House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal (Spoiler-Free)

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal (Spoiler-Free)

Best Short TV Series 2025

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal ranked #5 (so far)

This is our “most popular” shortlist for 2025 — the stuff people keep searching, reviewing, and recommending in short-drama communities.

We rank using a mix of buzz (search interest), viewer reactions (comments/ratings), and how often a series gets suggested as a “watch next.”

Quick heads-up: each app has its own catalog. Shortical is a different app with its own originals, so you won’t always find the same titles across DramaBox / ReelShort / ShortMAX. Rankings can move during the year as new releases climb.

#1
Keys To My Heart cover

Keys To My Heart

Shortical Shortical
Vibe Romance / comfort-drama
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#2
Pulse of Love cover

Pulse of Love

Shortical Shortical
Vibe Romance / tension
Watch Now!
#3
Billionaire’s Secret Life cover

Billionaire’s Secret Life

Shortical Shortical
Vibe Billionaire / secrets
Watch Now!
#4
Love & Open Marriage cover

Love & Open Marriage

Shortical Shortical
Vibe Marriage drama
Watch Now!
#5
House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal cover

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal

DramaBox DramaBox
Vibe Drama
Watch Now!

Why these 5 made the list (vibe + story fit)

This top 5 is our “watch-next” shortlist for 2025 — a mix of what readers keep searching for, what gets recommended in comments, and which stories people actually finish (not just click once). The common thread: fast pacing, clear tropes, and big hooky moments.

#1 Keys To My Heart — why it sticks

The comfort pick. It leans into emotional payoff (second chances / healing / “are we really doing this?” tension), so people binge it when they want something softer but still dramatic.

Watch on Shortical

#2 Pulse of Love — why it’s replayable

This one wins on pacing. The vibe is sharper (more push–pull, more cliffhangers per minute), which is exactly what short-drama viewers reward with “one more episode” behavior.

Watch on Shortical

#3 Billionaire’s Secret Life — the high-gloss drama slot

Wealth/secret stakes + relationship pressure. It’s built for quick episodes: clean hooks, strong escalation, and a vibe that stays “big” without getting slow.

Watch on Shortical

#4 Love & Open Marriage — the messy relationship slot

Less “cute romance,” more “what would you do?” drama. It hits because the tension is moral + emotional, so it gets a lot of reaction-driven engagement.

Watch on Shortical

#5 House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal — the classic binge hook

Straight momentum with big twists. It’s the “keep going” structure: dramatic beats land quickly and the episode loop stays tight.

Watch on DramaBox

Shortical vs DramaBox (quick comparison)

  • Shortical is the move when you want exclusive originals with a polished, “produced” feel — strong hooks, clean pacing, easy binge flow.
  • DramaBox is great for big-catalog energy and popular series availability, especially when you’re hunting a specific title.
  • They don’t share the same library, so think: Shortical = “exclusive originals”, DramaBox = “big catalog”.

If you’re choosing one app to start with for this list, Shortical is the easiest first pick (4 of these are there), and DramaBox is the place to watch #5.

#1 Full review: Keys To My Heart (Shortical)

Keys To My Heart cover

Keys To My Heart

Romance drama that’s big on emotional payoff — less “random chaos,” more “this actually hurts (in a good way).”

Shortical Shortical Romance Second chances Comfort drama

What it’s about (spoiler-light): At its core, this is a “we broke for a reason… but the feelings didn’t leave” romance. Two people who should probably be done with each other get pulled back into the same orbit, and every episode is basically a tug-of-war between pride, old wounds, and the fact that they still care.

The story doesn’t try to be complicated on purpose — it’s clean, direct, and emotional. You get misunderstandings, forced proximity moments, outside pressure, and a steady drip of “okay, so what REALLY happened back then?”

Why people like it: it feels warm. Even when it’s tense, the vibe is romantic, not cruel. Short-drama viewers love this because it’s easy to binge without feeling exhausted. And it delivers payoff — the little emotional wins land.

Vibe check

Soft-angsty romance. More “lean in” than “throw your phone.”

Why it ranks #1

Big emotional hook + smooth pacing. It’s a perfect starter series.

