Enemies with Benefits Episode 9

ลัลล์ไม่ชอบไวน์ ‧ Drama ‧ 2026

9.4
Your Rating: -/10
Ratings: 9.4/10 from 23 users
Reviews: 3 users
Season: 1

As rumours about their relationship circulate around the company, Lal and Wine are called on to address the rumours. After denying the veracity, Wine cuts ties with Lal. Despite her hurt, Lal is later prepared to throw herself in harm's way to come to Wine's rescue. (Source: MyDramaList)
  • Aired: June 28, 2026

Enemies with Benefits Recent Discussions

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Greed, Avarice, Malice vs. True Love by Ivylina Jolie -1 0
Ivylina Jolie
8 days ago

Enemies with Benefits Episode 9 Reactions

Katelyn And Keo
0 people found this review helpful
5 days ago

Great job ladies!!!

Great job ladies!!!Our friends Nicola and Elle joined us for this episode!We loved it.!! Elle really enjoyed it. Nicola was GAGGED AND HAPPY AND EXCITED AND LOVED IT AND LAUGHED AND FELT SO SORROWFUL FOR LAL.Keo liked it.KATELYN LOVED IT IT WAS SO FREAKING GOOD I LIVED FOR THE MOMENT
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Her in Focus
0 people found this review helpful
7 days ago

Wine Finally Takes Control as Enemies with Benefits Sets Up an Unpredictable Finale

Wine finally stands up to Korn, a shocking Medsai reveal changes everything and Enemies with Benefits heads into its finale with plenty of unanswered questions. Our review explores the episode's standout performances from Jan and JingJing, the smart storytelling behind Wine's biggest moment yet, where the pacing occasionally stumbles and why the adaptation has become genuinely unpredictable heading into its final chapter - https://bit.ly/4aTwYwg
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Ivylina Jolie
0 people found this review helpful
8 days ago

The Best Episode Thus Far!

Episode 9: The Corporate Machine Ate My Heart and Washed It Down With TearsLast week I told you Episode 8 was a detonation. Episode 9 is the aftermath, and I am writing this from a smoldering crater of emotional devastation while clutching the charred remnants of my dignity. The series didn't just twist the knife — it forged an entire PowerPoint presentation on corporate treachery, printed it on my skin, and then set the projector on fire.Let me say this first, because it needs to be screamed from the top of a skyscraper: Enemies with Benefits is the most intelligently written Thai GL series we have. Episode 9 burned away whatever rom-com safety net I'd been subconsciously clinging to and revealed the cold, beautiful machinery underneath. This isn't petty office politics. This is greed and avarice breathing down your neck while you're just trying to steal a glance at the woman you love. Every "uneasy smile," every "hidden smirk" I mentioned before? They've graduated. They're full-blown chess moves now, orchestrated by people who see love as a liability and human hearts as collateral damage. The boardroom doesn't just have tension — it has fangs.And then there's Lal.If Episode 8 Lal was a golden retriever who thought matching pajamas constituted a merger agreement, Episode 9 Lal is that same dog left out in a thunderstorm, nose pressed to the glass, wondering why her human won't let her in. I was not prepared. Every single tear she shed — and there were enough to fill a quarterly sales report — dug that festering, hurting hole in my chest deeper. She isn't just missing Wine. She's grieving the future she'd already built in her head, the one with domestic mornings and Excel sheets that somehow led to forever. Watching her try to negotiate a deal with her own heartbreak, using every sales tactic she knows and failing spectacularly, was the kind of exquisite pain that makes you pause the screen just to breathe. Lal, you sweet, broken negotiator: some things can't be closed with a smile and an assumptive close.And Wine. Oh, Wine.The cognitive dissonance I diagnosed in Episode 8 has metastasized into full-blown self-immolation. This woman shed tears for the pain she was causing Lal, and I believe those tears were real, but she shed them while her hands were still tied by the ghosts she refuses to exorcise. She’s not just a dormouse with Korn anymore; she's a hostage negotiator who's forgotten which side she's on. The steel magnolia is rusting from the inside out, and watching her choose — actively choose — a path that sets both of them on fire was a masterclass in tragic character writing. The series keeps asking: what does survival cost? And Wine keeps answering with her own destruction.The toxic workplace isn't a backdrop anymore. It's a character. A greedy, avaricious, shark-eyed character that grinds up vulnerability and uses it as coffee creamer. Which brings me to the question that Episode 9 branded onto my achy breaky heart with a sizzling iron: In an environment this ruthless, where every alliance is a spreadsheet and every secret is leverage, is there a place for true love? Or is love just another resource to be exploited, another weakness to be managed by HR?I don't have an answer yet. The episode made me bleed bitterness and longing and disappointment, the way only the best drama can. I wanted to reach through the screen, wrap Lal in a blanket, and enroll Wine in an emergency therapy session conducted by a hostage negotiator with a specialty in haunted women. And somewhere in the wreckage, Tangkwa and Proud are still orbiting their own confusion — a subplot that now feels almost merciful, a small candle flickering in a typhoon of corporate evil.If Episode 8 made you scream-text the group chat, Episode 9 will make you type in silence, delete the message, and just stare at the wall. It's brilliant. It's devastating. It's the kind of storytelling that respects its audience enough to hurt them honestly.Go watch it. Bring tissues. Bring a whiteboard to diagram your feelings. Then come find me in the wreckage. I'll be the one still trying to figure out if love can survive a quarterly review.

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