I finished it. I wish I could say it was worth it.
I went into this as a FortPeat fan — genuinely invested in their dynamic, their chemistry, the particular way they work together. Yesterday was announced as darker, Peat's character described as a black flag. I was open to that. The first three episodes gave me reason to stay.Then the kidnapping arc happened, and something shifted that I couldn't shift back.
There's a line for me between dark romance and something else. A toxic dynamic where both people have psychological agency, mutual pull, even obsession — I can engage with that. What I can't frame as romance is one character imprisoned, distressed, stripped of choice, while the other brings in a therapist not to get help but because surely something must be wrong with someone who stopped loving him. That's not darkness I find compelling. That's a portrait of abuse dressed in the language of devotion.
What makes it worse is the narrative decision to explain Kelvin's behaviour through mental illness. I want to be careful here because I think the intention may have been to add complexity — and Kelvin being the first toxic BL character to actually go to therapy is, on paper, interesting. But the execution does something I find genuinely harmful: it uses BPD and depression as a reason for his actions, which both stigmatises those diagnoses and quietly absolves him. The implication becomes he couldn't help it, and he can be fixed. Neither of those things is true to how these illnesses actually work, and neither should be used to explain away abuse. If you're going to bring mental illness into a story this seriously, you owe it the honesty of showing it as an ongoing process — not a plot device that gets resolved by a time jump.
The ending felt like a bad joke to me. Veir's forgiveness is framed as emotional maturity, as living in the present. Maybe there's something philosophically interesting in that framing. But the series didn't earn it — not with this story, not with what Kelvin actually did, and not with a resolution that skips the hard part entirely.
FortPeat still perform. That part I won't take away from them. But something recalibrated after this, and I'm still sitting with what that means.
The mythology pulls you in — the couple keeps you at a distance
The mythology pulls you in — the couple keeps you at a distanceReview:
The premise genuinely hooked me. A family curse that kills every male heir before their twenty-first birthday, a young man raised under a girl's name to preserve the protection, and then at twenty the veil starts to lift and he begins seeing things he shouldn't. As far as I'm aware this is one of the first Thai BL series to put Thai mythology this centrally at its heart, and that alone makes it worth paying attention to. That part of the story stuck with me.
Where I personally struggled was with KengNamping as a couple. They're beautiful to look at, but the dynamic felt overly familiar to me — Namping feminine, androgynous, delicate, in need of protection; Keng sexy, mysterious, powerful. I've seen that pairing before and I wanted something more from it here. The added layer of Keng's priestly vows — his purity at risk if he gives in to attraction — could have created real tension, and occasionally it does. But with neither character willing or able to make a move, and both of them leaning heavily introverted, I found myself wondering at times whether these two would have anything to say to each other if the supernatural threat wasn't conveniently in the room.
Circling each other without really closing the distance gets exhausting after a while. The world the series builds is genuinely interesting — I just wished the people at the center of it felt a little more alive to each other.
Here for PondPhuwin — and only for PondPhuwin
I watched this for the Never Let Me Go spinoff and stopped once that part was done. The anthology format means the other couples weren't a reason to stay, and I didn't pretend otherwise.
The past life concept is a sweet idea and PondPhuwin carry it well — the chemistry is still there, the emotional beats land. But I kept asking myself whether this was really necessary. Never Let Me Go stands completely on its own, and a journey into a past life felt more like a charming detour than something the story actually needed.
What I would have wanted instead is simpler and probably harder to write: Palm and Nuengdiao in the present, after everything. Everyday life, a relationship without trauma as the backdrop, small moments that show how two people who went through all of that actually build something together. That's what I find genuinely interesting about established couples — not the grand gestures or the fate-testing scenarios, but the quiet proof that they work. That version of a spinoff I would have watched twice.
As it stands — sweet, enjoyable, and exactly as necessary as a spinoff tends to be, which is to say not very. But PondPhuwin made it worth the detour.
