Other Short Dramas
System fallback tag for dramas and articles without a more specific tag.

The Missing Love(English dubbed versio)
After the real golden girl, Xu Mingzhu, is recognized. The fake daughter Xu Qi's parents and brother, who have always doted on her, start to listen to Xu Mingzhu's words. Because they mistakenly believe that Xu Qi has pushed her grandmother down the stairs and caused her to fall into a coma, the Xu family sends Xu Qi to a school of female virtue to repent and change her ways. Resulted in Xu Qi suffering from three years of inhumane torture and irreversible lifelong disability. Three years later, Xu was taken back by the Xu family and the Xu family found that the once bright and smiling Xu now rejects everyone.

Claiming His Hidden Mate and Pup
SOPHIA CARTER , a werewolf and a single mom, unfortunately gets expelled from her tribe and becomes a rogue. By chance, she becomes the official guardian of Alpha LUCIAN HARRINGTON’smissing child, but ironically, neither of them realize the child is both of theirs. From there, they become entangled, mysteriously drawn to each other, while VANESSA REID——Lucian’s fiance——tries to tear them apart.

More Than a Trainer: The Secret Matriarch
At an elite high-society gala, self-made real estate CEO Rella unexpectedly runs into her mother, Catherine—a humble horse trainer. The snobby guests relentlessly mock Catherine, assuming she only got in through her daughter's connections. But their jaws drop when the city's most powerful tycoons arrive, all bowing down to treat Catherine as their ultimate VIP! Just what shocking secret identity is this seemingly ordinary horse trainer hiding?

Another Kind of Exchange Wife
Rylee finds out her husband is cheating with a client’s wife, Sarah, and goes to the hotel to catch them. There, she runs into Wade, who came for the same reason. The two team up for revenge and uncover a carefully planned scheme. Both couples put on a perfect show in public—but behind closed doors, it’s all lies and manipulation. When the masks come off, which pair will win the final game?

Dragon Firefighter and His Love
Freya thought she was going to die, trapped in a raging fire—until someone burst through the flames to save her. Ethan. Her childhood friend. The boy she secretly loved for ten years. But Ethan had vanished three years ago without a word, leaving Freya to face her darkest days alone. Now he’s back as a firefighter. Still gentle. Still familiar. Still making her heart race. Yet the pain of his sudden disappearance still lingers. Worse, she believes he’s become a heartless womanizer.

My Adoptive Husband
Killed by her spouse in a past life, she gets reborn, takes revenge on betrayers, braves gunfights and intrigues, and gains genuine love and dominance.

The Antidote: Reborn to Save the World
Lin Shumeng was a brilliant researcher who developed a zombie cure—only to be murdered by her cheating boyfriend Song Renhui and his mistress. Moments later, the apocalypse took them all. Then fate reset the clock. They both woke up one month before the outbreak, with all their memories intact. While Song scrambled to hoard supplies with his mistress, taking out high-interest loans to build his doomsday empire, Lin quietly planned her revenge. She lent him money with crushing interest rates, sold him her villa at an inflated price, and loaded him with debt that would collapse before the first zombie appeared. But revenge was not her only goal. She returned to her lab and discovered the green virus that started it all was a weapon—manufactured by a shadowy corporation. No one believed her—except Fu Beiye, the young heir of a pharmaceutical empire. He trusted her. Together, they developed the antidote in time to stop the first wave. Song and his mistress, now working with the corporation’s security chief, launched attack after attack: poisoning a water plant, sabotaging a conference, releasing an upgraded virus. Every scheme failed. And the security chief? He was Fu Beiye’s own stepbrother, consumed by a false revenge. At the wedding of Lin and Fu, the stepbrother drugged Lin’s drink to destroy her. They switched the cups. The mistress drank it instead and was disgraced. Song and his lover ended in prison. Cornered, the stepbrother kidnapped them to a childhood hideout, planning to die together. The truth about his parents’ death was finally revealed—it was never Fu’s family to blame. His obsession shattered. He was taken away. But the real enemy remained. The corporation’s Founders Council had a plan: release the ultimate virus in seven global cities, killing billions. Lin and Fu joined forces with an Interpol agent and a defector from the Council itself. They traveled to the Antarctic base, fought through gunfire and mutant monsters, and destroyed the core database. Along the way, a shocking truth emerged: Fu Beiye was the illegitimate son of the Council’s founder. He and his stepbrother were actually half-brothers by blood. Using their combined DNA, Lin and Fu cracked the virus’s encryption and created the final antidote. The world was saved. At the end of it all, Lin Shumeng was pregnant. She and Fu Beiye embraced by the sea—closing the chapter on the apocalypse and welcoming a new beginning where love, not vengeance, carried the future forward.

