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Miss You After Goodbye

A bite-size TV mini series told in 75 fast chapters. Big feelings, short episodes. This site is a fan hub for the ReelShort/DramaBox version (the one often linked to IMDb tt37984131). If you’ve seen the clips on social and wondered where to actually watch, you’re in the right place.

What this site is (for now)

This is a placeholder while we build out proper pages. You’ll still find the essentials: what the show is about, where to watch it legally, a spoiler-light overview of the episode arcs, the main characters, and what viewers are saying. As soon as the full guide is ready, we’ll add deep-dive sections like episode breakdowns, cast bios, and an ending explainer.

Where to watch (official sources)

There isn’t a single, official “full movie” link floating around. Miss You After Goodbye is released as a 75-episode vertical series on the ReelShort and DramaBox apps. Some early episodes are usually free; finishing the story may require unlocking inside the app or using a subscription. If you bump into random “full” uploads on sketchy sites, expect low quality, out-of-order episodes, or takedowns. For clean subtitles and the intended cut, the apps are the way to go.

What it’s about (no spoilers)

At its core, the show is about timing, choice, and the gap between being cared for and being chosen. Neil is steady and thoughtful—someone who keeps promises even when it costs him. Keira is smart and self-protective, still untangling old feelings and expectations. The chemistry isn’t fireworks every scene; it’s the slow ache of two people learning how to say the real thing out loud. The series keeps the stakes personal: small gestures, tiny misreads, the way silence can sound like an answer. If you like relationship dramas where consequences matter, this one hits.

Episode arcs (spoiler-light)

To make it easier to jump in, think of the series in five arcs:

  • Ep 1–10: Setup & breakaway plan
    Teaches the “rules of the world” and the imbalance the leads have been living with. The final episodes in this block put a boundary on the table—quietly, not dramatically.
  • Ep 11–25: Complications & realizations
    Old facts finally land. Neil stops over-explaining himself. Keira starts noticing what it costs to live around a memory. Fewer speeches, more honest pauses.
  • Ep 26–45: Turning points
    The energy shifts from proving worth to choosing direction. Some context drops reframe earlier choices, but it’s not twisty for the sake of it.
  • Ep 46–65: Consequences
    Truth gets said out loud. Plans turn into logistics. Side characters stop giving safe advice and face the fallout of their nudges.
  • Ep 66–75: Finale (no spoilers)
    No magic reset, no stunt twist. The ending answers the show’s thesis using the rules it taught you to notice.

Characters you’ll care about

  • Neil — Disciplined, observant, a do-the-right-thing guy who learns that effort isn’t the same as being chosen.
  • Keira — Bright, guarded, and more tender than she lets on. Her arc is about choosing in real time instead of mourning in hindsight.
  • Simon — Not a mustache-twirling villain—more like gravity. He represents the safer story Keira knew how to believe.
    Around them: friends who mean well (and sometimes make things worse), plus a parent who tried to shortcut healing.

Why people keep watching

This is “trash TV” in the best way: heightened, dramatic, a little messy—and yet weirdly sincere. Episodes are snackable, so it’s easy to say “one more” and suddenly you’re twenty deep. Viewers praise the emotional payoff and the “ordinary heartbreak” details: who texts first, who notices small preferences, who shows up when it’s inconvenient. Critics call out clipped editing and uneven acting in spots. Both can be true, and that tension is part of the charm.

Who will like it

  • Fans of relationship dramas where choices have a bill.
  • People who enjoy short-form, vertical storytelling and don’t mind melodrama.
  • Rewatchers who like catching small callbacks and mirrored lines.

Common questions

Is there a real full-length movie?
Not officially. The recognized release is the 75-episode series cut.

Do I have to pay?
Early chapters are often free. To finish, you’ll likely unlock inside the app or use a sub. Pricing and promos vary by region.

Is this the same as clips I saw on TikTok/YouTube?
Those are usually teasers or compilations. The official episodes live in the apps.

Does this site post spoilers?
Not on the homepage. When our “Ending Explained” section goes live, it’ll be opt-in and clearly labeled.

Themes & tone (quick hits)

Contract marriage dynamics, loyalty vs. self-respect, second chances, timing, social pressure, and the difference between caretaking and desire. The tone is earnest with a streak of melodrama; it never fully winks at the camera, which is why the emotional beats land.

What people are saying (around the web)

  • Some viewers call it “cheesy but addictive”—the kind of series you finish in two sittings because the micro-cliffhangers work.
  • Others appreciate the flip in perspective: the “dependable” lead isn’t a doormat; he just stops auditioning for a role he already played for years.
  • Detractors point to stiff line reads and fast transitions; fans counter that the story’s heart and pacing outweigh the rough edges.

Roadmap for this site

While we build, this homepage will serve as your quick guide. Coming soon:

  • A clean Where to Watch page with direct, official links and region notes.
  • A spoiler-light Episode Guide organized by arc (not 75 tiny recaps).
  • Cast & Characters with a friendly glossary of who’s who.
  • Ending Explained for those who want the deep dive after finishing.
  • Discussion & Reviews pulling in opinions from IMDb, Reddit, YouTube, and more.

Credits & disclaimer

This is a fan-run site for the ReelShort/DramaBox version of Miss You After Goodbye. We’re not affiliated with the platforms or rights holders. All trademarks, images, and clips belong to their respective owners. If you’re a rights holder and spot an issue, we’re easy to reach and happy to fix it.