Sweet premise, complicated by an age gap I couldn't fully set aside
The concept is genuinely inventive — a 29-year-old transported into a virtual game as a 19-year-old character, tasked with bringing happiness to someone who doesn't know any of this is happening. There's something quietly interesting about the ethics of that setup, and the series handles the sweetness of it well enough.My personal sticking point is the age gap, which the virtual framing doesn't really resolve for me. Tae is emotionally and experientially a decade older than how he's presenting, and that asymmetry sat with me throughout in a way I couldn't fully set aside. I'm aware the series isn't asking me to think about it that hard — it's a gentle, warm story and it mostly succeeds at being that. But I notice these things and they affect how fully I can invest.
The couple landed somewhere in the middle for me, the intimate scenes didn't quite work, and by the end my engagement had drifted. Sweet while it lasted, but not something I'd return to.
Everything built toward something — and then the final kiss didn't deliver it
This series was recommended to me as one of the most emotionally affecting BL series out there, and it earns that reputation for most of its runtime. The slow build of suppressed feelings between two people who've been each other's entire world since childhood, the jealousy that surfaces when a girl enters the picture and forces something unspoken into the light — it's handled with real patience and emotional intelligence. I thought of Let Free the Curse of Taekwondo more than once, which is a high bar. That series reached me a little deeper personally, but this one absolutely belongs in the same conversation.Which is why the final kiss matters so much, and why I have to be honest about it.
I wish I were less affected by this kind of thing. I'm aware it might sound shallow. But when a series spends its entire runtime building toward a moment — layers of pain, longing, restraint, everything held back for so long — and then that moment arrives and reads as tense in the wrong way, not shy or overwhelmed but genuinely uncomfortable, it undermines something. A crescendo that doesn't land doesn't just disappoint, it retroactively dims what came before it. That's not a small thing when the whole series has been building emotional pressure toward exactly that release.
Everything else here is strong. The story, the performances, the pacing — all of it works. I just wish the ending had matched what the series deserved.
Didn't fully catch me — but surprised me where it mattered
The setup is familiar enough — a boy being pursued by a senior, a fake boyfriend arrangement that convinces nobody, the predictable trajectory from pretend to real. I wasn't expecting much beyond that.What I didn't expect was the father. A parent who genuinely doesn't accept his son's sexuality, and a conflict that actually sits with that rather than resolving it quickly or pretending everyone is fine. That's not something Thai BL does often — the genre tends to exist in a bubble where queerness is met with warmth or gentle confusion at worst. Seeing a series step outside that bubble, even briefly, felt honest in a way I appreciated. I'll give it credit for that without pretending it changed my overall experience of the series.
The couple didn't fully land for me and not much stayed after I finished it. But that one element surprised me, and I think surprises deserve to be acknowledged.
Came for Benz and Garfield — they couldn't quite deliver here
I found this series through Pit Babe, where Benz and Garfield caught my attention as a side pairing and left me wanting more of them. This felt like the obvious next step.
It wasn't quite what I hoped for. In Pit Babe their dynamic had something that made me curious — here that something didn't translate in the same way, and the chemistry between them never convinced me the way I'd expected it to. Worth noting too that they've since gone their separate ways as a BL pairing, which adds a certain weight to watching this in retrospect.
The main couple actually has more chemistry between them, which is its own kind of irony given why I was there. But the story around everyone didn't pull me in either — I skipped large portions and finished what I did see mostly out of stubbornness rather than genuine engagement. Functionally closer to dropped than completed.
Sometimes a pairing works in one context and doesn't transfer. This was one of those times for me.
Soulmates on screen — I just wished the series had trusted itself to go a little deeper
The foundation of this story is genuinely moving. Two best friends, a shared love of photography, years of quiet feelings that one of them didn't know how to hold. That scene with the private exhibition, just the two of them, their photos, their world - chefs kiss! That detail alone made me feel something. This is what soulmate energy actually looks like when a series takes the time to build it properly rather than just declare it.The fear of losing the friendship felt completely earned to me, and the series handles that anxiety with real care. What I found particularly strong is a question that gets raised near the end — Wataru asking whether he's now split between two roles, best friend and partner, and which one he's supposed to be. That moment quietly points at something we don't talk about enough: the way we still categorise relationships into separate boxes, as if love and friendship can't exist in the same space without one replacing the other. For a relatively gentle series, that's a sharp observation.
