Best 7 Chinese bromance dramas that make you question if they’re just friends

Bromance overload: Best C-Dramas where the male leads love (platonically?) each other more than you love yourself
I don’t know about you, but for me there’s something magical about a good C-drama bromance.
The brooding glances. The subtle hand grabs. The intense loyalty that says, “I would destroy an entire sect for you, bro.”
Sure, they’re not technically romantic (well, some of them aren’t, and some of them are actual BL romances disguised as “not” just to please the Chinese censors), but they’ve got more tension than most love triangles.
So whether you’re a seasoned danmei detective or new to the genre, here are seven unforgettable Chinese dramas that are not only my favorites (and I rewatch them all the time), they also crank the bromance dial up to “soulmate.”
1. The Untamed (陈情令, 2019)
Main Cast: Xiao Zhan as Wei Wuxian, Wang Yibo as Lan Wangji
Genre: Xianxia, Fantasy, Cultivation, Emotional Torture with Flutes
Wei Wuxian, a mischievous but talented cultivator, gets entangled in the morally grey art of demonic cultivation. Lan Wangji, the human embodiment of “strict Asian dad energy,” becomes his reluctant partner-in-fighting-evil.
Over the course of 50 episodes, they investigate conspiracies, fight monsters, and throw yearning glances that can burn through stone.
Bromance Level
The highest of high highs. (There’s a reason why, when someone mentions Chinese dramas with burning bromance, this is the first one mentioned).
Why Watch
- Sublime acting from Xiao Zhan and Wang Yibo, who serve angst and loyalty like it’s their day job.
- Period costumes so dramatic they deserve their own spin-off.
- It’s basically a love story cleverly disguised as a cultivation drama to pass the censors.
- Stunning world-building and costume design that looks expensive (because it was).
- Musical flirtation via hauntingly beautiful flute solos.
- The soundtrack slaps.
- Chemistry so tight, you’d think they practiced in a lab.
- A masterclass in longing glances and eyebrow acting.
2. Word of Honor (山河令, 2021)
Main Cast: Zhang Zhehan as Zhou Zishu, Gong Jun as Wen Kexing
Genre: Wuxia, Mystery, “Not Gay But Super Gay”
Plot
Zhou Zishu, a disillusioned former assassin, meets the flamboyant Wen Kexing, who has a few secrets (including being the literal king of a ghost clan). The two team up, exchange philosophical debates and smirks, and basically become soulmates with swords.
Bromance Level
The kind of ride-or-die where one guy literally calls the other his soulmate and it’s somehow still “just friends.”
Why Watch
- Chemistry so intense it could start fires.
- Sassy banter, tragic pasts, and epic martial arts battles.
- A glorious mix of angst, comedy, and the occasional poisoned hairpin.
- The sass, the shade, the slow-motion eye contact.
- Action scenes choreographed like a dance-off with swords.
- Top-tier OST and poetic death speeches.
- If vibes could kill, this drama would’ve ended in episode 3.
- The official Weibo account leaned into the ship harder than the fans did.
3. Guardian (镇魂, 2018)
Main Cast: Bai Yu as Zhao Yunlan, Zhu Yilong as Shen Wei
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Sci-Fi Noir, Police Procedural With Feelings
Plot
Zhao Yunlan is the snarky leader of the Special Investigation Department, which solves supernatural crimes. Shen Wei is a mild-mannered professor with way too many secrets. One of them is basically an ancient god. Together, they save the world, one unresolved emotional stare at a time.
Bromance Level
Their love transcends space, time, multiple reincarnations, and censorship guidelines.
Why Watch
- Zhu Yilong and Bai Yu’s chemistry could power a small nation.
- A surprisingly philosophical plot involving fate, time loops, and responsibility.
- A gay romance that’s not overtly romantic—but let’s be real, they’re basically married.
- Supernatural crime-fighting that’s weirdly addictive.
- You’ll scream, “JUST KISS ALREADY!” at your screen—many times.
- Feels like watching a married couple solve crimes together.
4. Mysterious Lotus Casebook (莲花楼, 2023)
Main Cast (bromance edition): Cheng Yi as Li Lianhua, Zeng Shunxi as Fang Duobing, Xiao Shunyao as Di Feisheng
Genre: Wuxia, Mystery, Emotional Damage with a Side of Wholesome Chaos
Plot
Once upon a time, Li Xiangyi was the greatest swordsman in the land, admired, feared, and full of moral superiority. Then tragedy struck (as it always does in Wuxia), and he faked his death, changed his name to Li Lianhua, and became a mild-mannered traveling doctor with a duck cart and too much inner pain.
Enter Fang Duobing, a young, naive, justice-obsessed constable who latches onto Li Lianhua like a golden retriever who’s just discovered his human.
Also re-enter Di Feisheng, a former rival who’s like, “I hate you so much I’ll follow you around until you accept my loyalty.”
And thus forms a three-man band of misfit martial heroes, solving mysteries, chasing grudges, and forming the most dysfunctional found family since Guardian.
Bromance Level
Fang Duobing: “You’re my hero and possibly my emotional support mentor.”
Di Feisheng: “I’m obsessed with you in a way that should concern your therapist.”
Li Lianhua: “Please stop caring about me, I’m trying to die in peace.”
Yeah. It’s that good.
Why It’s a Must-Watch
Cheng Yi absolutely crushes the role of a once-great warrior turned gentle, dying sleuth. His emotional range is borderline illegal.
