TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love poster
#6680 This Week

TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love

TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love  ·  2020, Thailand
7.2
3,159 ratings
12
Episodes
0
Watchlisted
● Completed 🕑 2020

Type and Tharn have been together for seven years, and both are enjoying their most harmonious life. They still bicker and meet up with university friends. Now both working adults, Type and Tharn face difficult issues…

Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Episodes
Reviews (7)

Seven years have passed since Tharn and Type's fiery university romance ignited, and the couple is now navigating the uncharted waters of adulthood together. Their love has deepened, but the everyday grind of work, family expectations, and unresolved personal insecurities begin to test the foundation they built. Type, now a stressed-out office worker, struggles with a tyrannical boss and the pressure to conform to societal norms, while Tharn, a successful event planner, yearns for a public commitment—marriage—something Type is terrified to embrace. Their once-passionate bickering gives way to deeper, more painful misunderstandings. Into this fragile equilibrium come new faces: Fiat, a troubled young man with a complicated past who becomes dangerously fixated on Type; Leo, Fiat's long-suffering best friend harboring a secret love; and a host of other couples—the sweetly awkward Doc and Champ, and the childish Cir and responsible Phu. As Tharn and Type grapple with jealousy, miscommunication, and the ghosts of old wounds, they must decide whether seven years of love is enough to overcome the fear and pride that threaten to tear them apart. This season dives into the messy reality of a long-term relationship, exploring the quiet sacrifices and explosive confrontations that come with truly committing to another person. Fans of the original will recognize the trademark blend of steamy intimacy and raw emotion, but now the stakes are higher—and the path to happiness is anything but simple.

E01
1
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 1
Season 1 · Nov 06, 2020
~ min
E02
2
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 2
Season 1 · Nov 13, 2020
~ min
E03
3
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 3
Season 1 · Nov 20, 2020
~ min
E04
4
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 4
Season 1 · Nov 27, 2020
~ min
E05
5
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 5
Season 1 · Dec 04, 2020
~ min
E06
6
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 6
Season 1 · Dec 11, 2020
~ min
E07
7
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 7
Season 1 · Dec 18, 2020
~ min
E08
8
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 8
Season 1 · Dec 25, 2020
~ min
E09
9
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 9
Season 1 · Jan 08, 2021
~ min
E10
10
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 10
Season 1 · Jan 15, 2021
~ min
E11
11
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 11
Season 1 · Jan 22, 2021
~ min
E12
12
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love Episode 12
Season 1 · Jan 29, 2021
~ min
7.2
out of 10
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MF
mewgulf_forever
June 2024
9/10
I don't care what the haters say—this season gave me everything I wanted. Tharn and Type feel real, like a couple who's been together long enough to have ugly fights but still burn for each other. Yes, they make dumb decisions, but that's love! Mew and Gulf's intimacy is off the charts, and I cried so hard during the ordination episode. The side couples were a bonus; Leo and Fiat broke my heart in the best way. If you're a true romantic, you'll understand.
PH
plot_hoarder
Aug 15, 2025
3/10
After seven years, I expected growth, not regression. Tharn and Type still can't communicate to save their lives—every conflict is resolved with sex or dramatic threats. The jealousy plot with a photo was laughable. And don't get me started on the side couples: Cir and Phu have zero chemistry, and the Leo-Fiat arc relies on Fiat being a cartoon villain. The finale drags on with a wedding for characters we barely know. A cash grab that insults the audience's intelligence.
CL
critical_lens
Mar 10, 2025
2/10
This season is a masterclass in how NOT to write a healthy relationship. Type's plan to kidnap Fiat is framed as a 'solution'—but it's literal assault, especially coming from a character who was himself a victim of assault. The misogyny in the female characters' portrayals (Type's boss, the mom) is exhausting. Tharn's possessive whining and the constant dismissal of boundaries made me uncomfortable. There's no consent talk, no therapy, just drama. Skip it unless you want to study toxic tropes.
LE
leofiat_enjoyer
Dec 5, 2024
6/10
I'm here for Leo and Fiat, and honestly, their story was the only thing keeping me going. Pique and First had real angst and a redemption arc that hit harder than the main couple. But their screentime was criminally short, and the main plot kept interrupting them. The 'I actually loved you the whole time' reveal was cheesy but sweet. If there was a cut of just LeoFiat scenes, I'd give it a 9. As a whole, the show is a mess but with a few beautiful moments.
ND
novel_detective
Feb 20, 2026
4/10
As someone who read the novel, I'm deeply disappointed. The book's emotional depth and the slow unraveling of Type's trauma were replaced with cartoonish jealousy and filler. The adaptation removes the nuance of why Type rejects marriage—in the novel, it's tied to his past abuse, but here it's just 'scared of commitment.' The addition of the cousin's wedding felt pointless. The core romance was sanitized of its complexity. Read the novel instead; it's darker but more honest.
MA
music_and_melody
Oct 22, 2025
5/10
I give it a 5 for the soundtrack alone—the OSTs like 'Hold Me Tight' and 'Missing You' are beautiful and perfectly capture the angst. Every time one of those songs played during a breakup scene, my heart ached. But the sound effects were jarringly loud and amateurish, pulling me out of the moment. The background score was repetitive. Great music, poor audio engineering. If only the show was as well-crafted as its theme songs.
VV
visual_voyeur
Jul 8, 2024
3/10
The cinematography is a significant downgrade from season 1. Scenes are poorly lit, with harsh shadows and distracting camera shakes. The color grading feels flat—no warmth in the domestic scenes, no tension in the dark moments. Even the intimate scenes are shot like a generic soap opera. And the editing? An absolute mess. Transitions are abrupt, and there's a weird reliance on zoom-ins that betray the emotional beats. The leads deserved a better visual treatment.