DramaSnack |Her Fortune Favored Husband| Chinese Summary & Watch

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A DramaSnack Review | Chinese Vertical Drama


Cast: Zhao Guanyu (ML)
Peng Yao (FL)

What if your husband was secretly a human lucky charm — and you were the only one who knew it?

That is the entire premise of this drama, and somehow it delivers way more than that sentence suggests. Think transmigration chaos, a walking lottery ticket for a husband, mind-reading gone catastrophically wrong, and a heroine so sharp and funny that you will be pausing every two minutes just to catch your breath from laughing. This one grabbed me from the first episode and did not let go.


The Story

Gu Wangshu is a modern woman who spends a night rage-watching a terrible short drama — the kind where a saintly second son suffers endlessly while the spoiled third brother gets everything, and somehow the screenwriter calls that a happy ending. She is furious. She is done. And then a lightning strike later, she wakes up inside that exact drama, inside the body of the vicious supporting actress who is married to the second son.

That second son is He Chengye — tall, broad-shouldered, criminally handsome in person compared to how he looked on screen, and completely undervalued by his entire family. The He household is barely scraping by: cramped bungalow, worn-out shoes, potatoes for every meal, and a mother who rations eggs like they are gold bullion.

But Wangshu watched this drama. She knows the plot. And more importantly, she knows the secret the whole family missed: He Chengye is a fortune star. The better you treat him, the richer the family becomes. Every egg he eats, every glass of wine he drinks, every small kindness directed his way — the universe responds with lottery wins, rising stocks, and million-yuan business orders rolling in like clockwork.

The family has been starving their golden goose and blaming the goose for being thin.

Wangshu is about to fix that. And she has one more weapon in her arsenal that nobody asked for and nobody can turn off — she can hear everyone’s thoughts. Every petty, embarrassing, chaotic inner monologue in the entire drama, broadcast directly into her ears at all times.


Watch the Trailer

The Family Chaos You Signed Up For

The He family is a masterpiece of dysfunction wrapped in warmth, and each member gets their moment.

The mother starts firmly in the “sacrifice the second son to fund the third’s education” camp — rationing eggs, serving potatoes to Chengye, and cooking fresh dumplings for everyone else. But the second Wangshu starts steering the ship, the results are immediate and absurd. Give Chengye an egg? Dad wins the lottery. Buy Chengye new shoes? The stocks spike. Let him eat a proper dinner? Big brother closes a 100,000-yuan factory order before the plates are cleared. The mother catches on faster than anyone and by the midpoint she is boiling foot baths for him unprompted and shopping for villas.

He Jingpei — the third brother — is the drama’s chaotic wildcard and secretly its funniest character. He threatens to drop out of school over dumplings. His total exam scores are lower than the family’s entire savings account, which sits at 123 yuan and 56 cents. He demands ten yuan from his broke brother, declares himself a future Peking University professor, and gets dragged for every delusion in real time by Wangshu’s inner commentary. Yet somehow, after being starved, disciplined, and denied meals throughout the drama, this insufferable boy gets into Tsinghua University and announces he wants to be an astronaut. The glow-up is unhinged. The audience cheers anyway.

Big brother He Yanbei’s business goes from scraping by to multi-million-yuan orders in what feels like days — entirely tied to whether Chengye had a decent meal that morning. The father wins a 100,000-yuan lottery after a decade of nothing, the broken family TV switches itself on to the lottery channel that same night, and nobody can convince Wangshu that any of this is coincidence. This drama is not subtle and it is glorious for it.


The Gu Family Is a Whole Other Show

If the He family is cheerful chaos, the Gu family is a full catastrophe with a birthday cake on top.

Wangshu’s stepmother Song Ruya has charmed every wealthy husband in their social circle into buying her gold bracelets and Mercedes-Benz cars. A birthday lunch for Song Ruya turns into one of the most spectacular scenes in the drama when Wangshu’s glitching inner voice starts broadcasting everyone’s secrets out loud to the entire room. Suddenly the guests know about the love letters, the hotel rooms, and the gold.