Reborn to Bring Treasures Home
A beloved cobalt-glazed rabbit-head vase from the Yongzheng era was shattered by invaders in 1900. Its soul traveled across a century and was reborn as Ning Le—the ignored legitimate daughter of a modern family, whose place had been stolen by her stepsister. With her new human form, Ning Le awakened a supernatural gift: she could hear the whispers of ancient artifacts and absorb their spiritual energy. No longer the timid girl who endured abuse, she fought back. When her stepsister came to slap her, Ning Le levitated using the room’s antique aura—stunning everyone into silence. She vowed to bring lost national treasures home. With her peerless appraisal skills, she bought a discarded imperial seal for fifty yuan and sold it for half a million. She made a bet with the market’s top picker, then uncovered one priceless relic after another: Wang Xizhi’s brush, the Yongle Encyclopedia, a Tang dynasty flying Apsaras. Her finds exceeded a hundred million yuan. She won, forcing her opponent to kneel, and became a rising star. Returning to her family with a fortune, she exposed her father’s bias and her stepmother’s greed, humiliated her vicious stepsister, and walked away for good. At a high-end auction, she met Gu Shiyan, the king of Haicheng’s antique world. He was captivated by her talent and patriotism. They joined forces, triumphed over conspiracies, and fell in love. His stepbrother and her stepsister plotted to destroy them. Ning Le escaped every trap. She bought a blind box for three hundred million and found three national treasures inside, costing her enemy one point two billion. She cracked open a black-market Buddha head to reveal pure Hetian jade—and refused a fortune to keep it, donating it to the state instead. But fate had other plans. While shielding Gu Shiyan, she was gravely wounded. At the same moment, the original vase was fully restored—and the porcelain soul had to return. They said goodbye on a Ferris wheel. Her soul drifted back into the blue vase. Years later, Gu Shiyan stood before the vase in a museum, tears in his eyes. He spent the rest of his life recovering lost Chinese relics—keeping a promise across life and death, and writing a legend of love and devotion to the nation’s heritage.

Reborn: No More Fool
In his past life, Ye Fan loved Liu Ruyan for ten years. He gave her everything. The Liu family called him a groveling fool. She married him only to make her first love jealous. When that man returned, he framed Ye Fan for theft and murder. Liu Ruyan divorced him without a second thought. Ye Fan died on the street—killed by the man she chose. The only one who tried to save him was Liu Jingru, her sister. She died too. Then he woke up. It was his wedding day. The priest asked if he would take her as his wife. He said no. Cold. Final. When Liu Ruyan ran off to tend to her first love’s fake collapse, Ye Fan cut ties with the Liu family in front of everyone and walked away. This time, he played to win. Using his memories of the future, he invested in lithium at rock-bottom prices. The market surged tenfold. He made his first fortune. Then he launched an e-commerce platform with a viral referral system. Fifty million users in three months. Market cap: ten billion. Without Ye Fan, the Liu Group collapsed. Stock prices plummeted. Partners fled. Funds dried up. Liu Ruyan began to see the truth: the man she had scorned was the one who had held her family together. It was Ye Fan who saved her from a fire. Ye Fan who cooked for her when she was sick. Ye Fan who pulled her company out of crisis. Her first love had stolen every credit. When that man tried to drain the Liu fortune and frame Ye Fan for murder, Ye Fan struck back. At a victory banquet, he played the evidence for all to see. Ou Haochen was sentenced to death for murder, embezzlement, and fraud. Liu Ruyan finally knew the truth. She knelt. She begged. Ye Fan turned away without a word. He chose Liu Jingru instead—the only one who had ever truly stood by him. Her belated love was worth less than nothing.

Mountain Stream, Magic Vial
Li Fei was always sick. Too weak to hold a job, he went back to his rural hometown, where everyone called him a useless leech. His girlfriend left him. His life hit rock bottom. Then a crab pinched his finger in a mountain stream. He fished out an ancient porcelain vase engraved with the name of Li Er. His blood awakened it. The vase was a celestial treasure—able to nourish life, heal the dying, and turn the ordinary into the miraculous. Li Fei drank from it. His illness vanished. He watered a withered rose—it bloomed into seven colors unseen on earth. He aged cheap ginseng into thirty-five-year-old premium roots, selling them for a million yuan. His rainbow roses sold for eighty thousand. In weeks, he went from broke to wealthy. The rose buyer was Chu Xinyue, owner of New Moon Restaurant. Business became partnership. Partnership became something deeper. With the vase, Li Fei grew oranges and vegetables that tasted like nothing else. He raised ordinary tilapia into ""divine fish"" that rivaled the rarest catches. New Moon Restaurant thrived, overtaking the city's biggest dining chain, Oasis Hotel. Its owner, Wu Wenzhong, and his manager Wang Chao fought back. They spread lies, monopolized the fish supply, and bribed a thug to poison Li Fei's farm. All the fish died. All the crops withered. Li Fei poured water from the vase. The fish came back to life. The plants sprouted again. And the surveillance camera had recorded everything. The climax came at the 70th birthday banquet of Chu Xinyue's grandfather. Li Fei offered a blessed Angong Niuhuang Pill as a gift. The elites laughed at him—a country boy with cheap medicine, they said. They tried to throw him out. Then the grandfather collapsed. He was bleeding from the mouth, slipping into a coma. The best doctor in the city declared it hopeless. Li Fei fed him half the pill. The old man woke up. His chronic ailments were gone. The doctor offered ten million for the remaining half. The crowd fell silent. Desperate, Wu Wenzhong pulled a knife. Li Fei disarmed him with one hand. The police arrived, armed with the poisoning evidence. Wu, Wang, and the thug were all arrested. In the end, Li Fei married Chu Xinyue. She gave him seventy percent of the group. He became the real power behind New Moon. She became pregnant. The boy once mocked as a sickly freeloader now had wealth, love, and a family. And the ancient vase, found in a mountain stream, gleamed under the sun—witness to a miracle that changed everything.

