A CEO who folded faster than a lawn chair the moment he caught feelings.
How do you review A Boss and a Babe when your main memories are Cher's chaos, Gun's heart eyes, and ForceBook making office romance look dangerously appealing?
This series really looked at the boss-and-intern trope and said, "What if we added gaming, found family, emotional healing, and enough green flags to restore your faith in humanity?"
Cher walked into the office with approximately three brain cells, unlimited optimism, and enough chaotic energy to power the entire company.
Gun took one look at him and immediately forgot how to function normally.
Honestly?
Understandable.
Book Kasidet brought so much warmth, humor, and sincerity to Cher that it was impossible not to fall in love with him alongside Gun. Beneath all the jokes and teasing was someone incredibly thoughtful and deeply caring about the people around him.
And Force as Gun?
The king of quiet affection.
The emperor of supportive boyfriends.
The CEO of looking at someone like they've personally become the best part of your day.
Watching Gun slowly lower his walls while Cher reminded him that life could be joyful again gave us one of the softest workplace romances in recent years.
Their relationship wasn't built on drama or misunderstandings.
It was built on communication.
On support.
On showing up for each other even when things got difficult.
Revolutionary concept.
The office crew and gaming friends brought so much life and humor to the series that every interaction felt warm and genuine.
The friendships felt real, messy, and supportive in exactly the way found families should.
And can we talk about the people behind the camera?
Director New Siwaj Sawatmaneekul understood exactly what this story needed: comfort.
The pacing remained light without feeling shallow, while the emotional moments were given enough room to land when they mattered most.
The production team leaned fully into the cozy atmosphere of the office, gaming streams, and everyday moments that made the world feel lived in and welcoming.
And the soundtrack?
Pure serotonin.
Every song somehow managed to make an already adorable scene feel even softer.
A Boss and a Babe wasn't trying to reinvent workplace romances.
It didn't need to.
This wasn't enemies-to-lovers.
This wasn't emotional devastation.
This was tired CEO × human sunshine with a gaming headset.
And honestly?
Sometimes that's exactly what you need.
10/10.
Would absolutely join the gaming streams, become part of the office friend group, and watch Gun fall a little more in love with Cher every single episode all over again.
This series really looked at the boss-and-intern trope and said, "What if we added gaming, found family, emotional healing, and enough green flags to restore your faith in humanity?"
Cher walked into the office with approximately three brain cells, unlimited optimism, and enough chaotic energy to power the entire company.
Gun took one look at him and immediately forgot how to function normally.
Honestly?
Understandable.
Book Kasidet brought so much warmth, humor, and sincerity to Cher that it was impossible not to fall in love with him alongside Gun. Beneath all the jokes and teasing was someone incredibly thoughtful and deeply caring about the people around him.
And Force as Gun?
The king of quiet affection.
The emperor of supportive boyfriends.
The CEO of looking at someone like they've personally become the best part of your day.
Watching Gun slowly lower his walls while Cher reminded him that life could be joyful again gave us one of the softest workplace romances in recent years.
Their relationship wasn't built on drama or misunderstandings.
It was built on communication.
On support.
On showing up for each other even when things got difficult.
Revolutionary concept.
The office crew and gaming friends brought so much life and humor to the series that every interaction felt warm and genuine.
The friendships felt real, messy, and supportive in exactly the way found families should.
And can we talk about the people behind the camera?
Director New Siwaj Sawatmaneekul understood exactly what this story needed: comfort.
The pacing remained light without feeling shallow, while the emotional moments were given enough room to land when they mattered most.
The production team leaned fully into the cozy atmosphere of the office, gaming streams, and everyday moments that made the world feel lived in and welcoming.
And the soundtrack?
Pure serotonin.
Every song somehow managed to make an already adorable scene feel even softer.
A Boss and a Babe wasn't trying to reinvent workplace romances.
It didn't need to.
This wasn't enemies-to-lovers.
This wasn't emotional devastation.
This was tired CEO × human sunshine with a gaming headset.
And honestly?
Sometimes that's exactly what you need.
10/10.
Would absolutely join the gaming streams, become part of the office friend group, and watch Gun fall a little more in love with Cher every single episode all over again.
Was this review helpful to you?