Tables get flipped.
Women start swinging.
Someone’s husband gets exposed for writing three hundred love letters to another woman. A nanny declares passionate love for an eighteen-year-old.

It is absolute mayhem and Wangshu is standing in the middle of it trying to think innocent thoughts and failing entirely.

Her step-sister tries to call He Chengye by his first name and gets corrected firmly — and physically — by Wangshu, who is done pretending she is the doormat this character was written to be. She delivers a speech that would make a courtroom lawyer jealous and leaves the entire Gu family speechless.

Meanwhile the drama peels back the step-sister’s carefully constructed image layer by layer — the study abroad was fake, the college grades were catastrophic, the English she claimed to speak was nonexistent — all exposed at the worst possible moment during a military inspection with foreign journalists. Her solution is to faint dramatically. Wangshu steps in, translates flawlessly, and saves the day while her husband watches with an expression that says he is completely reconsidering everything he thought he knew about his wife.


The Romance — Because Yes, It Is Very Much There

He Chengye starts the drama as a man who has been told his whole life that he is the family burden. He is quiet, controlled, and watchful. He notices things. He notices Wangshu.

The slow burn here is genuinely satisfying. Wangshu is loudly simping over her husband in her inner monologue — his shoulders, his jawline, his hands — while performing cool detachment on the outside. Chengye is increasingly aware that his wife is not who she used to be, and he is not complaining about the change. Their dynamic has that perfect push-pull energy where neither one will just say the thing, but both of them are very much doing the thing.

The drama gets their wedding-night content censored by the platform for being too popular. Make of that what you will. The kang bed collapsed once already. Wangshu has requested a stronger one for the new villa. The tension is immaculate.


Spice Level 🌶️🌶️🌶️

Three out of five chillies. The romance is slow-burn and playful rather than explicit, but the energy is absolutely there and the drama is not shy about implying everything it cannot show. The censored episode alone tells you everything you need to know.


Drama Ratings

Humour ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Wangshu’s inner monologue is the best character in any drama this year. Watching her try to control her broadcasting thoughts while standing in a room full of people she has just accidentally exposed is comedy at its finest.

Plot Creativity ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Transmigration into a drama you were actively complaining about is a concept this show wears effortlessly. The self-awareness never gets old.

Main Couple Chemistry ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — Slow, deliberate, and worth every second of the wait.

Side Character Chaos ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ — The Gu family birthday disaster alone earns the full score. Table-flipping, love letter readings, a nanny confession, and a paternity crisis all in one scene.

Rewatch Value ⭐⭐⭐⭐ — You will catch things in Wangshu’s commentary on every rewatch that you missed the first time because you were laughing too hard.


Drama Badges

🏆 Fortune Star Husband
🎰 Lottery Winner Family
📈 Stock Market Chaos
🧠 Mind Reader Heroine
🎭 Transmigration Done Right
🏡 Rags to Villa Pipeline
⚔️ Villainess Turned Mastermind
🎓 Potato Diet to Tsinghua University
💼 Business Empire Built on Breakfast


Who Should Watch This

Watch this if you love a funny, self-aware heroine who knows the plot and weaponises every page of it.

Watch it for the chaos of a family discovering that kindness has a direct ROI.

Watch it for the slow-burn romance, the military tension, the absolutely unhinged Gu family dinner scenes, and a third brother who goes from potato-rationed menace to aspiring astronaut in the most satisfying arc this drama had no business pulling off.

This is comfort chaos. It is the drama equivalent of eating something spicy and delicious and immediately reaching for another bite. Put it on your list now.


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Have you watched this one yet? we want to know which scene broke you first. The lottery win? The birthday table flip? Or Wangshu standing in a crowded room desperately trying not to think anything embarrassing and failing completely?

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