If you’ll love it

You like romance with real feelings and a satisfying payoff.

If you might skip

You only want nonstop twists — this is calmer and more heart-led.

#2 Full review: Pulse of Love (Shortical)

Pulse of Love cover

Pulse of Love

Romance drama with sharper pacing — more cliffhangers, more push–pull, and more “wait, what?” per minute.

Shortical Shortical Romance High tension Fast twists

What it’s about (spoiler-light): Two people get tangled up in a relationship that feels inevitable… and also dangerous. The series leans into power imbalance, jealousy, misunderstandings, and “do you love me or are you using me?” energy. It’s basically built to keep you hitting next.

This is the short-drama version of a rollercoaster romance. Every time things calm down, something pokes the relationship again: a secret, a third-party push, a sudden reveal, a choice that forces someone’s hand.

Why people like it: it’s addictive. The cliffhanger rhythm is strong, the chemistry is obvious, and the story keeps escalating without getting lost.

Vibe check

Intense romance. More sparks than softness.

Why it ranks #2

Fast pace + clean cliffhangers. It converts “one ep” into a binge.

If you’ll love it

You want romance with edge — tension, friction, big feelings.

If you might skip

You prefer slow-burn tenderness over drama spikes.

#3 Full review: Billionaire’s Secret Life (Shortical)

Billionaire’s Secret Life cover

Billionaire’s Secret Life

High-gloss romance drama: wealth, secrets, and relationship pressure that escalates fast.

Shortical Shortical Billionaire Secrets Reputation drama

What it’s about (spoiler-light): A romance that starts in the shadow of power and money. One side has the status, control, and a private world full of rules. The other side has the human truth: feelings, boundaries, and the need to know what’s real.

The “secret life” part is the hook — you keep watching because you want to understand what’s being hidden and why, and how long the relationship can survive without the full truth on the table.

Why people like it: it’s clean drama. The stakes feel big, the reveals hit on time, and the story never forgets that the romance is the engine. If you like rich-people tension but still want a real emotional thread, this lands.

Vibe check

Luxury romance + “what are you hiding?” tension.

Why it ranks high

Strong hook + steady escalation. It’s built for quick episodes.

If you’ll love it

You like billionaire drama with real relationship pressure.

If you might skip

You want pure comedy or gentle romance — this is heavier.

#4 Full review: Love & Open Marriage (Shortical)

Love & Open Marriage cover

Love & Open Marriage

Relationship drama that goes straight for the “what would you do?” nerve — messy choices, real tension, lots of debate.

Shortical Shortical Marriage drama Moral tension Reactive

What it’s about (spoiler-light): A relationship hits a point where “love” and “rules” stop matching. The story plays with boundaries, jealousy, and the kind of agreements people say they want… until they actually have to live them.

This one is popular because it’s a conversation starter. People don’t just watch — they argue about it, pick sides, and project their own values into the choices characters make.

Why people like it: it’s high reaction. Every episode gives you a moment that makes you pause and go “okay… that would break me.” If you’re into romance drama with moral pressure, it scratches the itch.

Vibe check

Messy, tense, and a little uncomfortable (on purpose).

Why it ranks high

It drives debate + engagement. People can’t stop talking about it.

If you’ll love it

You like “choose your side” relationship drama.

If you might skip

You want simple romance without moral messiness.

Why “House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal” still earned #5

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal cover

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal

A legit “gem” pick — even in a year where Shortical originals are dominating the watch-next conversation.

Let’s be real: short-drama apps pump out a lot of titles, and not all of them are great. The reason the #1–#4 picks are doing so well is because they feel tight and “produced” — clean pacing, strong hooks, and a vibe that keeps you watching. That’s a big part of why Shortical has been growing fast: the originals are usually polished, and the stories are built to binge.

But #5 matters for a different reason. House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal is one of those rare drama picks that still breaks through outside the Shortical bubble. It’s not “perfect,” but it’s unique — the setup is weird in the best way, the episodes move, and it keeps throwing you just enough twist energy to stay fun.

So yeah… it’s ranked #5, but that’s not a diss. In 2025, getting into a top list at all is hard. This one earns its spot because it’s a real binge hook — and if you’re the type who’s already watched the glossy romances on Shortical, this is a great “switch the vibe” series.

