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| 4 Destiny (2025) Thai BL Anthology Project – Short Review, Recap & Ending Explained (Photo: VIU TH) |
“4 Destiny” isn’t your typical Thai BL — it’s a four-part anthology that stitches together romance, tragedy, rebirth, and even a touch of supernatural chills.
Streaming exclusively on Viu, this eight-episode project wraps up with a finale that leaves your heart full yet strangely hollow.
Each mini-series stands on its own, but together they tell a bigger story about fate, forgiveness, and second chances.
The four stories — The Last Night, Red Moon and Wine, Un-in Heart, and Blood Fighters — each have distinct moods and visual tones, ranging from eerie night terror to soft heartbreak and hopeful bromance.
🧩 Cast Line-Up
A lineup of familiar and rising BL faces keeps things cohesive across the anthology:
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P Ekkapop Tata & Pan Jirachot Chotticomporn (The Last Night)
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Light Naruesorn Kantaram & Rice Natid Kaveekornwong (Red Moon and Wine)
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P-Jung Kritsana Panchai, Plai Chattrin Chotticomporn, Wi Wiset Pakjaidee (Un-in Heart)
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Seng Wichai Saefant & Pond Kumpanat Kulthai (Blood Fighters)
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Plus supporting performances from Earth Nanthawat, Dee Patthama, and Jasmine Tuchchamon, who help link the emotional arcs across stories.
🕯️ Story-by-Story Breakdown & 4 Destiny BL Ending Explained
1. The Last Night – Love, Death, and Regret
A chilling yet emotional opening act. The Last Night dives into guilt-ridden love between Yot (P Ekkapop) and M (Pan Jirachot).
A heated argument spirals out of control, leading to an accident that takes M’s life.
From there, the series blends ghostly horror and emotional healing — M’s spirit lingers, reminding Yot of a promise to ordain as a monk for him.
The finale is tear-soaked and eerie: Yot finally fulfils that vow, allowing M’s soul to find peace.
The ending subtly hints that redemption often comes with letting go, not holding on.
It’s tragic but beautifully tied up, setting a mature tone for the rest of the anthology.
2. Red Moon and Wine – Reincarnation & Obsession
Probably the most chaotic and philosophical of the bunch. Light Naruesorn and Rice Natid play star-crossed lovers tangled in a cycle of rebirth and revenge.
The dialogue swings between confrontational and poetic — “It’s been lifetimes… he’s been reborn twice already.”
As the red moon rises, truth surfaces: their souls have been bound for centuries, trapped by unresolved love and vengeance.
The ending suggests that breaking the curse means accepting loss — and that obsession masquerading as love is still a cage. A surreal, gothic chapter that’s divisive but memorable.
3. Un-in Heart – The One That Got Away
This one softens the blow with pure emotional realism.
P-Jung, Plai, and Wi deliver one of the anthology’s most grounded love triangles — tender, nostalgic, and full of “what-ifs.”
The final conversation hits hard: an ex-lover admits they’ve found someone new who treats them better, but deep down, neither has fully moved on.
No ghosts, no curses — just the ache of real human love fading away. It closes with quiet acceptance rather than reconciliation.
“Un-in Heart” reminds viewers that some endings aren’t tragic — they’re just real.
4. Blood Fighters – Punches and Promises
The finale brings humour and heat back into play.
Seng and Pond carry this one with charming chemistry — a mix of flirty banter and genuine growth.
A boxer meets a delivery rider who won’t stop teasing him. What starts as annoyance turns into affection through boxing lessons and daily encounters.
It’s classic Thai BL fun with a rough-around-the-edges sweetness.
The ending is refreshingly upbeat: after a promise of “a thousand jump ropes a day,” the two finally drop their walls — proving that love can grow even in the simplest routines.
A perfect lighthearted closer after three heavy tales.
💭 Overall Ending Meaning
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When all four stories come together, 4 Destiny paints love as something that transcends time, death, and circumstance — but not always in the way we expect.
Each story reflects a facet of destiny:
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The Last Night – Karma and closure.
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Red Moon and Wine – Rebirth and obsession.
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Un-in Heart – Acceptance and maturity.
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Blood Fighters – Renewal and playful healing.
By the final credits, the series quietly suggests that fate doesn’t decide love — choices do. And whether that choice is to let go or to keep fighting, it’s what makes every ending truly human.
⭐ Verdict: 4/5
“4 Destiny” balances its themes beautifully despite uneven pacing across stories. It’s visually solid, emotionally rich, and proof that Thai BL anthologies can deliver both depth and entertainment.
It may not be flawless, but it’ll definitely leave you thinking — and maybe texting your ex (don’t).





