La emperatriz Gu Qing fue asesinada y pereció en un incendio, transmigrando su alma al cuerpo de Feng Qing, una doncella del Armario Imperial. Para proteger a su hermana menor, Gu Wan, y encontrar al verdadero culpable, se desenvuelve como doncella en las complejas relaciones entre las concubinas y une fuerzas con su hermano menor, el médico imperial Gu Xuan, para burlar a las diversas facciones del harén. Recorre el palacio de nueve niveles paso a paso, y su vínculo con el emperador Xiao Luo se renueva silenciosamente en medio de estos enfrentamientos. (Fuente: WeTV) Edit Translation
- Español
- Русский
- English
- Português (Brasil)
Dónde ver Regreso Glorioso
Reparto y créditos
- Gao Xi ErFeng QingPapel principal
- Zhao Hua WeiXiao LuoPapel principal
- Wang RitaGu QingPapel secundario
- Wu Man SiGu WanPapel secundario
- Chu Zi JunGu XuanPapel secundario
- Liu Yi Ling Papel secundario
Reseñas
Short Drama, Big Brain Moves… and One Very Complicated Love Life ?
Glory Back is one of those mini dramas that quietly walks in, does its job properly, and then leaves you wondering why full-length dramas can’t get their act together like this.For a short format, the production is surprisingly solid. Costumes look good, sets don’t feel cheap, and the pacing actually respects your time. No dragging, no filler, no “let’s stare at each other for 5 minutes while sad music plays.” It moves, and it moves with purpose.
Acting is where this one really earns its keep. The female lead carries the drama with sharp expressions and that calm, calculating energy you expect in a palace revenge setup. She’s not loud, not overdone, just controlled and smart. The kind that makes you lean in a bit. Even the supporting cast hold their ground, which is rare in minis where half the cast usually looks like they just showed up for snacks.
Now the honest bit. The romance… yeah, that’s where things get messy. The emperor situation is exactly what you think it is. One man, multiple women, shared affection, and somehow we are supposed to believe this is deep love. Didn’t quite land. You can see what they were trying to do, but it felt more political than emotional. A few viewers felt the same, struggling to really root for that pairing .
That said, the drama doesn’t collapse because of it. The intrigue, schemes, and constant tension keep things interesting enough that you don’t sit there waiting for romance to save it.
What this drama does right is simple. It takes a full-length palace story, trims the nonsense, keeps the spice, and delivers it fast. No overthinking, no overpromising.
Final take. Not perfect, but for a mini drama, this is dangerously close to showing the big dramas how it should be done. Short, sharp, well-acted, and just messy enough to keep you hooked.
I came for the chaos and stayed for the schemes but the emotional payoff just wasn’t giving
I went into this expecting a typical palace revenge story, but what I got was actually a very plot-driven, tightly written harem drama, and I enjoyed it more than I expected.The strongest part of this drama is really the harem politics. It’s messy, ruthless, and honestly very entertaining. The story takes time to show different consorts across the hierarchy, and each one brings a different kind of danger. Some are outright cruel, some are calculated, and some are just unhinged 😭 but it works because it makes the palace feel alive and constantly shifting.
Feng Qing carries this drama for me. She’s intelligent, strategic, and most importantly, she moves on her own terms. She doesn’t wait to be saved, and she doesn’t rely on the emperor emotionally or politically. Everything she does feels intentional, and that makes her very satisfying to watch.
The writing is also stronger than I expected. The schemes are thought out, and the revenge plot is quite tight.
But where it falls short for me is the emotional execution, especially the romance.
There was so much potential in her relationship with the emperor—their past was built on love, distrust, and power imbalance—but the way they reconnect in the present timeline feels underdeveloped. I never fully bought into their reconciliation. It lacked the emotional weight and buildup that it needed.
I also wish we saw more vulnerability from the emperor. Given everything that happened, there should have been more grief, more conflict, more visible regret. Instead, that emotional layer felt a bit too restrained, which made the romance less impactful than it could have been.
Some side storylines didn’t really add much (the adopted brother arc didn’t work for me), and there are a few moments where the plot leans slightly convenient, but overall the structure remains solid.
At the end of the day, this is a strong, engaging drama carried by its plot and female lead, but it stops short of being truly memorable because it doesn’t fully deliver on the emotional side.
Still, I had a good time watching it—and for this genre, that already says a lot.
8/10 - A solid and enjoyable watch with strong writing in its political and strategic elements, but lacking the emotional depth needed to elevate it further.




















