I don’t get the part about the puzzle game . I wonder anyone get that part . who’s hide that under students table? Is it xin shu ? I’m lazy to rewatch it .
Watching this drama makes me miss my youth. Sometimes it feels like my youth wasn’t even my own life . it feels like it belonged to someone else. I still remember those days, but they seem so far away, like they happened to a different person.
I’m 5 episodes in. FL seems to be so disinterested in the team as a whole. Fu was correct, she didn’t sign…
LWX and Wangfa don’t feel attached to the football team yet. They’re both still focused on their own goals. However, you can slowly see the football boys growing on them.
I understand why they’re acting this way because it’s not really their responsibility to take care of these boys. LWX just wants to do her job well, while Wangfa is only interested in investigating LWX. So when they don’t seem very concerned about the boys’ struggles, some viewers might feel uncomfortable. But honestly, that’s how people are in real life—not everyone cares about other people’s problems.
I actually like how realistic this is. LWX doesn’t care whether the team wins or loses at first; she just wants to complete her assignment. But after seeing the boys’ passion, she starts encouraging them and works hard to find them a coach. Even then, she never forces them to train. She gives them the opportunity, but the decision is still theirs.
To me, LWX is like a healer. She supports people, helps them when they need it, and creates opportunities, but she lets them make their own choices and play their own roles.
Football is a game of 11 players. It’s impossible for everyone to be willing to play along with me like this.”
That line stayed with me long after I heard it.
Life is much the same. We meet people who share our journey, our dreams, and our goals, but no one is meant to walk beside us forever. As time passes, everyone finds their own direction, pursues their own dreams, and carries their own responsibilities. We can’t expect every person to keep playing the same game with us.
What matters isn’t how long someone stays, but that, for a part of the journey, they chose to stand beside us. Like football, life isn’t about finding people who never leave—it’s about cherishing those who willingly become part of your team while your paths align.
Maybe that’s what growing up teaches us: to appreciate every teammate, knowing that every journey eventually leads people toward their own destination.
I'm enjoying it, but I'm getting the feeling that Esther isn't really in the scene and was just inserted into…
She is there, but she doesn’t seem to have many standout scenes. I noticed that too. However, from my perspective, she’s still the protagonist—she just doesn’t act like a typical one. Instead of taking over every situation, she respects everyone’s role and lets them do what they’re meant to do.
Take Wangfa, for example. A typical female lead would probably make a fuss when he keeps asking the kids to run over and over again, but she doesn’t. It actually makes the drama less frustrating because she isn’t constantly interfering. It may seem like she’s just there without many scenes, but the truth is that none of these moments could really happen without her presence.
LWX and Wangfa don’t feel attached to the football team yet. They’re both still focused on their own goals. However, you can slowly see the football boys growing on them.
I understand why they’re acting this way because it’s not really their responsibility to take care of these boys. LWX just wants to do her job well, while Wangfa is only interested in investigating LWX. So when they don’t seem very concerned about the boys’ struggles, some viewers might feel uncomfortable. But honestly, that’s how people are in real life—not everyone cares about other people’s problems.
I actually like how realistic this is. LWX doesn’t care whether the team wins or loses at first; she just wants to complete her assignment. But after seeing the boys’ passion, she starts encouraging them and works hard to find them a coach. Even then, she never forces them to train. She gives them the opportunity, but the decision is still theirs.
To me, LWX is like a healer. She supports people, helps them when they need it, and creates opportunities, but she lets them make their own choices and play their own roles.
https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSCAYg61y/ this edit is so wholesome . the idea that get in my mind . people who want to die won’t use coin to bet on their choice so linwanxing really wants to survive yet she wants to escape the pain . she’s standing on the rooftop wishing there will be another option .
I understand why they’re acting this way because it’s not really their responsibility to take care of these boys. LWX just wants to do her job well, while Wangfa is only interested in investigating LWX. So when they don’t seem very concerned about the boys’ struggles, some viewers might feel uncomfortable. But honestly, that’s how people are in real life—not everyone cares about other people’s problems.
I actually like how realistic this is. LWX doesn’t care whether the team wins or loses at first; she just wants to complete her assignment. But after seeing the boys’ passion, she starts encouraging them and works hard to find them a coach. Even then, she never forces them to train. She gives them the opportunity, but the decision is still theirs.
To me, LWX is like a healer. She supports people, helps them when they need it, and creates opportunities, but she lets them make their own choices and play their own roles.
That line stayed with me long after I heard it.
Life is much the same. We meet people who share our journey, our dreams, and our goals, but no one is meant to walk beside us forever. As time passes, everyone finds their own direction, pursues their own dreams, and carries their own responsibilities. We can’t expect every person to keep playing the same game with us.
What matters isn’t how long someone stays, but that, for a part of the journey, they chose to stand beside us. Like football, life isn’t about finding people who never leave—it’s about cherishing those who willingly become part of your team while your paths align.
Maybe that’s what growing up teaches us: to appreciate every teammate, knowing that every journey eventually leads people toward their own destination.
Take Wangfa, for example. A typical female lead would probably make a fuss when he keeps asking the kids to run over and over again, but she doesn’t. It actually makes the drama less frustrating because she isn’t constantly interfering. It may seem like she’s just there without many scenes, but the truth is that none of these moments could really happen without her presence.
I understand why they’re acting this way because it’s not really their responsibility to take care of these boys. LWX just wants to do her job well, while Wangfa is only interested in investigating LWX. So when they don’t seem very concerned about the boys’ struggles, some viewers might feel uncomfortable. But honestly, that’s how people are in real life—not everyone cares about other people’s problems.
I actually like how realistic this is. LWX doesn’t care whether the team wins or loses at first; she just wants to complete her assignment. But after seeing the boys’ passion, she starts encouraging them and works hard to find them a coach. Even then, she never forces them to train. She gives them the opportunity, but the decision is still theirs.
To me, LWX is like a healer. She supports people, helps them when they need it, and creates opportunities, but she lets them make their own choices and play their own roles.
this edit is so wholesome . the idea that get in my mind . people who want to die won’t use coin to bet on their choice so linwanxing really wants to survive yet she wants to escape the pain . she’s standing on the rooftop wishing there will be another option .