This review may contain spoilers
“When E-Sports Took a Backseat to Pink Luggage”
I had been planning to watch Go Go Squid! for quite a while, primarily because of Yang Zi and Li Xian — I find both of them compelling actors. The e-sports angle finally pushed me to start, since that felt like a fresh hook compared to typical fluff. The show is based on the novel Stewed Squid with Honey.
So I dove in, thinking: okay—maybe I’ll find something more than just “girl meets boy in modern city”. But… well, it turned out to be a mixed bag for me.
2. Synopsis 🧑💻⚔️
The story centers on Tong Nian (Yang Zi), a computer-science prodigy / online singer, who meets Han Shangyan (Li Xian), a former top e-sports CTF player now running his own club/team.
Tong Nian falls for him at first sight, pushes into his world of gaming/esports, and over time supports his ambitions while they navigate romantic misunderstandings and team dynamics.
There is the team “SOLO” backstory, there are flashbacks to ten years earlier, and there are various side characters (the club, teammates) doing their own arcs.
So from my lens, the “promise” of the drama was: e-sports + competent female lead + strong male lead. Great on paper. But reading stops at “promise”.
What I Liked ✅
First: Yang Zi & Li Xian are compelling together. Their chemistry has moments where it really works — the way Li Xian’s Han is cold but with hidden emotions, and Yang Zi’s Tong tries to support him. Even though I at times found some of her behaviour irritating (see Cons section), I can’t deny the charisma both bring.
The supporting cast and team arc: One of the things that actually worked for me was the club/teammates subplot. The idea of pursuing dreams, of being part of a team, wanting to represent something bigger — I liked that. I read that many viewers thought the secondary characters elevated the show.
Some meaningful moments in maturity: I did enjoy the flashback/back-to-then vs now aspect: how the characters’ thinking changed, how their life decisions evolved. This I felt clicked with me (I’m 20, so maybe more able to see that growth bit).
The set-up around e-sports feels fresh compared to many modern romances: Even though the execution faltered (again: see cons), the concept itself — genius programmer meets former top player in an esports club — is something I had hoped for and appreciated.
What I Didn’t Like / Criticisms 🙄
The female lead’s behaviour & characterisation: This is my biggest gripe. Tong Nian is educated, brilliant, talented — she has big brain creds. But so often her actions felt childish, naïve, over-the-top in a way that clashed with how smart she should be. For example, chasing the ML relentlessly, following him into restricted areas with no obstacles, etc. it made me cringe. “The FL’s mannerisms are off … I really cannot either…”
So yes: as a 20-year-old Asian girl who isn’t a stereotypical “sweet-girly, baby-acting” heroine — it was hard to reconcile.
The male lead's backstory & team’s purpose: OK, Han quit his team SOLO, built K&K, etc. But the reasoning felt stretched, sometimes illogical, and the esports scenes themselves were under-delivered. Although I came for the esports angle, too often we saw monitors with black boxes or over-dramatised “game scenes” without real immersion.
The romance vs. the story balance: Since I came for the esports element, I found the romance (and many romance-drama tropes) overwhelming. The first ~10 episodes are very “clingy-girl/aloof-guy”.
The pacing & the flashbacks: The show has 41 episodes. That’s long. Some scenes felt repetitive, flashbacks were abundant, walking-down-memory-lane. The length and the drag made the earlier episodes especially rough.
Suspension of disbelief & unrealistic moments: Yes — the “fan girl meets idol in restricted team restroom no barrier” situation, the “talented genius girl who in real life should behave X but behaves like Y”, the “team vehicle picks her up as ‘sister-in-law’” — these moments made me roll my eyes. Feels like the plot picks convenience over realism.
So in the end: Was it worth it? Yes and no.
If you love the leads (Yang Zi & Li Xian) and you are okay with a sugary romance with e-sports skin, then you will probably enjoy it.
But if you are like me, looking for a serious esports drama, or a modern romance where the female lead feels her intelligence and maturity in actions (not just credentials), then you’ll be frustrated at times.