Crisis Travel: Tech King
Tang Ning was a 25-year-old deliveryman. On his birthday, a meteor hit him. Now, whenever his life is in danger, he travels to another world. He landed in the Great Xia Dynasty, where the emperor is weak and the noble clans rule everything. He barely arrived before he saw Empress Qi Liuli kill four top assassins with her bare hands—and was sentenced to death for trespassing. He saved himself with instant noodles and spicy snacks. The cold, violent empress turned out to be a secret foodie. Her trusted nurse chose him as a fake fiancé to fend off the clans' forced marriage plots. The Wangs and the Cuis had monopolized salt, iron, grain, education, and government for centuries. They wanted the empress to marry one of their own, then steal the throne. The empress was the greatest warrior alive—but she couldn't read. The clans used her illiteracy to control her. She needed an outsider. Tang Ning brought modern knowledge. In literary contests, he crushed the scholars with ancient poems they had never seen. In martial tournaments, he pulled out an AK-47, a Barrett sniper rifle, and a rocket launcher—shattering the myth of invincible martial arts. He refined salt with chemistry to break their monopoly. He solved famines with modern economics. He introduced anonymous exams and movable-type printing, giving poor students access to books and breaking the clans' grip on officialdom. As they fought side by side, the empress stopped using him and started protecting him. She faced down assassins and rebel ministers for his sake. He, once only trying to survive, began to guard her throne with his life. When two top killers attacked, he blew them up with a rocket launcher. The blast triggered the travel power. They landed in the modern world. The empress saw cars, TVs, and elevators for the first time. Her cold mask fell away. She became a curious, food-crazed girl. Their love deepened fast. Back in Great Xia, the clans allied with half a million barbarian troops. Generals betrayed the empire. Tang Ning's modern weapons turned the tide. The empress led the army herself, crushed the invasion in half a month, and annexed the barbarian lands. She returned to the capital, punished the traitorous clans, and abolished aristocratic rule forever. In the end, Qi Liuli became a legendary emperor. She married Tang Ning in a grand ceremony and named him Prince Hua. Right after the wedding, they traveled through time again—and settled together in the modern world. The boy who delivered food became the man who saved an empire. And the empress who trusted no one found a love that crossed two worlds.

Twin Destinies: Truth in Lies
Su Qingqing, a concubine's daughter, lived a tragic life. Because her legitimate half-sister Su Manli was barren, the family forced Qingqing to marry General Huo Changfeng as a secondary bride—a surrogate to bear Manli's child. After a painful delivery, Manli had her disfigured and buried alive. With her last breath, Qingqing learned the truth: Manli had always planned to take the child and kill her. She swore revenge. And woke up on her wedding day. This time, she would not submit. When Su Manli sent her peach-colored robes to mark her as a concubine, Qingqing donned scarlet—the color reserved for a true bride. She took a hidden mountain path to arrive first, entered through the main gate, and stole Manli's wedding glory. Inside the manor, the traps came one after another. Su Manli rallied the other concubines against her. Qingqing broke their alliance with a single truth: their own children were also born of concubines. When Manli tried to murder the twins of another concubine, Qingqing saved them and exposed the crime. General Huo Changfeng watched her with suspicion at first. Then with admiration. Then with love. Su Manli faked a pregnancy to frame Qingqing. She staged a fall to plant cursed evidence against her. Each plot backfired. An imperial physician exposed Manli's lies and her barrenness. The general stripped Manli of power and elevated Qingqing to equal wife. At a homecoming banquet, Manli conspired with the Prime Minister's wife to accuse Qingqing of adultery. Qingqing dismantled the scheme with ease. The Prime Minister's wife, in revenge, forced Qingqing's birth mother to kill herself. Her mother's death opened Qingqing's eyes. Her true enemy was not just one woman—it was the entire system that crushed concubines and their children. Then she discovered she was pregnant—with the same son she had lost in her past life. She wept with joy. Desperate, Su Manli hired a Taoist priest to curse the unborn child. She tried to push Qingqing during a charity event to cause a miscarriage. Qingqing had prepared. A bolt of lightning struck Manli down. Qingqing gave birth to a healthy son. In the end, Huo Changfeng gathered all the evidence—fake pregnancy, attempted infanticide, murder of Qingqing's mother. Su Manli was stripped of her title and sent to a nunnery for life. The Prime Minister's household fell from favor. Su Qingqing, once a bullied concubine's daughter, became the general's cherished wife. She had her son. She had her love. She had the revenge she swore on her deathbed—and a life that made all the pain worth it.
