Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss-Why This Chinese Short Drama Became a Phenomenon

Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss is now available on MiniShort, captivating viewers with refined aesthetics, layered emotional storytelling, and an elevated short-drama style. This in-depth review breaks down its success, visual language, and why it resonates with today’s audiences.
Amelia Johnson
Amelia Johnson
Updated: 2025-12-05
Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss-Why This Chinese Short Drama Became a Phenomenon
In This Article
The Anatomy of a Hit: How “Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss” Broke Out
Not Just a Short Drama—A Redefinition of the Format
When a Short Drama Has Cinematic Aesthetics
The Visual Language: Roses, Light, Movement, Distance
Music as Emotional Architecture
Why Audiences Fell in Love—and Stayed
Why Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss Fits Perfectly on MiniShort

Even weeks after its finale, Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss remains a drama audiences can’t quite walk away from.

Its ascent from pre-release buzz, to explosive launch, to genuine cultural phenomenon mirrors the evolution of China’s vertical-screen short drama market itself.Much like its Chinese title 盛夏芬德拉 suggests, the show blooms with a kind of emotional richness and visual poetry rarely seen in short-form storytelling. It doesn’t simply ride the wave of the short-drama boom—it redefines what short dramas can be.

The Anatomy of a Hit: How “Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss” Broke Out

This title achieved what many short dramas only dream of:

1 million+ pre-release reservations

1 billion views within its first 24 hours

20 billion cumulative views in 8 days

30 billion views in 18 days

Dominating platform Top 1 for 17 consecutive days

But numbers don’t tell the whole story.

What truly distinguishes Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss is how it won over two very different viewer groups:

1. traditional short-drama fans hungry for romantic conflict

2. new audiences—urban women & mature viewers—looking for emotional realism and aesthetic integrity

This convergence is exactly why it became a “shared conversation” across Chinese social platforms—and why its cast exploded in popularity almost overnight.

Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss Review
Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss
Free watch

Not Just a Short Drama—A Redefinition of the Format

The growth of China’s free-to-watch short drama market has brought in a new demographic:

educated, aesthetically selective, emotionally literate viewers who crave authenticity over cheap thrills.

These viewers:

are tired of high-conflict, high-noise, three-episodes-and-you're-hooked formulas

want emotional layering, slower burn romance, and “life-like tenderness”

expect visual quality closer to film than to traditional web drama

Most short dramas fail them.

Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss is one of the rare titles that doesn’t.

Why? Because it refuses to follow the old rules.

According to its creative team, the decision was intentional:

“If three episodes aren’t enough for the leads to fall in love, then why force the heartbreak arc so early?”

Instead of relying on shock-value plotting, the team placed full creative energy on:

emotional pacing

genuinely felt romantic progression

textured cinematography

symbolic mise-en-scène

The result feels closer to a tragic romance film than a disposable 1-minute-per-scene short drama.

When a Short Drama Has Cinematic Aesthetics

From its very first scene, the show announces its difference.

1. The opening arranged-meeting sequence

Most short dramas rely on voiceover dumps or punchy lines to introduce the leads.

Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss does the opposite.

It places the audience inside a dim, spatially oppressive room.

Instead of bright lighting and quick cuts, the camera lingers, breathing with the characters.the male lead sits alone, silent, already waiting an hour

the female lead enters through a doorway flooded with faint natural light

the camera moves—push, pull, subtle shift—to create emotional distance

Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss

The viewer doesn’t hear who these people are.

They feel it—through tone, posture, space, silence.

The drama trusts its audience.

And trust is rare in the short-drama market.

The Visual Language: Roses, Light, Movement, Distance

If Wong Kar-wai made a vertical short drama, it might look like this.

The “Roses of Fendra” Symbolism

Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss

The recurring rose motif tracks the entire relationship arc:

budding → tentative attraction

half-bloom → emotional stirring

full bloom → emotional surrender

This is not decorative.

It’s narrative through imagery, a hallmark of auteur cinema.

The Tunnel Kiss

Shot with manual focus—a bold choice—it captures:

slow breaths

trembling eyelashes

the micro-emotions that precede the kiss

It feels intimate not because of physical closeness, but because the lens allows us to inhabit their hesitation and longing.

The Ancestral Hall Scene

Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss

One of the drama’s most critically praised moments.

No declarations.

No dramatic score.

Just:flying papers

frozen hands

a quiet offering of gloves

the male lead discovering his name written again and again

It is tenderness expressed through restraint—deeply Eastern, deeply poetic.

Music as Emotional Architecture

When Fish by Cheer Chen plays during the rainy-night scene, it doesn’t accompany the visuals—it completes them.

Lyrics reflect the heroine’s insecurities and longing.

The slow motion, the sound of rainfall, their careful movements under one umbrella create an atmosphere that feels more like memory than present action.This is not background music; it’s interior monologue.

Why Audiences Fell in Love—and Stayed

1. Emotional intelligence

The drama respects its viewers.

It avoids shouting emotions and instead invites interpretation.2. Realistic romantic arc

Love grows from understanding, not coincidence.

3. Sophisticated camera work rarely seen in short dramas

Viewers repeatedly commented that each frame feels “capturable,” “curated,” “like a film still.”

4. Female-centric emotional resonance

The heroine isn’t a “plot device.”

She is a character whose:loneliness

dignity

sadness

warmth

…are expressed through visual nuance, not melodrama.

Women saw themselves in her—and stayed for her.

5. It filled a market gap

It became “the short drama that doesn’t feel like a short drama.”

That niche was empty.

Now it isn’t.

Why Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss Fits Perfectly on MiniShort

MiniShort’s rising user base increasingly prefers “high-aesthetic, emotionally mature, story-respectful” short dramas. This title is precisely that.

Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss Review
Like Roses, in Summer's Tender Kiss
Free watch

It aligns with MiniShort’s curated taste for:

quality visual style

complex emotional arcs

romance told with subtlety rather than shock value

immersive pacing rather than cliffhangers every 30 seconds

Like Roses, in Summer’s Tender Kiss is not only a fan favorite—it represents the direction the short-drama industry is evolving toward, and MiniShort is becoming the hub for this new wave.

back to top
Back to Top