Why it’s a “gem”

The hook lands fast and the pacing stays tight. It doesn’t waste episodes setting up the premise.

How it differs from the Shortical top picks

Less polished-romance energy, more “plot momentum + twists.” A good change of pace after romance-heavy binges.

Who it’s best for

Viewers who like drama with quick payoffs and don’t need everything to be slow-burn romantic.

If you’re choosing apps

Start with Shortical for polished originals, then dip into DramaBox when you want a standout “gem” like this.

Alright — after all that top-5 stuff and the comparisons, if you’re here for the actual series itself, you’re in the right place.

Below is the full, spoiler-free review for “House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal” — what it’s about, the vibe, why people stick with it, and whether it’s worth starting right now.


This one is basically a “don’t judge the quiet guy” story… just dialed up to immortal levels.

House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal follows Logan Bale, a man who’s lived for a thousand years and is hiding exactly how powerful he is. He isn’t trying to conquer the world. He’s trying to keep a promise: protect his disciple’s family for three years—and the way he does that is by marrying his disciple’s granddaughter.

And yeah, the family treats him like trash. That’s the whole early tension: Logan is seen as a useless live-in “house husband,” while he’s quietly sitting on the kind of strength that could end the argument in two seconds. Instead, he holds the line, keeps his vow, and carries a second promise of his own: when the three years are up, he walks away.

If you like short dramas where the payoff is watching people slowly realize, oh… we messed with the wrong guy, this is in that lane.


The premise

Here’s the clean, official setup (no added fanfiction):

  • Logan Bale is an immortal who has “walked the earth for a thousand years.”
  • He fulfills a dying promise to his disciple: protect the disciple’s family for three years.
  • To honor that vow, he marries his disciple’s granddaughter.
  • He’s met with scorn and cruelty from her family, but he endures it with quiet resolve.
  • He’s also holding onto one personal promise: to leave the moment the three years end.

That’s the whole engine. The show doesn’t hide its main hook: humiliation now, power later, and a countdown ticking in the background.


Cast (what we can actually verify)

This is the annoying part with a lot of micro-dramas: a full official cast list isn’t always published publicly in a clean way.

  • The DramaBoxDB listing page for this title is built around the synopsis + episode list, and it doesn’t display a full cast grid the way IMDb pages do.
  • There are also people online actively trying to identify who plays the leads (Logan Bale and the female lead sometimes called “Susan Price” in fan discussions), because they “can’t find their names anywhere.”

So the safest, most accurate approach for your site right now is:

  • Use the character name that’s in the official synopsis: Logan Bale.
  • Don’t guess actor names unless DramaBox/DramaBoxDB publishes them on the title page or in an official credit listing you can cite.

You will see re-upload channels claiming specific “ML/FL” names in descriptions, but those are not reliable enough to treat as confirmed casting.


Episodes & format

On DramaBoxDB, the series is listed as 65 episodes, and you can see an Episode List that runs from EP.1 onward.

That number matters because you’ll also see “full movie” edits on YouTube or “completed collection” playlists that bundle everything into long videos. Those bundles are just packaging—this title’s core structure on the DramaBox side is still the 65-episode run.


The world (vibe check)

Even though the premise is supernatural (a thousand-year immortal), the setting plays like modern “rich family + social status + humiliation” drama.

The wife’s family doesn’t treat Logan as dangerous or mystical. They treat him like he’s beneath them, which is the point: the story is about power being invisible… until it isn’t.

Also, the “three-year promise” adds a nice pressure you can feel even in early episodes. Every insult and every compromise has an expiration date.


Character dynamics (why the story hooks people)

Logan Bale – the calm center
Logan is written as someone who can end conflict instantly, but chooses not to. He’s not trying to “win” arguments. He’s trying to complete the mission cleanly, without breaking his vow. That patience is basically the show’s personality.

And because it’s a short drama, that restraint becomes a recurring tease. Viewers keep watching for the moment he finally stops absorbing disrespect and starts revealing what he is.