The romantic relationship in the final episodes feels genuinely healthy — unhurried, warm, mutual. I appreciated that.
My personal sticking point is that the series stays a little too safe given the emotional depth it clearly has access to. I'm not asking for explicit content — that's not the point. But I think there's something to be said for a story that has built this much intimacy between two people and then keeps a certain distance from what that actually means for them as a couple, including any reckoning with identity or what loving each other changes about how they see themselves. The foundation was there for something more layered. I wish the series had walked a little further into it.
One of the most genuinely relevant things I've watched in this genre — and OffGun deliver
This series opens with a conversation that stopped me immediately. A man in burnout being told by his "girl"friend to take a break, go to therapy — and him answering that he can barely afford rent, so how exactly is he supposed to afford therapy. That exchange alone signals what kind of show this is going to be: one that's actually paying attention to the world it exists in.The burnout bar as a concept is inspired — a place where customers therapeutise each other because professional help is out of reach for most of them. It's absurd and completely believable at the same time, and it sets up a story about art, AI, labour, and the very specific exhaustion of trying to be creative in a system that doesn't support it. These are not themes I expected to find handled this thoughtfully in a BL series, and I found it genuinely exciting.
OffGun carry it fully. The chemistry is there, the performances are strong, and the three-way dynamic at the center of the story is genuinely compelling — chaotic and messy in the way real human entanglements are. What I found most interesting is that the main character isn't positioned as a victim of circumstance but as someone who is himself flawed, himself capable of toxicity. That honesty gives the series a texture that most shows in this genre don't attempt.
In terms of story and acting, one of the strongest series I've seen. The kind of show that makes me wish more BL trusted its audience this much.
Grief, jealousy, and two people finding each other in the friction between
A series about loss, suspicion, and the complicated thing that grows between two people who start out wanting nothing to do with each other. I believed the pairing completely, and I'd go back for them without hesitation.The setup does a lot of quiet work. A transfer student whose jazz playing echoes someone who's no longer there, a boy still carrying his brother's death, and then the two of them thrown together for a performance evaluation neither of them wanted. Jazz is present as a shared space and a point of connection, but it's not the engine of the story — the emotions are. The jealousy, the grief, the suspicion about Seo Do Yun that keeps things complicated longer than either of them would like. All of that felt genuinely layered to me.
My one personal sticking point is the physical side — the emotional intimacy between the leads is real and well-built, but the kiss and intimate scenes didn't quite match the intensity of everything surrounding them. That gap is something I notice, and here it was noticeable enough to mention.
Everything else lands. A quietly strong series that stayed with me more than I expected.
Came for MaxkyBas, stayed for MaxkyBas — and they were worth every minute
I'll be upfront: I watched this almost entirely for MaxkyBas, and they delivered in a way I didn't fully anticipate.What makes them interesting to me isn't just the chemistry — it's that they quietly subvert the archetypes they're supposed to inhabit. On paper Bas looks like he fits the serious, good-looking top role, and Maxy the cute, slightly nerdy, cheeky counterpart. And yes, the series plays them that way to some extent. But anyone who's spent five minutes watching their actual dynamic off-screen knows that Bas is genuinely a little weird — charmingly, endearingly so — and Maxy is nobody's damsel in distress. Compared to pairings that operate in a similar register, like ZeeNuNew for example, MaxkyBas break the mould in ways that feel authentic rather than performed. Bas charater can talk about his feelings and Maxys doesn't need rescuing. That distinction matters more than it might sound.
The main couple's storyline — the second chance romance, the mentor dynamic, the loose end that never got tied — is fine and carries its own charm. But honestly MaxkyBas are the reason I was there, and the reason I'd go back.
