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I'm the Most Beautiful Count thai drama review
Ongoing 13/13
I'm the Most Beautiful Count
8 people found this review helpful
by Aaku
Aug 4, 2025
13 of 13 episodes seen
Ongoing 2
Overall 9.5
Story 9.5
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 9.0
Rewatch Value 10.0
This review may contain spoilers

It's not just time travel. It's time travel with flair.

Being transported back in time isn't an unfamiliar fantasy trope, but no one told the past it would have to deal with this much charisma, sass, and scandal quite like this. This isn’t just time travel. It’s time travel with flair and it's hilariously, gloriously beautiful.

I'm completely smitten by Nut's performance as Prince and later Woradet. The series opens with Prince strutting in heels, wrapped in glamour and blinding charm, belting out "This is Me" with unapologetic pride. It's the perfect introduction to a character who knows exactly who he is and refuses to tone it down for anyone. And I absolutely love it. Then time shifts, Prince becomes Woradet, a name echoing through a world that isn't ready for his sparkle. Prince enters history with her full diva mode saying, "1,2,3... Action". Prince isn't just a character. She's a whole spectacle, and I'm here for every dramatic entrance, every unapologetic moment, and every scandal Prince leaves in her fabulous wake. History is about to get a makeover it didn’t see coming.

Talking about Ping as Lord Kosol, he is the rumored lover of Woradet, who allegedly broke Woradet's heart and drove him to the edge, teetering on the brink of despair and poison. But Kosol, ever composed, denies the scandal with the same sharp edge he wields his sword. He's the picture of restrained power: broad shouldered, stoic, devastatingly handsome, and trained to kill with both blade and stare. He walks with the poise of nobility but the intensity of a man who knows secrets that could topple a kingdom. Also, suiting his personality, he's got a tiger named Moo Moo for a pet. Cute, isn't it? XD And let's be honest- if heartbreak looked like him, we might all be tempted to risk it.

But the intrigue doesn't stop there.

Enters Banjong in his glasses, who grew up together with Woradet and is harboring feelings for him but he has his own secrets. While helping Woradet escape, under the cover of night, in a boat gliding across moonlit waters, he begins to recite a poem, words drenched in longing, spoken so gently they might as well be a confession. That's not all, the boat rocks slightly and so do they. Lips meet just for a moment. Accidental but no doubt a Scandal.

Then there's Chaiyachet, the baby king who has the softest spot for his brother Kosol and he is so cute. He wants his brother by his side but his brother has other plans. Drama, more drama. And let’s not forget Jet, the fiercely loyal servant to Woradet- steadfast and utterly devoted. All the cast have played their roles so well.

Here, we have royal drama, emotional devastation, sword fighting hotties, secret poems, time travel and kisses- some intentional, some accidental -each guaranteed to spark chaos. This isn't just a story, it's a glittering storm of emotion, comedy, and fabulous disruption.

And trust me on this:
If elegance were a weapon, the count would be armed to the teeth.
If drama were a currency, the count would be the richest man alive.
And if you're not watching, you're seriously missing the most extra history lesson of your life.

P.S: The review will be updated as the series progresses.
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