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| Chen Feiyu vs Liu Yuning: Fans Debate Chemistry After Dilraba’s Viral Variety Show Moment. (Credits: Weibo) |
Dilraba Dilmurat’s heart rate spike on a primetime variety show has become the unexpected talking point of the week, after a flirt-heavy segment with Chen Feiyu overtook an already buzzworthy pairing with Liu Yuning, turning a routine drama promotion into a viral moment.
The appearance, tied to upcoming drama Love Beyond the Grave (白日提灯), saw Dilraba Dilmurat join Liu Yuning and Chen Feiyu on Hello Saturday, where a staged “early relationship” scenario quickly blurred into something far more watchable.
What began as light, scripted banter evolved into a sequence that viewers dissected frame by frame, largely due to one measurable detail: rising heart rates.
In the first segment, Dilraba Dilmurat and Liu Yuning played a couple easing into public romance. Set against a casual café backdrop, she floated the idea of taking a selfie framed as an “official announcement”.
His reply — understated and direct — cut through the performance: he cared only about her opinion, not public chatter.
The exchange landed well, registering a visible reaction as their heart rates climbed to 118 and 116 respectively, signalling a convincing, if controlled, chemistry.
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| Hello Saturday Clip Sends Love Beyond the Grave Promo Viral Over Unexpected Heart Rate Reveal |
But it was the follow-up pairing with Chen Feiyu that shifted the tone entirely.
Leaning in close, Dilraba Dilmurat delivered a whispered line — “I heard you like me?” — that pivoted the segment into a more intimate register.
His response, delivered without hesitation, carried a different weight: he did like her, and it came from his own feelings rather than hearsay.
The numbers told the rest of the story. His heart rate hit 127, hers surged to 129 — the highest recorded in the segment — sealing the moment as the clip viewers would replay.
The contrast between both interactions quickly became the central narrative online.
With Liu Yuning, the tone was composed and quietly reassuring. With Chen Feiyu, it tipped into something more charged, less rehearsed in appearance, and notably harder to ignore.
For many watching, the shift in Dilraba Dilmurat’s response — measurable and visible — became the defining takeaway.
Away from the staged segment, it was Liu Yuning who earned a separate wave of attention.
During a break in filming, he was seen offering Dilraba Dilmurat a scallion pancake he had just tried.
Before handing it over, he paused to check the filling, asking what type of meat it contained to ensure it met her dietary restrictions.
Only after confirming did he pass it to her, a small but deliberate act that resonated strongly with viewers aware of her background.
The moment extended further when Chen Feiyu, seated beside her, watched her reaction as she ate.
Initially declining when offered a taste, he soon changed his mind and took a small piece — a subtle continuation of the on-screen dynamic that fans were already analysing.
Some viewers focused on the contrast in chemistry, reading the heart rate data as an unfiltered indicator of emotional response and debating which pairing felt more natural.
Others pushed back, framing the entire segment as performance-driven and cautioning against overinterpretation. A third group shifted attention entirely, highlighting Liu Yuning’s off-camera attentiveness as the most genuine moment of the episode, arguing that consideration carries more weight than scripted lines.
What is clear is that the segment has extended the reach of Love Beyond the Grave (白日提灯) far beyond a standard promotional cycle.
Clips continue to circulate widely, with discussions showing little sign of slowing as audiences revisit the details and draw their own conclusions about what was real, what was staged, and what landed somewhere in between.
The broadcast may have been designed as light entertainment, but its afterlife has been anything but casual.. viewers are left piecing together their own narrative from a tightly edited show.
.. was it chemistry, clever production, or something in between — and which moment actually felt the most real?

