Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet!
Death-row prisoner. Dying empire. Abel wakes in the final days of Zeldra, a dynasty scarred by lost lands and foreign humiliation. As collapse nears, he sees what history never achieved. If Zeldra must fall… can he decide how it ends?
Adapted from the novel "Zhong Song" by Guai Dan De Biao Ge
Recommended for you
Ep Review
Show More Reviews (5)





Power Shifts in a Single Glance
When the robed official enters, the room freezes. But the prisoner? He doesn't flinch. That subtle smile says he knew this would happen. The tension between authority and rebellion is electric. Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet! delivers layers of power play you won't see coming. Perfect for late-night binge sessions.
Whip Cracks, But Will Doesn't Break
The whip scene isn't about pain—it's about pride. The prisoner absorbs every strike without begging, while the interrogator loses composure. It's a masterclass in stoic resistance. Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet! turns torture into theater, and I'm here for every dramatic beat.
The Real Prisoner Is the One Giving Orders
Irony alert: the man holding the whip looks more trapped than the one in chains. His rage, his desperation—it's all exposed under that cold blue light. Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet! flips the script on who's really imprisoned. Watching it on netshort app? Absolutely addictive.
Silence Is His Weapon
He never raises his voice. Never begs. Just stares, smirks, and lets their anger unravel them. That's the real power move. Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet! proves sometimes the loudest statement is made in total silence. If you love slow-burn tension with explosive payoffs, this is your fix.
Chains Can't Hold His Spirit
The prisoner's calm defiance while chained is chilling. Every glance, every smirk screams he's still in control. The interrogator's frustration grows with each failed attempt to break him. Watching Dying Empire? I Say Not Yet! on netshort app feels like witnessing a psychological duel where silence speaks louder than screams.