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Sword and Beloved chinese drama review
Completed
Sword and Beloved
2 people found this review helpful
by Mrs Gong
Nov 2, 2025
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 7.5
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 5.5

“Sword and Beloved: Gorgeous but Emotionally Empty”

I jumped into Sword and Beloved without watching the previous dramas in the Fox Spirit Matchmaker universe, so I went in completely fresh 😅. I don’t watch many xianxia dramas these days, so my expectations were moderate… yet the first half pleasantly surprised me ✨. The writing was solid, the world-building elegant 🌸, and Cheng Yi once again nailed the calm yet tragic hero type 💫. The story felt layered, pacing smooth, and the family + romance dynamics were charming 💖. At that point, I even rated it 9/10 🌟.

But as the episodes went on… my excitement slowly turned into confusion and disappointment 😞. The second half lost its soul — events happened, but I didn’t feel anything 😵‍💫. All the beauty and charm of the first half seemed to vanish 💔, leaving me frustrated and unable to fully enjoy the drama 😢.

It’s such a shame because the opening episodes showed real potential 🌿. By the end, it felt like the drama forgot what it wanted to be, leaving a hollow experience despite strong performances and a captivating first half 🎭💥.


⚔️ Story & Script — A Promising Beginning That Fell Apart

The writing in Sword and Beloved is where everything goes wrong. The first half built a world of tension and emotion — humans and demons caught between duty, fate, and forbidden love. It was poetic, full of promise 🌙. But halfway through, the entire story lost its soul.

The pacing fell apart. The emotional threads between the characters were cut off. The story jumped from one subplot to another with no clear direction. It’s like the scriptwriters had no idea what they wanted to tell — was it a tragic romance, a war epic, or a political fantasy? They tried to do everything and ended up doing nothing well 😩.

The second half felt like someone tore out the heart of the script and replaced it with random scenes. Plot twists appeared out of nowhere, emotional buildups vanished, and dialogue turned into empty poetry — lines that sounded deep but meant absolutely nothing. The characters stopped evolving and started existing only to push the story forward.

🌀 The Vanishing Male Lead

One of the biggest disasters was how they handled the male lead, Fugui. Cheng Yi started the drama as the emotional center — burdened by duty, torn by destiny. But suddenly, he began to disappear. Entire episodes passed with barely a trace of him. Instead, side characters and secondary couples took over the screen.

By the time Fugui returned in the final stretch, the emotional bond between him and Qingtong was already gone. The audience couldn’t reconnect because the writers had already replaced the heart of the show with filler content. It’s honestly shocking that a drama built around Cheng Yi’s character managed to push him out of his own story 😤.

💔 Empty Drama Disguised as Depth

The writing tried to appear profound but ended up being hollow. Every big scene was heavy with “important” lines about destiny, love, and sacrifice — yet none of them felt real. The characters didn’t act like humans anymore; they acted like puppets performing someone else’s bad poetry 🎭.

Even the emotional peaks — deaths, sacrifices, heartbreaks — were meaningless because they weren’t earned. You can’t just throw in tragic moments and expect the audience to cry when there’s no emotional buildup. Everything was happening, but nothing hit.

🎭 How the Cast and Production Tried to Save a Dying Script

The most heartbreaking part is that everyone else tried so hard to make it work. Cheng Yi and Li Yitong gave far more emotion than the script deserved 💔. Cheng Yi carried pain and restraint in his eyes even when the dialogue was nonsense. You could see him trying to turn broken lines into feelings. Li Yitong brought warmth, humor, and grace, even though her character’s motivations kept changing every few episodes.

The production team also did their best — the visuals were breathtaking, the sword fights beautifully shot, and the lighting was cinematic 🌌. Every scene screamed effort: “We know the story is dying, but look how beautiful we can make it!”

But sadly, no amount of beauty or talent can save a hollow core. The cast and crew were fighting to keep the drama alive, yet the script had already bled out. You could feel their effort, but you couldn’t feel the story.

🔥 The Finale — Beautiful but Soulless

By the final episodes, the drama became an empty shell. The plot rushed to its ending, throwing in every cliché it could find. The visuals were stunning — glowing swords, elegant costumes, emotional music — but everything felt fake. It was like watching a puppet show with no soul behind it.

I finished the finale completely numb 🫥. Not happy, not sad, just empty. The ending wasn’t tragic — it was meaningless. That’s far worse.

💭 Final Thoughts

Sword and Beloved had the foundation to be an incredible xianxia drama — strong actors, emotional potential, and visual brilliance 🌙. But the writing destroyed it. The story lost its rhythm, wasted its leads, and traded emotional truth for dramatic chaos.

If I had to describe it in one line:

“A beautiful sword, dulled by a broken script.” ⚔️word, dulled by a broken script.” ⚔️
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