“Fourever You Season Two” First Impressions (Ep.1 to 4)

This series follows Phoon (Tonliew Methaphat), who unexpectedly meets his former neighbor Fah (Bever Patsapon) again at university after many years. Their reunion brings back painful memories for Phoon, including guilt and unresolved feelings connected to a past family tragedy. While Fah is gentle and kind, Phoon struggles to face him and cannot move past the hurt from the past. The first three episodes focus more on the awkward and emotional tension between the two, but a little bit in episode three and in four, we see a gradual change of heart, or little character development. Phoon finds it difficult to interact with Fah, making their scenes feel uncomfortable but realistic, as most people who meet someone they badly want to forget or have some painful memory about, would react.


There are simple and subtle sweet gestures throughout the first four episodes and some obvious reconnaissances that make us believe that there is something; those are touching moments when Phoon’s dorm loses power, and Fah offers him a place to rest, which feels like a step towards rebuilding their connection. The conflict deepens with Phoon’s father, who still blames him for the family’s past and warns him to stay away from Fah. This adds emotional weight and highlights Phoon’s inner struggle.

Also, it feels good to see our old characters like Easter (Earth Katsamonnat), North (Bas Hatsanat), and Dao (Oat Tharathon) return. Their banter and fun relationship adds warmth to the story, while helping Phoon grow and slowly regain confidence, allowing him to share his thoughts and feelings. One of the things I am enjoying in the series is the small but cute exchange between Phoon and Fah through notes and gifts, allowing us to get more invested in their connection emotionally.

Overall, I feel that the start of the second season of this series is a simple and sweet but heavily guarded emotional story about friendship and love. Upto four episodes, we can see that the scriptwriters are taking a slow approach, allowing the characters to grow naturally. Fah’s caring nature and Phoon’s gradual confidence make the journey heartfelt and meaningful.

Rating- 4 out of 5

Streaming on- IQIYI

Leave a comment