Never trust ads or websites in videos. Our content is from the internet and we are not responsible for any ad content ⚠️
Spring Festival Counterattack: Taming the Toxic Relatives
Spring Festival Counterattack: Taming the Toxic Relatives Plot:
Lin Xiaoman, a fresh graduate stuck in 996, dreads every Spring Festival—it’s her "disaster day"! Her aunt nags her to marry, Uncle Li pries into her salary, and her cousin steals the gold jewelry she bought for grandma… These toxic relatives’ antics push her to the edge. This year, she’s prepared "counterattack ammo": the health products her aunt obsesses over are a scam, her cousin’s three-year NEET secret, Uncle Li’s factory owes workers three months’ wages… But just as she’s about to confront them with evidence, grandma pulls out her primary school essay *My New Year Wish*: "I hope all relatives like me, and we can have a warm New Year’s Eve dinner together." It turns out grandma knew everything—behind those harsh words, there’s the aunt’s panic over her loneliness, the cousin’s urgency to buy insulin for grandma, and even Uncle Li, who loves to show off, once slipped pocket money into her bag secretly. Xiaoman suddenly realizes: the real "counterattack" is never about winning—it’s learning to hold her family’s clumsy love with tenderness.
Comments
Scan for Mobile View
Scan this QR code with your mobile device to watch this video on your phone
Recommended Videos
Mr. Li's Secret Darling
Tycoon Li Mohan accidentally takes in amnesiac girl Su Nuan and keeps her in his private villa. As memories resurface, she discovers she's actually the daughter of Li's business rival. Their relationship evolves from mutual suspicion to genuine affection amidst layers of deception. When family vendettas emerge, Li must choose between corporate vengeance and true love.
The Return to Capital
Shen Qingtang, the disgraced general's daughter who was exiled a decade ago, returns to the capital posing as a merchant. While running a rouge shop as cover, she secretly investigates her family's massacre, only to clash with imperial censor Pei Jingchen. As their childhood betrothal resurfaces, as political rivals' daughters approach with ulterior motives, and as a mysterious fire destroys crucial evidence—she must choose between vengeance and love. Meanwhile, in the palace shadows, the mastermind behind it all awaits her next move.
The Queen's Dog Hole Escape
In the royal court, Empress Yulan tires of her confined life and frequently escapes through a secret dog hole to seek freedom outside. On one adventure, she meets Ai Fei, a wandering artist, and their romance blossoms in the lively streets. But the Emperor catches wind of her actions and sends guards in pursuit, entangling her in court conspiracies. As she slips out again, Ai Fei’s identity as a traitorous spy surfaces, forcing Yulan into a heart-wrenching clash between love and loyalty. Climaxing with the Emperor closing in, the dog hole becomes a battleground of betrayal and revelation—will Yulan’s daring escape lead to true love or shattering choices? (200 words)
The Copy Everything Pot: Time-Travel Adventure
A modern youth Wang Xiao accidentally travels back to the chaotic Warring States period with a magic pot that can replicate any model into real objects. Using the pot to copy luxuries, he thrives in the ancient world, but draws the envy of imperial figures who plot against him. When he replicates a fake general, it sparks a deadly power struggle. Emotionally torn, he falls for an enemy princess, leading to life-or-death choices. Will the fake emperor he created unravel history, and can he save his love? This thrilling adventure is packed with twists and humor.
Hard to Be Good: Trending Nightmare
Food courier Chen Mo helps an elderly woman who fell in the rain, only to become the target of viral hatred when a manipulated video trends as #FakeGoodGuyStunt. Crushed by cyberbullying, job loss, and his girlfriend's betrayal, he's shocked when the woman he saved reveals herself as an undercover journalist investigating media manipulation. Together they trace the smear campaign to a shadowy 'trending topic machine'—operated by Chen Mo's girlfriend's powerful employer. As buried lies surface, an ordinary man's act of kindness ignites a high-stakes war against capital-driven misinformation, where every rescued truth threatens to drown them in deeper peril.