For me: I enjoyed the supporting cast, I enjoyed when the story did lean into dreams/ambitions/team, but I was frequently annoyed by the romance clichés, the character inconsistencies, the unrealistic fan-idol logistics.
So I dove in, thinking: okay—maybe I’ll find something more than just “girl meets boy in modern city”. But… well, it turned out to be a mixed bag for me.
2. Synopsis 🧑💻⚔️
The story centers on Tong Nian (Yang Zi), a computer-science prodigy / online singer, who meets Han Shangyan (Li Xian), a former top e-sports CTF player now running his own club/team.
Tong Nian falls for him at first sight, pushes into his world of gaming/esports, and over time supports his ambitions while they navigate romantic misunderstandings and team dynamics.
There is the team “SOLO” backstory, there are flashbacks to ten years earlier, and there are various side characters (the club, teammates) doing their own arcs.
So from my lens, the “promise” of the drama was: e-sports + competent female lead + strong male lead. Great on paper. But reading stops at “promise”.
What I Liked ✅
First: Yang Zi & Li Xian are compelling together. Their chemistry has moments where it really works — the way Li Xian’s Han is cold but with hidden emotions, and Yang Zi’s Tong tries to support him. Even though I at times found some of her behaviour irritating (see Cons section), I can’t deny the charisma both bring.
The supporting cast and team arc: One of the things that actually worked for me was the club/teammates subplot. The idea of pursuing dreams, of being part of a team, wanting to represent something bigger — I liked that. I read that many viewers thought the secondary characters elevated the show.
Some meaningful moments in maturity: I did enjoy the flashback/back-to-then vs now aspect: how the characters’ thinking changed, how their life decisions evolved. This I felt clicked with me (I’m 20, so maybe more able to see that growth bit).
The set-up around e-sports feels fresh compared to many modern romances: Even though the execution faltered (again: see cons), the concept itself — genius programmer meets former top player in an esports club — is something I had hoped for and appreciated.
What I Didn’t Like / Criticisms 🙄
The female lead’s behaviour & characterisation: This is my biggest gripe. Tong Nian is educated, brilliant, talented — she has big brain creds. But so often her actions felt childish, naïve, over-the-top in a way that clashed with how smart she should be. For example, chasing the ML relentlessly, following him into restricted areas with no obstacles, etc. it made me cringe. “The FL’s mannerisms are off … I really cannot either…”
So yes: as a 20-year-old Asian girl who isn’t a stereotypical “sweet-girly, baby-acting” heroine — it was hard to reconcile.
The male lead's backstory & team’s purpose: OK, Han quit his team SOLO, built K&K, etc. But the reasoning felt stretched, sometimes illogical, and the esports scenes themselves were under-delivered. Although I came for the esports angle, too often we saw monitors with black boxes or over-dramatised “game scenes” without real immersion.
The romance vs. the story balance: Since I came for the esports element, I found the romance (and many romance-drama tropes) overwhelming. The first ~10 episodes are very “clingy-girl/aloof-guy”.
The pacing & the flashbacks: The show has 41 episodes. That’s long. Some scenes felt repetitive, flashbacks were abundant, walking-down-memory-lane. The length and the drag made the earlier episodes especially rough.
Suspension of disbelief & unrealistic moments: Yes — the “fan girl meets idol in restricted team restroom no barrier” situation, the “talented genius girl who in real life should behave X but behaves like Y”, the “team vehicle picks her up as ‘sister-in-law’” — these moments made me roll my eyes. Feels like the plot picks convenience over realism.
So in the end: Was it worth it? Yes and no.
If you love the leads (Yang Zi & Li Xian) and you are okay with a sugary romance with e-sports skin, then you will probably enjoy it.
But if you are like me, looking for a serious esports drama, or a modern romance where the female lead feels her intelligence and maturity in actions (not just credentials), then you’ll be frustrated at times.
For me: I enjoyed the supporting cast, I enjoyed when the story did lean into dreams/ambitions/team, but I was frequently annoyed by the romance clichés, the character inconsistencies, the unrealistic fan-idol logistics.
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