slowly becomes a bit addictive.

And in the final episode, when Toru and Kishikishi split a single earring between them, it definitely gave me BL vibes.

This drama may not work for everyone, but viewers who enjoy character growth stories may find it surprisingly rewarding.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Completed
I Will Knock You
0 people found this review helpful
Jan 25, 2026
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

I Will Knock You (2022) — Full Review

This drama is incredibly cute—in the purest, most heartfelt way.

The first half of I Will Knock You is not about romance at all.
It’s about building trust.

Thi, a timid and sincere university student, becomes Noey’s tutor under awkward circumstances.
At first, their relationship is filled with misunderstandings, nervous sweat, and comedic tension.
But little by little, what grows between them is mutual respect, patience, and emotional safety.

That slow foundation is what makes everything that follows feel so real.

From Episode 8 onward, Noey’s feelings shift clearly from friendship to love.
His way of pursuing Thi is clumsy, earnest, and surprisingly gentle—especially for someone who acts tough on the surface.
Because the trust is already there, this transition never feels forced. It feels inevitable.

Episode 11 is where the story truly hurts in a good way.
Thi creates distance after being confronted by his parents, choosing to step back for Noey’s sake.
It’s a painful decision rooted in care, not fear.

And then Episode 12 delivers the emotional payoff:
Noey follows Thi all the way to Chiang Mai.

Even while apart, Thi continues to support Noey’s studies, proving that love doesn’t disappear with distance.
When Noey finally graduates, Thi keeps his promise—he comes to pick him up.

That moment says everything.

In the end, this story isn’t about dramatic twists or grand declarations.
It’s about two people who meet at the wrong time, grow together, wait for each other, and realize they were meant to walk forward side by side.

A soft, warm, destiny-level love story—quietly unforgettable.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 7/10
Yesterday
3 people found this review helpful
29 days ago
7 of 10 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 8.0
Story 8.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 7.0
Rewatch Value 7.0
This review may contain spoilers

Yesterday (2026) – Episode 7

This episode left me with one big question:
Who actually killed Rarit?!

At this point, the story is becoming less about romance and more about a corporate power struggle, and honestly… I’m not mad about it.

Weer is arrested as the prime suspect in Rarit’s murder, but things quickly escalate beyond what was expected. Kelvin, who usually calculates every move with precision, seems unpredictable this time. Whether this outcome was part of his plan or not is unclear — and that’s exactly what makes him so unsettling.

Behind the scenes, it looks like Kelvin’s foolish older brother Ken and his father-in-law, Licht (the head of Lloyd Group), are pulling the strings. Their goal is not just to trap Weer, but to take over both the King Group and Weer’s father’s company.

The only one who might truly understand what’s happening is Rarin. As the eldest daughter who was denied succession simply because she’s a woman, she shares Kelvin’s intelligence and composure.
It almost feels like only a “psycho” can truly understand another psycho.

What surprised me most is how strongly the business takeover plot is taking over the story. The romance is still there, but it feels like everything is heading toward a devastating confrontation — I can already picture Kelvin and Weer standing alone in the ruins of everything.

Peat’s performance as Kelvin is outstanding. His portrayal is the reason this drama remains so compelling.

With only a few episodes left, the tension is rising fast.
This is definitely building toward something explosive.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 10/13
Goddess Bless You from Death
0 people found this review helpful
9 hours ago
10 of 13 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 8.5
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 8.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 8.0
This review may contain spoilers

Goddess Bless You From Death (2025) – EP.10 Review

Finally caught up! 🔥

This series is an occult thriller BL that blends supernatural elements with a crime investigation storyline, and it’s been surprisingly engaging.

The story follows Singha, a detective investigating a bizarre serial murder case. The victims are found hanging from a tree inside an abandoned mall, with their eyes and mouths sewn shut using red thread—an unsettling and memorable visual that immediately sets the tone.

At the crime scene, he encounters Toop, a young man who can see spirits. Initially treated as a suspect, Toop gradually proves that his ability is real, and Singha has no choice but to accept it.

What makes their dynamic interesting is that Singha himself seems to be protected by some unknown force. Being near him allows Toop to live more peacefully, creating a subtle but compelling bond between them.

In the beginning, the series leans more toward the occult murder mystery, with very little BL focus. However, around EP.4, the BL elements become much more prominent, especially with the introduction of Singha’s ex-boyfriend, King.

The case itself is layered and spans across different timelines—incidents that occurred 5 and 10 years ago, eventually leading back to a key event 25 years ago in Sisaket province, which appears to be connected to Toop.

Despite having many suspicious characters and complex supernatural elements, the story doesn’t fall apart. It actually does a good job of guiding the viewer through the mystery without making it confusing.

EP.10 is particularly emotional. It reveals that King is not just a cruel or manipulative character, adding more depth to his actions and making the situation more tragic than it initially seemed.

Overall, this is a series that keeps you hooked with its mystery while gradually building emotional weight.

I’d say it’s definitely worth your time.

⚠️ Warning: The special effects (especially the “slit-mouthed woman”) are quite disturbing, so be prepared if you’re sensitive to horror elements.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?
Ongoing 6/12
My Romance Scammer
2 people found this review helpful
Feb 9, 2026
6 of 12 episodes seen
Ongoing 0
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 9.0
This review may contain spoilers

Episode 6 Review

EP.6 focuses on trust — or rather, how difficult it is to rebuild once it has been broken.

After North confronts Yu about the lies surrounding his identity and background, Yu is forced into a position where deception is no longer an option. For someone who has lived by scams and half-truths, telling the truth becomes the hardest thing he can do.

Following Tim’s blunt advice to “tell him everything,” Yu begins stripping away every layer of his lies. He shows North his real living situation, reveals that the woman he introduced as his mother is actually his aunt, and even admits that his real mother is a scammer. He also gathers what money he can to return what North gave him.

But even after all of this, North cannot easily forgive him. Trust, once shattered, does not return overnight.

Yu’s final move is the most drastic one — deciding that the only way to truly prove his sincerity may be to let North go and file for divorce.

At the same time, the episode also follows Pai and Tim as they continue preparing for their wedding. However, Tim’s decision to cut off the “clients” he used to scam right before the wedding may bring unexpected trouble.

EP.6 quietly shifts the story from deception to accountability. It feels like the moment where Yu stops acting like a scammer and starts acting like someone who genuinely loves North.

With the tension building on multiple fronts, EP.7 looks like it might be painful to watch.

Read More

Was this review helpful to you?