The grumpy-sunshine dynamic between Li Lianhua and Fang Duobing is hilarious and unexpectedly tender, while Di Feisheng adds chaotic bromantic spice to every scene he’s in.
A rival? A friend? A man with unresolved sword feelings? Yes.
Philosophical, funny, and occasionally soul-crushing—it’s like Sherlock Holmes but with more robes, swords, and emotional repression.
The trio’s chemistry is so compelling, fans were shipping them in every possible configuration soon after Di Feisheng first shows up.
5. Nirvana in Fire (琅琊榜, 2015)
Main Cast: Hu Ge as Mei Changsu, Wang Kai as Prince Jing (Xiao Jingyan)
Genre: Historical Drama, Political Intrigue, Brain vs Brawn
Plot
Mei Changsu, a brilliant strategist with a secret identity, returns to the capital to avenge his family. He uses his ten IQ points above genius level to manipulate politics while slowly reuniting with his former best friend, Prince Jing, who’s still salty but loyal AF.
Bromance Level
Angsty childhood-friend-to-unwitting-ally slow burn of political proportions.
Why It’s a Must-Watch
- Plot so intricate you’ll feel smarter just watching it.
- Emotional payoff that will wreck your soul.
- The way Prince Jing protects Mei Changsu even without knowing who he truly is? Cinematic gold.
- A bromance forged in fire, tragedy, and righteous fury.
6. The Disguiser (伪装者, 2015)
Main Cast: Hu Ge as Ming Tai, Jin Dong as Ming Lou, Wang Kai as Ming Cheng
Genre: Republican Era, Spy Thriller, “Family Dinner With Knives Under the Table”
Plot
Set during the Japanese occupation of China, The Disguiser follows the complicated, espionage-filled lives of the Ming family—a clan so elite and stylish you’d think they walked out of a noir fashion editorial.
At the heart of this cloak-and-dagger drama is Ming Tai, the youngest brother, who gets unwillingly recruited into spy work. His older brothers Ming Lou (elegant but terrifying) and friend Ming Cheng (loyal and perpetually stressed) have their own secret agendas—and together, this trio of reluctant spies navigate loyalty, identity, and siblinghood with guns, trench coats, and enough lies to fuel five entire seasons of Homeland.
Bromance Level
Technically a family, yes—but let’s be real: the bromantic energy is immaculate. These aren’t just brothers—they’re “I’d fake my death and double-cross my country for you” kind of siblings. It’s found family meets spy drama meets emotional devastation.
Why It’s a Must-Watch
- Hu Ge, Jin Dong, and Wang Kai in one show = acting dream team. You could frame any still and hang it in a museum.
- The Ming brothers’ interactions are layered with unspoken care, sharp banter, and constant “I hate you but I’ll die for you” energy.
- Delicious moral ambiguity. Everyone’s a little bit lying, a little bit loyal, and extremely dramatic about it.
- Features top-tier trench coat acting and the kind of emotional tension that feels like it was lit by candlelight and despair.
It’s not “officially” a bromance show—but oh, you will definitely feel it.
7. Killer and Healer (恨君不似江楼月, 2021)
Main Cast: Mao Zijun as Jiang Yuelou, Ian Yi as Chen Yuzhi
Genre: Republican Era, Crime, Medical Drama, “I’m Emotionally Unavailable But Here’s My Soul”
Plot
Jiang Yuelou is a hardened police officer who could intimidate a charging bull just by staring at it. He’s known for fighting crime like a wrecking ball in a trench coat, but secretly suffers from PTSD and a slew of emotional demons.
Enter Chen Yuzhi, a kind-hearted, idealistic doctor who’s so soft he practically glows. These two men—one killer, one healer (title drop!)—collide when their paths cross through a case… and never truly untangle again.
What begins as a tense, suspicious partnership slowly deepens into a relationship full of trust, sacrifice, and repressed yearning so intense it could be classified as a public safety hazard.
Bromance Level
Let’s just say: Jiang Yuelou will take bullets for Chen Yuzhi and refuse to explain why. Meanwhile, Chen Yuzhi will ruin his own career just to keep Jiang Yuelou from spiraling. Totally normal bro stuff.
They’re not “lovers” (thanks, censors), but they absolutely act like traumatized husbands trying to save each other in a war-torn society.
Why It’s a Must-Watch
- That intense emotional vulnerability is off the charts. There are so many scenes where someone’s on the verge of confessing something—not romantic per se, but soul-deep.
- Incredible chemistry between Mao Zijun and Ian Yi. One glowers, the other glows, and the dynamic works.
- The Republican-era setting adds just the right amount of noir danger and aesthetic brooding.
- It walks the tightrope between BL-subtext and deep friendship with remarkable grace—and a fair amount of longing stares.
- The title says it all: One saves lives. The other ends them. But both need healing.
Final Thoughts
In my opinion, bromances in Chinese dramas just hit different. And some of that, of course, is due to the censors.
That’s why they’re slow, subtle, and packed with enough repressed emotion to fuel five Nicholas Sparks novels. Whether they’re riding off into the sunset together or exchanging emotionally loaded sword glances, these male leads redefine what it means to have each other’s back.
And while they may not be “official,” we know what we saw.
So the next time someone tells you a show is “just about two friends,” just smile, nod, and press play. You know the truth.