The disciple’s family – the pressure
The family’s scorn isn’t subtle in the synopsis—DramaBoxDB literally calls it “scorn and cruelty.”
They’re there to keep the stakes personal. If the conflict was only “random enemies,” it wouldn’t hit as hard. This is a home-based humiliation story, so the betrayals feel closer.

The wife (disciple’s granddaughter) – the emotional hinge
The listing doesn’t name her directly, but structurally she’s the hinge: she’s the one person who can shift from “tolerating him” to “respecting him,” and that change is usually the emotional payoff in stories like this.


How the story moves (spoiler-light)

This kind of drama usually runs on a tight loop:

Early stretch — survival mode
Logan enters the marriage with a mission, gets treated as disposable, and absorbs a lot of disrespect while you’re screaming “please stand up for yourself.” The suspense is that he can… but he’s choosing not to (yet).

Middle run — cracks in the image
The story starts feeding the audience small proof that Logan isn’t ordinary—little moments where his competence slips out, or where someone sees him differently. The point isn’t one huge reveal. It’s a drip feed.

Later stretch — the countdown matters
The “three years” promise becomes more than flavor text. It turns into a real question: if Logan is only here to fulfill a vow, what happens when it’s done? He promised he’ll leave. Does he still want to?

That’s as far as I’ll go without stepping on big twists.


What to expect (no spoilers)

Fast payoffs, built for binge
With 65 episodes, the show is designed for that “okay, one more” feeling.

A hidden-power lead who refuses to flex too early
If you like instant domination fantasies, you might get impatient. Logan’s whole thing is restraint. The story wants you to earn the reveal by sitting through the disrespect first.

Family cruelty + redemption pressure
The conflict isn’t only external enemies. It’s being disrespected in the place that’s supposed to be “home,” and watching whether anyone in that household grows a conscience.

A ticking-clock vow
A lot of dramas do “I’ll leave someday” as a vague threat. This one pins it to a timeline: three years, then he goes.


Where to watch (simple and honest)

  • Primary source: the DramaBoxDB title page, with the synopsis and the full 65-episode listing.
  • Official app listing text also shows the same story setup (Logan Bale, thousand-year immortal, three-year promise). (Google Play)
  • Compilations exist (YouTube playlists and “full” edits), but the cleanest reference for episode structure is still the DramaBoxDB episode list. (YouTube)

what now? (my next stop)

If you liked House Husband? Try Supreme Immortal for the whole “everyone thinks he’s harmless… until the truth hits” vibe, these three scratch a similar itch (secret setup, pressure, then a big switch-up).

links are affiliate/sponsored.

Keys To My Heart — warm close-up poster

Keys To My Heart

what it is: Sophie reunites with her high school love (now a country star) while hiding their biggest secret: their 7-year-old daughter.

why it fits this: same quiet endurance energy as Logan—someone keeps their head down, takes the hits, and the payoff is watching the people around them slowly realize they’ve been judging the wrong story.

See what’s trending
Pulse of Love — upbeat duo, city lights poster

Pulse of Love

what it is: Nurse Taylor saves a billionaire’s grandfather and gets pulled into a fake/contract marriage that turns way too real.

why it fits this: if you liked the “marriage for a reason” setup (promise, duty, timeline), this has that same engine—except it’s more playful and modern, with sabotage/pressure pushing the couple faster.

See what’s trending
Billionaire’s Secret Life — sleek office poster with hidden identity vibe

Billionaire’s Secret Life

what it is: a “fake vows” romance where the relationship starts as a family-saving move, but his hidden power world (and betrayal) threatens to wreck them anyway.

why it fits this: this is the closest match to the Immortal vibe—hidden strength + messy people + a truth that changes the balance. You’ll get that same satisfaction when the mask starts slipping and everyone’s forced to rethink who had control all along.

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Danielle Parovsky

Danielle Parovsky is a seasoned technology journalist with over two decades of experience in reporting on tech and enterprise innovations. She contributes her expertise to a broad range of prominent technology websites, including Tech Trends Today, Digital Enterprise Journal, NetTech Horizon, and various industry services. Her work is well-regarded for its depth and insight, and she is known for her ability to elucidate complex technology concepts for a wide audience. Danielle's articles often explore the intersection of technology with business and consumer trends, making her a respected voice in the tech community.