Feel What You Feel poster
#2871 This Week

Feel What You Feel

Feel What You Feel  ·  2026, Hong Kong
7.6
3,514 ratings
8
Episodes
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2026

Ming De University law students Yu Lei and Chen Ke have no idea that they'll change each other's lives when they first meet. Initially, they seem like complete opposites: Yu Lei is bold and confident, while Chen Ke leans…

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (5)

Set against the soft-focus nostalgia of early 2000s Hong Kong, 'Feel What You Feel' follows law students Yu Lei and Chen Ke, two polar opposites whose first encounter is anything but friendly. Yu Lei is confident, athletic, and popular, while Chen Ke is quiet, studious, and seemingly aloof. Initially, Yu Lei's jealousy over Chen Ke's academic success—and his sister's admiration for him—masks a deeper, confusing pull. What begins as a rivalry slowly blurs into an intense friendship, filled with stolen glances, late-night phone calls, and quiet moments that neither can name. As they navigate university life, dorm-room tensions, and the meddling of friends (including a persistent admirer and a nosy cousin), both young men must confront feelings that defy the easy labels of 'brotherhood' or 'friendship.' More than a simple romance, this series is a tender, atmospheric meditation on self-discovery, first love, and the courage it takes to say 'I feel something more.' Its beauty lies in the unspoken—the way a shared piano melody or a timid touch says everything words cannot.

E01
1
Feel What You Feel Episode 1
Season 1 · Apr 03, 2026
~ min
E02
2
Feel What You Feel Episode 2
Season 1 · Apr 04, 2026
~ min
E03
3
Feel What You Feel Episode 3
Season 1 · Apr 10, 2026
~ min
E04
4
Feel What You Feel Episode 4
Season 1 · Apr 11, 2026
~ min
E05
5
Feel What You Feel Episode 5
Season 1 · Apr 17, 2026
~ min
E06
6
Feel What You Feel Episode 6
Season 1 · Apr 24, 2026
~ min
E07
7
Feel What You Feel Episode 7
Season 1 · May 01, 2026
~ min
E08
8
Feel What You Feel Episode 8
Season 1 · May 08, 2026
~ min
7.6
out of 10
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B4
butterfly_4ever
October 2026
9/10
I lived for every single second between Yu Lei and Chen Ke. The way they circle each other, the phone calls, the piano scene—I had to pause because my heart couldn't take it. This is exactly the kind of soft, yearning love story I crave. The ending made me ugly-cry in the best way. Yes, the pacing is slow, but that's the point! Not every BL needs to rush to confession. This one lets you feel every emotion settle into your bones.
PH
plot_hole_detective
September 2026
6/10
I really wanted to love this, but the plot mechanics drove me crazy. The jealous classmate subplot (He Jin) came out of nowhere and felt like a lazy way to inject drama—the attempted murder scene was especially egregious. And the finale was a flashback parade that barely moved the relationship forward. The main couple has cute moments, but the story relies too much on miscommunication and stubborn obliviousness. It's watchable, but the potential was squandered.
VP
visual_poetry_junkie
November 2026
8/10
This show is a visual love letter to the early 2000s. The warm color grading, the soft-focus close-ups on rain-soaked windows, the way light falls on the dorm room—every frame feels deliberately composed. The music (especially the piano motif) perfectly complements the restrained longing. I wish the script had been as disciplined as the camera work, but honestly, the atmosphere alone kept me glued. For a mood piece, it's stunning.
OM
ouyang_ming_shipper
October 2026
8/10
I'll be honest—I mostly stuck around for Ouyang Han and Li Ming. Their dynamic was electric: the persistent, loud guy slowly breaking through the quiet one's walls. They had way more honest communication and spicy tension than the main pair. The main leads were sweet but frustratingly slow. Li Ming's emotional confession in the library gave me everything I needed. If the whole show had been about them, it'd be a 10.
FM
feelings_matter_ml
December 2026
7/10
I appreciate that this BL avoids the 'internalized homophobia' trope and presents a world where love is love without societal trauma. However, I was uncomfortable with how Ouyang Han's persistent crush was framed as 'cute' when he clearly ignored boundaries—that's not harmless. Also, the attempted stabbing felt gratuitous and out of step with the otherwise gentle tone. For a show about 'feeling,' it could have modeled healthier emotional boundaries.