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  • Join Date: August 15, 2021
Replying to swish vanilla Jan 21, 2026
Am I the only one enjoying this so far even if the story hasn't lived up to S1 standards?? I've been watching…
Me too! Exciting for waiting the new episodes! 🤣
On The Imperial Coroner Season 2 Jan 21, 2026
Wang Ziqi talked about Xiao Jinyu has often been called a “ceiling-level character setting”—a near-perfect ideal.

“Everyone has their own ‘ceiling.’ No one can be the ideal for everyone. In real life, you can’t please everyone either.”
Replying to emotionallyevil Jan 21, 2026
I did not know he was originally supposed to be in a wheelchair! 😮
I don't read the novel but heard this before. Xiao Jinyu is a sickly prince 😅
On The Imperial Coroner Season 2 Jan 21, 2026
Wang Ziqi talked about Xiao Jinyu.

Beyond romance, Xiao Jinyu shoulders greater responsibility:

“He’s someone with profound devotion to both family and country. Leading the Three Judicial Offices is an immense burden, and this time he carries even more responsibility.”
On The Imperial Coroner Season 2 Jan 21, 2026
One detail Wang Ziqi designed was Xiao Jinyu’s habit of walking with his hands clasped behind his back:

“In the original novel, Xiao Jinyu was a disabled character in a wheelchair. During filming, he became physically frail instead. We also needed to convey his maturity despite his young age, so this posture helped give him an ‘old soul’ presence.”

Wang Ziqi divided his portrayal into two modes:

“At court, it’s all business—serious, strategic, restrained. At home, it’s about being with his wife—gentler, more relaxed. The contrast is essential. He’s humble at court, and maybe even humbler at home.”
On The Imperial Coroner Season 2 Jan 20, 2026
In S1, The Three Judicial Offices had a very clear division of labor:
Xiao Jinyu handled the core, high-risk reasoning;
Chu Chu did autopsies and logistics;
Jing Yi specialized in lie detection and field work;
Leng Yue was the combat support / healer.
Clear roles, everyone following orders.

In S2, the only one who’s been strengthened is Chu Chu. She can do autopsies, reason through cases, act as an emotional confidant, and even practice medicine. Meanwhile, the other three feel increasingly flattened, reduced to supporting her character setup.

Wang Ye feels like he’s been left with nothing but a romance function—repeating cycles of jealousy and apologizing. He was the backbone of Season 1, is essentially absent from the reasoning role this time. But Chu Chu can’t really fill that position either, so it ends up scattered and unfocused, jumping here and there. I genuinely don’t understand what the writers were thinking.

Jing Yi and Leng Yue have basically become “romance bodyguards.” Leng Yue, who grew up with Xiao Jinyu since childhood, suddenly doesn’t trust him anymore and even suspects he’s done something that wronged Chu Chu?
And that plot of going to brothel for seeking the relationship problem is so .... weird? Out of character of Wang Ye to seek a stranger's opinion about the relationship.
On The Imperial Coroner Season 2 Jan 20, 2026
Figure 1 is a rear-view screenshot from the scene where the so-called “Peacock Envoy” is captured.
Figure 2 shows the back and front of an outfit worn by Chu He when he goes to look for Chu Chu—suspected by some to be the same collar.
Figure 3 shows Zhao Fengming’s outfit from the front and side.
Figure 4 is the front view of the so-called “Peacock Envoy” at the capture scene.

Over the past two days, some fellow viewers sent me analyses suggesting that the Peacock Envoy is Chu He, with their main piece of evidence being the outfit in Figure 2. However, I don’t think this is sufficient proof. If we only look at the collar in Figure 1, it does resemble Chu He’s, but the decorative patterns on the clothing are not the same. In contrast, the dark woven patterns on Zhao Fengming’s outfit are much more similar.

In Figure 4, the face visible beneath the half mask does look very much like Chu He’s. But is this person really Chu He? Or, put another way, is this person truly the so-called “Peacock Envoy”?

Figures 5–7 raise Suspicion No. 1: Who saved You Chen’an?
In Episode 4, based on Yuluo’s description and the visuals shown, many viewers concluded that the old acquaintance who saved You Chen’an was Chu He. But the behavior and dialogue in Episode 5 make this doubtful. When Chu He sees You Chen’an, he becomes emotional and immediately pulls him into an embrace, pressing his hand directly onto You Chen’an’s wound. If he were the one who saved him, how could he press on the injury like that? Their subsequent dialogue is also worth close scrutiny.

“I heard back in Southern Zhao that you were the mastermind. I didn’t expect to run into you here.”
This line conveys two pieces of information: first, that “Chu He” has not seen You Chen’an recently; second, that You Chen’an being the mastermind was something “Chu He” learned while in Southern Zhao.

Three years ago, Chu He reunited with You Chen’an while doing business in medicinal herbs. He was then introduced to the King of Southern Zhao and became a supplier to the imperial pharmacy. When You Chen’an says that Chu He took care of him at the Qianzhou border, he is referring to the time before he entered the Southern Zhao royal court at the age of ten, when he was fostered with relatives in Qianzhou and met Chu He there.

“Otherwise, how would I have lived to enter the palace?”
I think the “palace” here refers to the Southern Zhao royal palace, not the Tang imperial palace, because he is speaking of repaying the kindness shown to him while he was cared for at the Qianzhou border. If it were a rescue on the way to the capital, he should have described it as a life-saving恩 (grace).

This creates a contradiction. If what “Chu He” says is true, then there are only two possibilities:
1. You Chen’an and Yuluo colluded and lied back in Episode 4; or
2. You Chen’an and Yuluo did not lie—there really was a coroner who saved him, but it was not Chu He.
So then, who was the person who saved You Chen’an?

Figure 8 raises Suspicion No. 2:
“The Tang only has peppercorns, Sichuan pepper, and dogwood—you can’t get authentic Qianzhou spiciness at all.” Chu He uses the term “the Tang,” which feels somewhat odd. As a Tang citizen, if he were merely describing regional differences in spicy flavors, he should have said “Chang’an.”

Is it possible that the current “Chu He” is actually someone else in disguise?

But this “Chu He” knows many details about Chu Chu. And if the brow ridge were altered through disguise, Chu Chu should have been able to notice it.

As for determining whether Chu He is the Peacock Envoy based on clothing alone, I personally don’t think that’s rigorous enough. If Chu He were the Peacock Envoy, what would his motive be? I believe it’s more likely that he was used by someone else and deliberately captured—possibly to direct suspicion toward Chu Chu and target the Three Judicial Offices.

In Suspicion No. 1, either You Chen’an or Chu He must be lying. In the new preview, You Chen’an is going to observe a three-day fast, and the person playing Go with Xiao Jinyu should be You Chen’an. Therefore, I’m more inclined to believe that the one lying is You Chen’an.

关于十六集预告的一点推测 图1是所谓的“孔雀使”被抓... http://xhslink.com/o/57hi92GqItb
Replying to Ximena Jan 20, 2026
Chu He can be Peacock. He has no business in the capital, but he stays there do nothing specifically. He can freely…
Gonna be 💔💔💔
Replying to Ximena Jan 20, 2026
Chu He can be Peacock. He has no business in the capital, but he stays there do nothing specifically. He can freely…
I don't know it just fake set up or hint tho~ 🤣