Review: Kill Me Love Me: A wild ride of revenge, romance, and screenwriting bad decisions

Chinese drama Kill Me Love Me — worth watching or not?

NOTEMAJOR Spoilers – Be Aware

If you are scrolling through your streaming options in 2025, desperately searching for a Chinese drama that’s equal parts thrilling, swoon-worthy, and sometimes incredibly maddening, Kill Me Love Me (春花焰) might just catch your eye.



Released in October 2024 on YOUKU, this historical revenge saga starring Liu Xue Yi and Wu Jin Yan promises a rollercoaster of emotions—but does it deliver, or does it crash and burn like a poorly planned assassination?

Spoiler alert: it’s a bit of both.

Buckle up then as I dive into this 32-episode whirlwind of love, betrayal, and some seriously questionable plot twists in our Kill Me Love Me review.

Kill Me Love Me starts off with a killer premise that hits you hard

Let’s start with the good stuff—because, oh boy, does this drama know how to reel you in.

Picture this: Prince Murong Jinghe (played by Liu Xue Yi), a brooding, crippled ex military general with a dark past, is blamed for torching Qingzhou and massacring its people, earning him the oh-so-charming nickname “Butcher General.”

Enter Mei Lin (Wu Jin Yan), a fierce orphan turned assassin who has spent years training to shove a dagger through his heart, believing Prince Jinghe is the monster who destroyed her family.

The twist?


Jinghe is secretly the mastermind behind her assassin training, pulling strings like a puppet master with a vendetta.

In other words, Kill Me Love Me is enemies-to-lovers dialed up to eleven, and the first few episodes are pure adrenaline.

That’s because the chemistry between Liu Xue Yi and Wu Jin Yan is one of the most electric things you will ever see on screen right from Kill Me Love Me, Episode 1 —think sparks flying off a clashing sword fight.

One minute, Mei Lin’s trying to strangle him in a pool (yes, that happens), and the next, they’re locking eyes like they might just kiss instead.

And when that kiss does come, it’s toxic, messy, bloody (yep, bloody) and absolutely delicious.

From assassin to adoring: The romance that lost its edge

But, here’s where things get tricky.

Kill Me Love Me starts as a gritty tale of vengeance, but somewhere around episode 10, it decides it’s actually a rom-com in disguise.

At that point, Jinghe goes from a snarling anti-hero to a lovesick puppy faster than you can say “plot twist,” and Mei Lin’s burning hatred melts into a puddle of devotion.

Sure, the shift isn’t inherently bad—Liu Xue Yi’s smoldering gaze could melt glaciers—but it’s jarring, as the drama trades its edgy, kill-or-be-killed tension for softer moments, like the couple hiding out in a picturesque village, baking cakes and flirting over drumbeats.

Cute? Sure. Thrilling? Not so much.

For a show called Kill Me Love Me, you’d expect more “kill” and less “love me” mushiness.

The enemies-to-lovers trope is a fan favorite for a reason, but this transition feels rushed, stripping away the delicious angst that made the early episodes so binge-worthy.

It’s like ordering spicy ramen and getting a bowl of plain noodles instead—still tasty, but not what you signed up for.

The last third of the Chinese drama: A plot trainwreck you can’t look away from

If the romance pivot raises an eyebrow, the last third of Kill Me Love Me will have you screaming at your screen.

After the first arc wraps up around episode 23—complete with a satisfying takedown of the real villain, Crown Prince Murong Xuan Lie (played by Baron Chen)—the story takes a hard left into “what is even happening?” territory.

Mei Lin, now poisoned and on a ticking clock, gets tangled in a convoluted power struggle in a neighboring state, fake-marries another prince (Yue Qin), and spends way too long separated from Jinghe.

The pacing drags, the stakes feel repetitive, and the side characters — like the tragically underused General Luo Mei — flail in poorly written sub-plots.

Fans on platforms like MyDramaList and Reddit have dubbed this the “trainwreck arc,” and they are not wrong.

After all, the drama tries to juggle palace intrigue, a love triangle, and a cure-the-poison quest, but it’s a mess of dropped threads and head-scratching choices.

Why kill off Yue Qin so abruptly? Why does the emperor’s creepy romance with a teenage consort get screen time? And what was the point of Mei Lin and Jinghe being separated for so long? Especially when that awful ending finally hits.

Because, yeah, don’t get me started on the finale. A finale in which, after all that suffering, Mei Lin dies, leaving Jinghe to mourn alone for 13 years.

It’s poetic, sure, but feels like a gut punch after 32 episodes of rooting for a happy ending.

The eye candy saves the day (sort of)

Even when the plot stumbles, Kill Me Love Me is still a gorgeous visual feast.

The cinematography is stunning, with its sweeping landscapes, dramatic battle scenes, and costumes so intricate you’ll want to pause and admire the embroidery.

Liu Xue Yi’s Murong Jinghe is a standout in one of the best performances I have ever seen by a Chinese actor (especially in the first few episodes), as his deep voice and menacing charisma carry the show even when the script falters.

Meanwhile, Wu Jin Yan’s Mei Lin is a badass with heart, her fighting skills matched only by her ability to make you feel her pain.

The Kill Me Love Me OST is also hauntingly beautiful, as well as perfectly underscores the drama’s tragic undertones.

Final verdict: Kill Me Love Me is a flawed gem still worth watching

So, should you watch Kill Me Love Me in 2025?

Yeah, you should. Because, hell, Liu Xue Yi’s performance is worth the price of a YOUKU subscription alone.

And, if you are a sucker for intense chemistry, gorgeous production values, and a revenge plot that hooks you early, you will love this even more.

Besides, the first 23 episodes alone make it worth a shot—just brace yourself for the second half’s wild derailment as, if you know it’s coming, it won’t hit you quite as hard.

No, Kill Me Love Me is not the masterpiece it could’ve been (looking at you, screenwriters), but it is most definitely a rollercoaster you won’t forget, and with some of the best performances ever captured on Chinese film.

And that’s why I am still giving it an 8/10 for Kill Me Love Me being flawed, frustrating, and utterly fabulous in equal measure.

Because, me? I loved it.

Watch Kill Me Love Me on YOUKU. And, yeah, you really should.