![]() |
| Poisonous Love The Series Review: A Thai GL That Pulls You In, Then Makes You Uncomfortable (Photo: Instagram/Poisonous Love GL) |
Poisonous Love The Series (is one of those Thai GL dramas that’s dangerously easy to binge. From the very first episode, the chemistry is loud, the pacing is slick, and the emotional tension hooks you hard. You press play expecting a casual watch, and suddenly you’re several episodes deep wondering how it got this intense, this fast.
On the surface, it’s glossy, seductive, and dramatic in all the ways GL fans tend to enjoy. But scratch just a little deeper, and you’ll notice that beneath the romantic pull sits a story that’s messy, troubling, and often uncomfortable. And strangely enough, that’s both its biggest strength and its biggest weakness.
This isn’t a series that asks you to think deeply while you’re watching. It works best when you let yourself drift along with the vibes. But the moment your brain switches into analysis mode, questions start creeping in about boundaries, obsession, power imbalance, and where desire quietly turns into control.
Ginny and Jayna: The Chemistry Carrying the Entire Show
There’s no talking about Poisonous Love without talking about its core pairing: Prem and Pat. Their chemistry isn’t just good — it’s magnetic. The looks linger, the silences speak louder than dialogue, and their body language creates a tension that’s almost hypnotic.
The series does a solid job of showing how these two characters slowly reshape each other. Prem begins as rigid, disciplined, and carefully moulded by family expectations. Her world is orderly, controlled, and emotionally locked down. Enter Pat — chaotic, confident, and impossible to ignore — and those cracks start forming fast.
Ginny delivers a quietly powerful performance as Prem. She isn’t just the “perfect daughter” or the successful heart surgeon. She’s someone suffocating under expectations, guilt, and fear. Her vulnerability is subtle but heavy, making her choices frustrating yet painfully understandable.
Jayna, meanwhile, dominates the screen whenever Pat shows up. Whether you love or hate the character, it’s impossible to look away.
![]() |
Pat: The Lead Who’d Be the Villain in Any Other Story
This is where Poisonous Love gets truly controversial — and oddly fascinating.
Pat is stylish, bold, charming, and confident. She’s written to be irresistible. But she’s also the biggest warning sign this series has to offer. She constantly crosses boundaries, ignores repeated refusals, and inserts herself into Prem’s emotional and personal space in ways that would feel deeply unsettling in real life.
If Pat were written as a male character, it’s hard to imagine viewers romanticising her behaviour. The persistence, the pressure, and the lack of respect for clear limits would be called out immediately.
The reason I fell in love with Prem’s character is because I never expected her to be this down bad, this sweet, and this hopelessly in love. She loved Pat so much and honestly, I’m in love with her because of the way she loved Pat 🥹✨
— 🦘 (@Iknowitsnot) December 1, 2025
[ #Ginjay #PoisonousLoveTheSeries ] pic.twitter.com/6CP0JBTZXz
Some scenes are genuinely uncomfortable, especially when emotional vulnerability or impaired judgement is involved.
The series largely frames these moments as romantic tension rather than something to question, and that’s where it starts to feel outdated. In 2025, certain storytelling choices simply deserve more care and awareness.
And yet — here’s the uncomfortable truth — Pat works. Not because her actions are defendable, but because her presence is overwhelming. She exists in that dangerous space between romance and obsession, between desire and control. The show knows this, leans into it, and lets the discomfort simmer.
A Romance That Refuses to Be Soft or Idealised
Unlike many GL dramas that aim for emotional comfort, Poisonous Love deliberately dives into darker territory. Obsession, regret, sacrifice, and uneven power dynamics are baked into the story from the start.
That choice makes the viewing experience uneasy at times, especially if you look at events through a realistic lens. But it also gives the series its identity. This isn’t a “sweet girls falling in love” story. It’s about relationships formed in emotionally fragile spaces, where desire doesn’t always come with safety or clarity.
Episode 9 stands out as the most brutal example of this approach. It’s heavy, emotionally draining, and narratively harsh. Not an easy watch — but undeniably memorable.
A cara de quem estava ficando apaixonada ❤️
— Sensitive ☁️🍀🇧🇷 (@sensitivee25) December 24, 2025
Saudade delas 🤧#GinJay #PoisonousLoveTheSeries pic.twitter.com/IkHvpScWjI
Villains Who Work Because They Annoy You
The antagonistic roles do exactly what they’re meant to do: irritate you. Nam, in particular, fits the classic villain mould perfectly. She’s manipulative, frustrating, and infuriating — which is precisely why she works. A villain who doesn’t spark emotion is forgettable, and Nam is anything but.
The performance is sharp and unsettling, adding real weight to the drama. While some moments feel repetitive, her role as a conflict trigger is effective, even when it tests the viewer’s patience.
So, Is Poisonous Love Worth Watching?
Yes — but with awareness.
![]() |
Poisonous Love is addictive. It’s easy to binge, hard to drop, and impossible to ignore. Not because it’s morally clean or emotionally safe, but because it’s intense, stylish, and charged with raw emotion.
It entertains, provokes, and unsettles all at once. It romanticises questionable behaviour and flirts dangerously with obsession, but when it lands, it lands hard. Visually, emotionally, and narratively, it knows how to keep you locked in.
More than anything, it proves that Thai GL dramas can be bold, complex, and artistically ambitious. You might love it, feel frustrated by it, or end up somewhere in between — and honestly, that mixed reaction might be the point.
![]() |
In the end, it leaves you feeling that Prem and Pat deserve an even stronger script in the future, because the talent and chemistry are undeniably there.
Now the real question is — how did you feel about Pat’s behaviour, the ending, and that emotionally heavy ninth episode? Did it cross a line, or did it make the story more compelling for you? Jump into the discussion and let’s talk about it.





