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Love Has Fireworks chinese drama review
Completed
Love Has Fireworks
16 people found this review helpful
by DramaDreams100
2 days ago
36 of 36 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 7.5
Story 7.5
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 9.5
Rewatch Value 5.0
This review may contain spoilers

Come for the Workplace Drama, Stay for the Slowest Slow Burn

I went into Love Has Fireworks expecting a modern romance. What I got instead was a workplace drama set in the world of investment banking, IPOs, venture capital, and corporate politics—with a romance quietly growing in the background.

Whether that’s a positive or a negative depends entirely on what you’re looking for.

The setup is genuinely fun. Qian Fei buys an apartment with her fiancé, only to have him leave her for a wealthy woman who offers him career advancement. Unable to afford the mortgage alone, she rents out the second bedroom, only to discover her new roommate is Li Yifei—the same man she’s already had several disastrous run-ins with. It’s an entertaining premise that naturally leads to them becoming reluctant roommates.

From there, however, the show shifts its attention almost entirely to work. Much of the story revolves around the attempted IPO of a hotel company, the increasingly messy corporate cover-ups surrounding it, the investigation into who keeps framing Qian Fei, and the politics inside the investment banking world. If you enjoy business strategy, financial intrigue, and watching complicated projects slowly unravel, there’s quite a bit here to appreciate.

The romance is exactly what people mean when they say “slow burn.” Li Yifei and Qian Fei don’t suddenly fall for each other—they slowly settle into each other’s daily lives until they function like a couple before either of them realizes it. Their domestic life together is actually one of the strongest parts of the series. They know each other’s routines, support one another naturally, and gradually become each other’s safe place.

The problem is that the burn may simply be too slow.

Li Yifei recognizes his feelings fairly early, but hesitates because he’s afraid confessing will destroy the comfortable home they’ve built together if she doesn’t feel the same. That’s a believable concern. Unfortunately, the show stretches the uncertainty much longer than necessary. Nearly everyone around them recognizes they’re in love long before they do, making the inevitable romance feel artificially delayed.

The repeated misunderstanding about Li Yifei supposedly having a girlfriend is probably the clearest example. He directly tells Qian Fei multiple times that he doesn’t have one, yet she continues insisting that he does. I understand what the writers were trying to accomplish—Qian Fei doesn’t yet understand her own jealousy or feelings—but after hearing the same misunderstanding repeated over and over, it starts feeling less like character development and more like a device to postpone the relationship.

Fortunately, the misunderstandings never completely take over the show. The workplace storyline remains the primary focus, which kept me watching even when the romance stalled.

Tan Jianci’s Li Yifei has one of the clearer character arcs in the show. At the beginning, he absolutely is arrogant, showy, and full of rich-heir confidence—so much so that Qian Fei saves him in her phone as “Pretentious Li.” What makes him worth rooting for is not that he starts out warm and grounded, but that he changes. Over time, he learns how to help without turning everything into a performance, how to pay attention to what someone else actually needs, and how to become emotionally reliable—especially for Qian Fei. His growth from spoiled, self-impressed heir to someone capable of real domestic care is one of the stronger parts of the drama.

Overall, I enjoyed the series, but mostly because I watched it between heavier dramas. It worked well as something calmer that mixed workplace intrigue with a gradually developing relationship. If you’re looking for a romance where the leads are together early or where emotional progression drives the story, this probably isn’t the drama for you.

If, however, you enjoy modern workplace dramas with competent professionals, corporate intrigue, and a romance that quietly develops alongside everything else, Love Has Fireworks may be exactly what you’re looking for.
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