Ladies, don’t say I didn’t warn you. Do not put on eye makeup before you press play on episode 7.
Who could have guessed that Pete chasing his man into the spirit world would leave me this wrecked? And I don’t mean a single, aesthetic tear sliding down his cheek. I mean full-on, can’t-breathe ugly crying that drags you straight into the wreckage with him. So if you find yourself breaking down alongside Pete, be kind to the delicate skin around your eyes. Moisturize. And whatever you do, don’t rub.
The episode opens with a reference to Zhuangzi’s butterfly dream, which finally makes sense of those recurring butterflies in the opening credits. The world Pete enters is governed by the “Great Void,” and its rule is merciless: stay longer than eight hours, and both souls are swallowed whole. Beneath all that beauty, the premise is ultimately a meditation on existence versus nothingness.
And as Pete keeps shouting Niran’s name into that emptiness, I caught myself wondering what “Niran” actually means in Thai. Strangely, it almost sounds like “Nani” spelled backwards. It feels familiar, yet not quite, carrying a faint sense of distance that makes his desperate calling feel even more hollow.
Then there’s the jade ring. The restraint is unreal. It is one of the most elegant, understated acts of shipping I have ever seen. No dramatic confession, just a quiet symbol loaded with cultural and emotional weight. Still, if I had been writing that scene, I might have let Pete say something far less restrained, and far more devastating:
“Come with me. Please. I need you. I don’t care how much you matter to anyone else. I can’t live without you.”
Because sometimes what truly destroys you is not the metaphor. It is hearing the words when there is no way out left.
I freaking cried with today's episode. What a heartfelt one. Nani really put in his all for this episode for real. The different types of crying ><
1. Sad that he cant stay with his parents even though its all he wants 2. Devastated about losing his important one.
The whole journey to convince Niran's ethereal soul to go back with him willingly... also depends on Niran's state of mind at that stage he's in 1. as a kid, 2. as a new Wu, 3. as the one that got lost.
I would have died if P'Wa ended at the black screen I SWEAR.
It's always Pete guys!! The one asking Niran if they're going to have feelings, asking why wearing ring on that finger. Found guilty😌 He is one who fell harder!!
"the english title, 'Plan B To U,' has a special meaning. since krit was never part of nile’s life plans before, nile had to come up with a backup plan (Plan B) to get back at him for all the trouble he caused. but since nothing worked, he kept coming up with plans C, D... until he reached Plan U (You), focused on that person who was never in the plans but always makes nile lose his cool." -BY JITTIRAIN (AUTHOR)
Replying toDevyCat66•Feb 16, 2026•Liked 4 days ago
Please give Boun a better partner who knows how to act. Prem is holding him back from achieving his potential..
they have been partners for a long time. i think, if boun didn’t feel comfortable being in a pair with prem, he would have replaced him a long time ago or right after the end of 'revamp'. if they are comfortable with each other, then why not
When Gaysorn found his mother's beads in the dirt, I felt bad for him. But then they showed him holding the skeleton arm and I laughed out loud. Probably not the vibe they were going for.
Who could have guessed that Pete chasing his man into the spirit world would leave me this wrecked? And I don’t mean a single, aesthetic tear sliding down his cheek. I mean full-on, can’t-breathe ugly crying that drags you straight into the wreckage with him. So if you find yourself breaking down alongside Pete, be kind to the delicate skin around your eyes. Moisturize. And whatever you do, don’t rub.
The episode opens with a reference to Zhuangzi’s butterfly dream, which finally makes sense of those recurring butterflies in the opening credits. The world Pete enters is governed by the “Great Void,” and its rule is merciless: stay longer than eight hours, and both souls are swallowed whole. Beneath all that beauty, the premise is ultimately a meditation on existence versus nothingness.
And as Pete keeps shouting Niran’s name into that emptiness, I caught myself wondering what “Niran” actually means in Thai. Strangely, it almost sounds like “Nani” spelled backwards. It feels familiar, yet not quite, carrying a faint sense of distance that makes his desperate calling feel even more hollow.
Then there’s the jade ring. The restraint is unreal. It is one of the most elegant, understated acts of shipping I have ever seen. No dramatic confession, just a quiet symbol loaded with cultural and emotional weight. Still, if I had been writing that scene, I might have let Pete say something far less restrained, and far more devastating:
“Come with me. Please. I need you. I don’t care how much you matter to anyone else. I can’t live without you.”
Because sometimes what truly destroys you is not the metaphor. It is hearing the words when there is no way out left.
1. Sad that he cant stay with his parents even though its all he wants
2. Devastated about losing his important one.
The whole journey to convince Niran's ethereal soul to go back with him willingly... also depends on Niran's state of mind at that stage he's in 1. as a kid, 2. as a new Wu, 3. as the one that got lost.
I would have died if P'Wa ended at the black screen I SWEAR.
Loved everything about it.
The one asking Niran if they're going to have feelings, asking why wearing ring on that finger.
Found guilty😌
He is one who fell harder!!
Joke aside I feel like he is giving to charity or smth like that.
-BY JITTIRAIN (AUTHOR)