That’s a very serious claim, so do you have any sources for this? I’ve looked through Thai news reports and never saw anything about the hospital photos being confirmed fake, or that her other exes were “framed” with the same videos, or that the police proved the clips were AI-generated. If you have official statements, police reports, or reputable Thai news articles that verify this, could you please share them? I want to understand the situation clearly and not rely on rumors. Thank you.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
You don’t have to understand other people’s identities to respect them. Mocking genders or pronouns doesn’t strengthen your argument; it just shows you’ve run out of valid points. At this stage, you’ve moved from criticizing a genre to mocking people’s existence, and that says everything about your intent and nothing about the Omegaverse.
The more upset you get about it now, the more will come out just to spite you :)
No one said realism was lesser. The point is that fiction isn’t limited to it. The beauty of storytelling is that it can explore both the ordinary and the extraordinary. Science, art, and literature have always fed each other; imagination drives discovery. The people who imagined flight, the moon landing, or the internet were dreamers first, engineers later. Without fantasy, even realism has nothing new left to say.
The more upset you get about it now, the more will come out just to spite you :)
Couldn’t have said it better. Calling imagination ‘malpractice’ just shows fear of anything that challenges limits. Creativity is meant to provoke, comfort, and expand, not shrink to fit someone’s taste.
The more upset you get about it now, the more will come out just to spite you :)
Imagination doesn’t ‘go wrong’ just because it makes you uncomfortable. The entire point of fiction is to explore concepts beyond realism, that’s literally how creativity evolves.
The more upset you get about it now, the more will come out just to spite you :)
Perfectly said. People act like omegaverse is some moral threat when it’s literally speculative fiction. No one panics about alien mating bonds in sci-fi, but add ‘omega’ and suddenly it’s the end of civilization.
The more upset you get about it now, the more will come out just to spite you :)
That’s how every media industry works. Yet people only bring it up when it’s something they personally dislike. Omegaverse exists because there’s demand, creativity, and community around it, not because some corporation forced it.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
That’s a lazy stereotype. The omegaverse community includes countless queer, trans, and nonbinary creators who explore identity and power dynamics in ways that mainstream fiction doesn’t. Reducing them to ‘straight women writing gay men’ is just outdated fandom gatekeeping.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
If you think queer people writing complex dynamics are ‘woke homophobes,’ maybe the problem isn’t the genre, it’s your inability to handle anything that doesn’t fit your narrow definition of representation.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
I don’t take it personally; I just prefer accuracy over assumptions. Omegaverse isn’t a monolith, and plenty of queer writers use it to deconstruct hierarchy and heteronormativity, not reinforce them. You’re free to read it as a metaphor for straight power structures, but pretending that’s the only valid lens erases the creativity and agency of the queer people who write and enjoy it.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
You’re calling an entire genre ‘straight junk’ while ignoring that it was literally created and expanded by queer authors and readers. Omegaverse explores identity, hierarchy, and relationships in ways that reflect queer experiences, just not always in the way you personally relate to. Dismissing it as ‘homophobic’ because it doesn’t fit your definition of queerness isn’t truth, it’s tunnel vision. Not every story has to perform activism to have value.
Please do not yuck other people's yums, just don't watch it. The omegaverse is also so vastly different across…
You sound really upset over something that’s just fiction. Omegaverse isn’t a single story or trope; it’s a whole genre with thousands of interpretations. Some are explicit, sure, but plenty are about care, comfort, identity, and emotional healing. If you’ve only seen the worst examples, that’s not a reason to attack everyone who enjoys it. Maybe try engaging with it instead of insulting people for liking what makes them happy.
I feel bad for Zefang too, but if he comes back, the love story between Xa Cha and Hai yuan will be ruined, in…
I get where you’re coming from — wanting to preserve the love story between Xia Cha and Hai Yuan. But that’s actually part of what makes this so heartbreaking to me. The fact that Ze Fang’s return would be seen as “ruining” a romance just shows how easily his pain, identity, and entire existence are being sidelined.
He didn’t just “leave” his body — he died, after years of struggling to be loved, understood, or even seen for who he really was. And now that body, his body, is being used to live out someone else’s “second chance”? It feels so wrong.
Saying he should only come back in another body kind of reinforces the idea that his original self — the one that was hurting, confused, desperate to be accepted — wasn’t worth saving or honoring. Why is the grandfather’s love story more important than Ze Fang’s right to live, to heal, to find his own love?
