Never trust ads or websites in videos. Our content is from the internet and we are not responsible for any ad content ⚠️
The Concubine's Code
The Concubine's Code Plot:
In early Republican China, opera star Su Wan is forced to become a warlord's concubine. While appearing submissive, she secretly navigates treacherous political waters with her theatrical skills. When her revolutionary childhood sweetheart reappears and the warlord's wife sets a deadly trap, this woman walking on the knife's edge must use her extraordinary talents to survive the turbulent times.
Comments
Scan for Mobile View
Scan this QR code with your mobile device to watch this video on your phone
Recommended Videos
Your World, My Rules
A short play about control and freedom, telling the story of how the protagonist finds themselves in someone else's world, ultimately discovering that true freedom comes from within.
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.
Dreams Weighing on Begonia
In 1930s China, down-and-out painter Shen Qingmeng meets wealthy heiress Haitang in Suzhou, bonding over a lost antique painting. Unbeknownst to them, the artwork holds century-old vendettas between their families. When Haitang faces an arranged marriage, Shen discovers the painting conceals the truth about her father's death. Torn between love and vengeance, they must choose: let dreams fade with the begonia, or uncover the bloody truth?
Love Without Expiry Date
Investment banker Cheng Ye falls for backpacker Su Man's philosophy of 'life as wilderness not rails'. Their romance shatters when he discovers her phone filled with one-way tickets - she's a perpetual wanderer. Between an engagement ring and boarding passes, a fierce clash erupts between rooted love and nomadic love.
Unmoored
Rising star designer Li Zhe finds himself adrift in a vortex of corporate deceit after his groundbreaking project wins acclaim. Days before clinching the industry's highest honor, his core bid documents vanish—with evidence pointing to his mentor. As he navigates treacherous waters, a mysterious informant reveals his meteoric success was built on stolen dreams. Now trapped between dizzying success and a bottomless abyss of guilt, Li Zhe must choose: ride the wave of lies to glory, or cut himself loose to drift toward redemption in uncharted waters.
Is This What Finding Family Feels Like?
Lin Xiaoman, 25, is a “family-less person” — after her grandma’s death, she poured all her energy into her e-commerce operation job and never thought about finding her biological parents. Until one day, an aunt in a floral dress blocked her at the company gate, holding her infant silver lock and crying, “I’m your mom.” Xiaoman was so scared she blocked the aunt on WeChat, only to find her favorite soft-boiled eggs on her desk every morning, warm honey water during overtime, and even moxibustion patches from the aunt after she casually mentioned “sore shoulders”. When she finally agreed to meet, the aunt took out a stack of crumpled notebooks — every page read, “Xiaoman worked overtime until 10 PM today” “Xiaoman likes lemon tea with less ice”. Xiaoman suddenly burst into tears: It turns out “the feeling of finding family” isn’t the dramatic hug from TV; it’s someone quietly engraving every little thing about you into their daily life.
Mom, I Don’t Want to Love You Anymore
On Lin Xiaoman's 30th birthday night, she slams the birth control pills her mom Su Min hid in her bag onto the table—it’s the Nth time her mom has interfered with her relationship. From tearing up her comic books in elementary school, forcing her to give up painting for accounting in college, to stalking her dates now, Su Min’s “for your own good” feels like a noose choking her. Xiaoman cries out, “Mom, I don’t want to love you anymore,” and slams the door. But three days later, she gets a critical illness notice from the hospital: Su Min was diagnosed with late-stage ovarian cancer a year ago. Those “controls” were just her desperate attempt to teach Xiaoman “how to live alone” in the little time she had left.