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Hide One's Love chinese drama review
Completed
Hide One's Love
1 people found this review helpful
by laiath
Jul 23, 2025
100 of 100 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 8.0
Story 6.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 6.0
Rewatch Value 10.0
This review may contain spoilers

Toxic yet vulnerable male lead at your service

I loved the toxic possessive love in this drama as much as I hated the plot holes. Okay here we go.

Nan Ye Jue, a powerful and obsessive man played by Chen Si, fixates on Yang Shu Yu’s Rong En, a young woman grieving her college boyfriend’s untimely death. With no other job options, Rong En becomes a nightclub hostess, where Ye Jue cruelly claims her, punishing her for being “unclean.” These scenes fully lay out what kind of a psycho Ye Jue is, but also how much of a sucker he already is for her: He can never get himself to follow through with his threats, which is so heartwarming in a dark, twisted way. Of course the girl hates him because she thinks he forced her into that life, and she has no choice but to submit.

Their toxic push and pull intensifies when her “dead” boyfriend returns, only he’s actually the vengeful twin, blaming Rong En for abandoning his brother during his coma. See, that’s never explained well. Why would he think she abandoned him when she saw him taken to the morgue and half lost her mind with grief?? Somehow Ye Jue can tell this guy’s up to no good and tries to protect Rong En, but the twin manipulates her further, turning her even more against Ye Jue. Fine. He deserves it anyway, but I just wish it would be for the right reasons like terrorizing her, restricting her freedom, etc.

Oh and of course she gets pregnant, and of course there’s an evil SFL.

Just as the truth of the twin’s manipulation begins to surface, a jealous woman in love with Ye Jue causes Rong En to miscarry, framing her as the one who aborted their child. Heartbroken, Rong En returns to the nightclub, where Ye Jue cruelly punishes her again, until he uncovers the truth. Rushing to make things right, he’s too late: Rong En’s mother, learning of her daughter’s job from the twin, dies in an accident after seeing her.

See, normally there would be no coming back from that, but what is normal in the world of vertical dramas, really?

Devastated, Rong En blames Ye Jue and tries to end her life. He repents deeply, destroying the twin and the jealous woman, but she demands his death as penance. Ye Jue lets her “kill” him and survives in secret. During his absence, Rong En’s real college boyfriend returns; dying, with only three months left. I rolled my eyes so far back I saw my brain folds, so I don’t know how on earth they explained his return or whether they even bothered.

Anyway, Ye Jue gets super jealous and reappears and takes Rong En back home. He also causes her to miss his last call from his death bed. So at this point they shouldn’t be able to reconcile, right? Wrong. It’s like that last bit never happened. As she learns all he did for her and recalls the agony of losing him, Rong En begins to forgive. They reunite, find peace, and she becomes pregnant again.
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