I’m not saying we have to throw out the rest of the story. But I just wish more people would sit with how deeply unfair this is — and recognize that Ze Fang wasn’t just a tragic plot device. He was a person.
I actually had a similar theory at first—that maybe Ze Fang just had a bad head injury and was imagining being…
Yeah, I get that, and I’d honestly love if it turned out to be something like a blood clot or memory issue instead. But the original novel is from 2005, and from what I’ve heard, the soul swap is real and doesn’t change. So unless the adaptation takes a new route, it’s still hard for me to fully enjoy it knowing Ze Fang basically gets erased.
I actually had a similar theory at first—that maybe Ze Fang just had a bad head injury and was imagining being…
Yeah, I get what you mean! I’ve watched all 4 episodes too, and I’m still following the story — the acting is great, and the chemistry is definitely strong. But honestly, the whole “grandpa in his grandson’s body” thing still really bothers me, especially because the person he ends up falling for is someone his grandson had a crush on.
It just feels emotionally messy and uncomfortable. Ze Fang’s body is being used as a vessel for Grandpa's romance, and now his pain and story are pushed aside while Grandpa Xia gets a second chance at love. It’s not just a soul swap — it’s everything that comes with it that makes it hard to fully enjoy without thinking about the cost.
But yeah, I’m still curious to see how the drama handles it all. Hopefully, they give the emotional weight the respect it deserves.
I like the series and their chemistry. But bro, that's a wildly inaccurate misconception of being trans. It is…
I just want to clarify something, because I think a lot of assumptions were made in your reply.
First, I never said Ze Fang wanted to be trans because he was rejected. What I was expressing was the sadness in how he clearly didn’t feel “enough” as he was — and that he was willing to change or erase parts of himself just to be loved. That’s not a comment on being trans — it’s a reflection of emotional pain and identity confusion, not gender identity itself.
Second, it’s unfair to assume I’m not part of the LGBTQ+ community. You don’t know me, and it’s hurtful to have someone label me like that just because they disagree with what I said.
I was speaking from a place of empathy, not misinformation. I think we’re all just trying to process a really emotionally layered story, and it’s okay to feel deeply about characters — especially ones who were hurting.
I’ve looked through Thai news reports and never saw anything about the hospital photos being confirmed fake, or that her other exes were “framed” with the same videos, or that the police proved the clips were AI-generated.
If you have official statements, police reports, or reputable Thai news articles that verify this, could you please share them? I want to understand the situation clearly and not rely on rumors. Thank you.
Zhong Zebin as Wen Hai
Shan Jiaqi as Gu Leng
Wang Yinan as Jiang Nan
He didn’t just “leave” his body — he died, after years of struggling to be loved, understood, or even seen for who he really was. And now that body, his body, is being used to live out someone else’s “second chance”? It feels so wrong.
Saying he should only come back in another body kind of reinforces the idea that his original self — the one that was hurting, confused, desperate to be accepted — wasn’t worth saving or honoring. Why is the grandfather’s love story more important than Ze Fang’s right to live, to heal, to find his own love?
I’m not saying we have to throw out the rest of the story. But I just wish more people would sit with how deeply unfair this is — and recognize that Ze Fang wasn’t just a tragic plot device. He was a person.
It just feels emotionally messy and uncomfortable. Ze Fang’s body is being used as a vessel for Grandpa's romance, and now his pain and story are pushed aside while Grandpa Xia gets a second chance at love. It’s not just a soul swap — it’s everything that comes with it that makes it hard to fully enjoy without thinking about the cost.
But yeah, I’m still curious to see how the drama handles it all. Hopefully, they give the emotional weight the respect it deserves.
First, I never said Ze Fang wanted to be trans because he was rejected. What I was expressing was the sadness in how he clearly didn’t feel “enough” as he was — and that he was willing to change or erase parts of himself just to be loved. That’s not a comment on being trans — it’s a reflection of emotional pain and identity confusion, not gender identity itself.
Second, it’s unfair to assume I’m not part of the LGBTQ+ community. You don’t know me, and it’s hurtful to have someone label me like that just because they disagree with what I said.
I was speaking from a place of empathy, not misinformation. I think we’re all just trying to process a really emotionally layered story, and it’s okay to feel deeply about characters — especially ones who were hurting.