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TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love thai drama review
Completed
TharnType Season 2: 7 Years of Love
0 people found this review helpful
by Lee Jun Ho
7 hours ago
12 of 12 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 9.0
Story 9.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 5.0
Rewatch Value 8.0

TharnType 2: 7 Years of Love — Growing Up Doesn't Mean Love Becomes Less Exciting

One thing I appreciated immediately about TharnType 2 is that it doesn't try to repeat the first season. Seven years have passed, and thankfully the writers allow the characters to grow with that time. Instead of watching two young men discovering love for the first time, we're now following an established couple learning how to build a future together. It's a different kind of romance, but one I found just as enjoyable.

The story naturally feels more mature. The conflicts are no longer about whether Tharn and Type belong together, but about the challenges every long-term relationship eventually faces. Careers, trust, jealousy, family expectations, and the fear of change all become part of their everyday life. I actually enjoyed that shift because it shows that staying together can sometimes be just as difficult as falling in love.

What continues to carry the entire series is Mew Suppasit and Gulf Kanawut.

Their chemistry is still outstanding.

If anything, they look even more comfortable together than they did in the first season. Every scene feels effortless because they no longer have to convince us that Tharn and Type love each other. We already believe it. The affection between them feels natural, whether they're teasing each other, arguing, or simply sharing quiet moments at home. That's exactly how an established couple should look.

The intimate scenes also deserve credit. Like the first season, they never rely on explicit content to create passion. Instead, it's the trust between the actors and the confidence of their performances that makes every romantic moment believable. Few BL couples manage to create that level of intimacy while keeping it emotionally meaningful rather than simply provocative.

The supporting cast once again brings plenty of energy to the series. Some secondary storylines are stronger than others, but I enjoyed seeing familiar faces return and watching how everyone's lives had evolved over the years. While the focus occasionally shifts away from Tharn and Type for longer than necessary, I never felt completely disconnected from the main story.

Visually, the production remains consistent with the first season. The direction is confident, the pacing rarely drags, and the emotional scenes are given enough time to breathe. The soundtrack isn't particularly memorable, but it supports the atmosphere well without becoming distracting.

If I have one criticism, it's that some of the new conflicts don't feel quite as powerful as those in the original series. The emotional intensity of discovering each other for the first time is naturally impossible to recreate, and a few dramatic moments seem designed more to create temporary tension than to genuinely challenge the relationship. Even so, because the central couple is so convincing, those weaker moments never significantly affected my enjoyment.

Final Thought

TharnType 2: 7 Years of Love proves that romance doesn't end once two characters become a couple. Watching Tharn and Type navigate adult life together was just as rewarding as watching them fall in love. Mew and Gulf once again deliver outstanding performances, and their chemistry remains among the very best in BL. It may tell a quieter story than Season 1, but it's a story that feels honest, mature, and completely worth following.
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