And the Winner Is Love

And the Winner Is Love

2020 • Action & Adventure, Drama
Chong Xuezhi, the young mistress of Chonghuo Palace, and Shangguan Tou, master of Yueshang Valley, overcome misunderstandings to stop Mu Yuan, who practices the dangerous "Nine Techniques of the Lotus God," and restore peace to the jianghu.

Why you should read the novel

Experience And the Winner Is Love as Jun Zi Yi Ze first imagined it. The source novel immerses you in a rich wuxia world where chivalry, sect rivalries, and heartfelt romance unfold with lyrical detail and razor-sharp stakes. On the page, character motivations breathe deeper. You gain access to layered inner monologues, nuanced political undercurrents, and a more intricate martial arts lore that screen time often compresses. The novel rewards careful reading with foreshadowing, symbolism, and slow-burn tension that pays off spectacularly. If you loved the drama’s atmosphere, the book amplifies it with fuller worldbuilding and emotional resonance. Start reading And the Winner Is Love to savor the definitive version of this wuxia romance—perfect for fans seeking authenticity, depth, and unforgettable prose.

Adaptation differences

Structure and pacing shift in the TV adaptation. To fit an episode-by-episode rhythm, the show streamlines early arcs, expands certain conflicts, and reorders key reveals. The novel’s tighter progression and layered setup give way to added tournament-style set pieces and episodic cliffhangers designed for broadcast flow. Characterization is gentler on screen. The drama softens edges, adds comedic relief via side characters, and reduces morally gray choices that the book explores. Internal dilemmas and subtle power plays in the novel are externalized as dialogue and action, and some supporting roles are merged or renamed for clarity. Tone and themes lean more idol-romance in the series. Where the book often embraces jianghu ambiguity, darker consequences, and detailed martial manuals, the adaptation brightens the palette, trims violence, and emphasizes a sweeter courtship. Censorship and broad-audience goals mean poison plots, vengeance threads, and sect politics are simplified. Key plot mechanics are streamlined. The screen version condenses the pursuit of secret techniques, shifts the timing of identity revelations, and alters the scale and location of the final showdown. Several subplots are abbreviated or omitted, and the ending favors a more conclusive, optimistic resolution compared with the novel’s more textured denouement.

And the Winner Is Love inspired from

And the Winner Is Love
by Jun Zi Yi Ze