Brothers, Hate Me Already!
As Zoey is going to retire, a system glitch puts her in a novel as the villainess. Her new mission: to be hated. But when she begins her scheming, her every inner thought is broadcast loud and clear to her new family. Instead of earning their disgust, she becomes the most cherished treasure. Will she find a way to get her own life back, or keep being the apple of their eyes?
Recommended for you






Wet Hair, Wet Tears, Dry Dignity
The brown-dress girl’s soaked bangs say everything: humiliation, resilience, quiet fury. While others posture, she *feels*—and that’s why we’re all watching. Brothers, Hate Me Already! turns a hallway into a battlefield of glances. 💧🔥
Gold Buttons vs. Pearl Necklace
Uniform’s gold crest vs. white dress’s pearls—a visual metaphor for inherited privilege vs. earned grace. Every gesture here is coded. Brothers, Hate Me Already! doesn’t need dialogue; the cuffs, the clutch, the *stare*—they tell the whole saga. 👑💎
Her Hands Said It All
Clasped palms, then a tug, then folded prayer—her hands narrate the arc of desperation to defiance. In Brothers, Hate Me Already!, body language is the real script. You don’t need subtitles when eyes and fingers speak this fluently. 🙏🎬
The Man Who Didn’t Look Away
While everyone else shifts gaze, he holds hers—just long enough to unsettle the room. That double-breasted suit hides more than fabric; it’s armor and guilt. Brothers, Hate Me Already! proves power isn’t in the suit… it’s in the pause before speaking. ⏳
The Poolside Power Play
That moment when the girl in uniform tugs the man’s sleeve—pure emotional leverage. The tension near the pool isn’t just water; it’s simmering class drama. Brothers, Hate Me Already! nails how silence speaks louder than shouting. 🌊✨