Lumen Gate
Jiang Yan, heir to the notorious underworld syndicate 'Lumen Gate', falls for Ling Wei, a wine steward hiding her identity as an assassin. When Ling receives orders to eliminate Jiang, the wedding chapel becomes a kill zone. As her blade plunges toward his heart, Jiang wrenches her wrist and kisses the knife's edge—revealing he orchestrated this lethal ceremony as her final initiation test through the gates of darkness.
Lucky Concubine & Fox Concubine: Forging Ahead Through Hatred
Lin Zhixia, daughter of a general, infiltrates the palace to avenge her family’s massacre—only to be labeled the “Lucky Concubine” and win the emperor’s favor, all while hiding her plan to kill him. Su Wantang, a fox demon, poses as a beloved concubine to steal the emperor’s dragon qi (needed to free her clan sealed by the royal family), faking a “dragon pregnancy” for her scheme. Once bitter harem rivals, they uncover a shocking truth: the emperor is behind both their tragedies! As the lies of “luck” and “pregnancy” unravel, will these two hate-filled women keep feuding… or team up to expose the emperor’s hypocrisy? The road of hatred is dangerous, but they’re determined to walk it to the end.
My Security Guard Dad Accidentally Married My Crush
Lin Xiaochuan has had a crush on Su Wan, the gentle librarian downstairs, for three years. Just as he works up the courage to confess, he撞见 his dad Lin Jianguo—an honest security guard—helping Su Wan move luggage at their doorstep. To his shock, his dad holds up a marriage certificate and says with a smile: "Wanwan is your stepmom!" It turns out Su Wan needed to "get married" within a week to inherit her grandma's library, and mistakenly took Lin Jianguo—who was helping a neighbor fill out forms—as her contractual spouse. Meanwhile, Lin Jianguo thought it was a reliable blind date set up by the community, so he agreed to marry her without hesitation. Now, Lin Xiaochuan has to help his dad cover up the "contract marriage" while suppressing his feelings for Su Wan. But Su Wan gradually realizes: this "stepson" who always avoids her is exactly the boy she's been quietly watching—the one who used to write love letters in the corner of the library...
When I Threw My Wife's Teddy Bear, I Found Her Secret
Lin Mo, married to Su Xiao for three years, is at his wits' end—his wife is obsessed with a half-human-sized teddy bear, hugging it while eating, sleeping, even ditching their wedding anniversary for it. One night, Lin Mo snaps: he slams his chopsticks, flips the table, and hurls the bear to the ground. As the fabric tears, a locked wooden box rolls out. When he pries it open, he collapses—it’s Su Xiao’s late-stage pancreatic cancer diagnosis from three months ago, and a video of her, skeletal yet smiling: “Mo Ge, I was scared you’d be lonely. I put our movie tickets, the glass marble you gave me… everything into the bear. Hug it when you miss me.” Lin Mo holds the torn bear, sobbing until dawn, realizing his wife’s “obsession” was a final, life-giving warmth.
When Courting the Goddess, I Gave My Heart Away
Lin Chuan, a socially awkward programmer, had a crush on campus goddess Su Wan for three years. He secretly wrote a 108-page "courtship manual"—calculating her milk tea sweetness and matching his outfits to hers—yet every move failed: spilling morning tea on her white dress, deleting her thesis while fixing her computer. Just as he prepared to give up, Su Wan asked him to the playground: "I’ve read all your 'courtship plans' in the notebook." Panicked, Lin Chuan stammered an apology—until Su Wan pulled out a pink-flannel notebook: "This is my 'anti-courtship diary'—since you gave me warm ginger tea the first time, I’ve waited for your 'sincere surrender'." It turns out every "chance encounter" was intentional, every "smile without reply" was waiting; the so-called "courtship" was just two silly kids passing their hearts through a thin layer of paper.