Muay Thai, great chemistry, and exactly what it needed to be
Sometimes a series doesn't need to reinvent anything. Muay Thai setting, a good-looking pair with genuinely strong physical chemistry, and a story that knows what it's doing with both — sign me up, and I mean that without irony.NiceGun work well together in every sense, and that's honestly the core of why this series succeeds for me. The chemistry is there in the quieter moments and it's there in the intimate scenes, and when a pairing clicks that consistently it carries a lot. The Muay Thai backdrop gives the show a specific texture and energy that I found genuinely engaging — there's something about the discipline and physicality of that world that feeds into the dynamic between the characters in a way that feels intentional.
Is it a masterpiece? No. Does it break new ground or do anything particularly unexpected with its premise? Also no. But it's confident in what it is, it delivers on what it promises, and I had a genuinely good time with it. Sometimes that's exactly enough.
FortPeat set everything on fire
FortPeat at their finest. I mean that without qualification. The chemistry between them here doesn't simmer — it ignites, and there are scenes in this series that I will not be forgetting anytime soon. The beach. The shower. You'll know.What works so well beyond the obvious is how the roles fit them. Peat's character — a sassy, closed-off erotica author who needs physical closeness to write but has built an entire fortress around the idea of actually loving someone — feels like it was written with him specifically in mind. And Fort plays someone so genuinely warm, so attentive, so quietly devoted that my main criticism is that people like that don't actually exist. A green flag so green it's basically a forest.
The emotional climax earns its weight. Fort knows from the start what he signed up for, but at some point living inside someone else's self-deception becomes its own kind of hurt — and watching him reach the point where self-love means walking away, even loving someone, is genuinely affecting. What makes the scene land even harder is that Peat doesn't say I don't love you. He says I can't love you. That distinction carries everything.
My one personal wish is for more before that moment — more of Fort's frustration surfacing, more of him trying to reach Peat before the decision to protect himself becomes inevitable. I think I would have pushed harder in his position, and I wanted to see that struggle more fully.
The production has its limitations and some dialogue lands a little flat, which is a real constraint on a story this emotionally ambitious. But FortPeat transcend it. They always do.
I came for BossNoeul and stayed for FortPeat — and I have no regrets about that
This series holds a particular place for me because it's where a lot of things started. A video of BossNoeul landed in my feed, looked intense enough to investigate, and suddenly I was watching Thai BL for the first time. Whatever I think of it now, that counts for something.I'll be honest about BossNoeul first: their storyline never fully worked for me, and with time it's worked less and less. Rain's logic — I know Phayu is bi, so I'll seduce him and reject him for revenge — is the kind of premise I find increasingly hard to engage with, and Noeul playing naive and slightly hapless while Boss is essentially perfect is exactly the dynamic I find least interesting. It's not for me, and I've made my peace with that.
FortPeat though. My god. They came in as the second couple and left as the reason I stayed, the reason I rewatched, and for a long time my favourite pairing in the genre. Yes, how they meet carries its own complications — I'm not going to pretend otherwise. But what I saw in them was character depth and genuine development, particularly on Fort's side, wrapped around a chemistry that speaks louder than almost anything else I can say about it. Some pairings just have it. They had it.
Nostalgic, imperfect, and important to me in a way that has nothing to do with whether it's objectively the best series I've seen.
Middling in the best possible way — pleasant, forgettable, fine
There's a comfortable predictability to this one that I didn't mind. A drunken accidental kiss, a younger guy who keeps reappearing, an older one who doesn't know what to do with any of it and chooses avoidance as a strategy. It's a familiar setup handled without much surprise but also without much misstep.Nothing here landed hard enough to stay with me for long, but nothing frustrated me either. The couple is fine, the pacing is fine, the story goes where you expect it to go. For a short series that doesn't ask much of you, that's enough — sometimes you just want something undemanding that delivers a small, warm ending and gets out of the way.
I'd land somewhere in the middle on every question I ask myself about a series like this. Believed the couple moderately, the scenes worked moderately, it held my attention moderately. A very consistent viewing experience in that sense, even if consistency isn't exactly a compliment here.
Worth watching if you're in the mood for something low-stakes and easy. Just don't expect it to follow you out the door.