Hi, on ep 12 and ML character keeps say that Hua Yong is an alpha but, in the description, says he is omega and or is he something else.... many combinations of both?
Hi everyone, I'm stuck on ep 9. The director put this off excellent. The only thing is brothers me the alpha and omega.... I know this is BL but maybe I'm wrong but looks like there's female and male alpha and omegas too
Ep. 23 will tell you why Siling is angry at Bai Juisi. it is very emotional episode. Crying again.
OMG! You’re absolutely right. Episode 23 is, without a doubt, the highlight of the entire drama. The moment she screams his name is pure heartbreak—raw, powerful, and unforgettable. Bai Lu completely embodies the character; she doesn’t just act the pain; she makes you feel it right along with her. That performance alone elevates the whole series.
Hi, I rewatched it for the second time, and the final episode still hit me just as hard. The female lead’s ability to travel into the past—either her own or others’—is an intriguing concept, but the execution leaves me conflicted. Despite her power to intervene or reveal the truth, the outcomes remain unchanged, suggesting a predetermined fate that no amount of effort can alter.
One scene that stands out is when she tells her past self to inform the male lead that she’s pregnant. Yet when she returns to the present, their child is still gone. This moment raises the question: what was the purpose of her intervention if it had no effect on the outcome?
From a storytelling standpoint, I feel the screenwriter missed an opportunity here. That scene could have provided emotional closure or at least shown that her actions in the past had some ripple effect in the present. Instead, the narrative reinforces a sense of futility—no matter what she does, nothing changes. While that might have been the intended message, it ultimately leaves the story feeling unresolved rather than profound.
I just watched the first 30 minutes of a short vertical drama with this actor as the ML. But I can’t find it…
OMG!!! I too just watched it on app that plays Chinese short dramas and on the site its called " Wife no more, Rival Reborn" but I can't find anywhere to finish watching it. Let me know if you find it and I will do the same. TTFN
I rewatched it for the second time, and the final episode still hit me just as hard. The female lead’s ability to travel into the past—either her own or others’—is an intriguing concept, but the execution leaves me conflicted. Despite her power to intervene or reveal the truth, the outcomes remain unchanged, suggesting a predetermined fate that no amount of effort can alter.
One scene that stands out is when she tells her past self to inform the male lead that she’s pregnant. Yet when she returns to the present, their child is still gone. This moment raises the question: what was the purpose of her intervention if it had no effect on the outcome?
From a storytelling standpoint, I feel the screenwriter missed an opportunity here. That scene could have provided emotional closure or at least shown that her actions in the past had some ripple effect in the present. Instead, the narrative reinforces a sense of futility—no matter what she does, nothing changes. While that might have been the intended message, it ultimately leaves the story feeling unresolved rather than profound.