Vampire/Blood
Browse Vampire/Blood short dramas.

Love's Time Lag
"Childhood sweethearts Xiao Sese and Duan Qiming grew into a loveless marriage—he obsessed with mistress Xie Yingying, she pining for her white moonlight Jiang Ge (unbeknownst to all, Duan's half-brother who secretly donated a kidney to save him). When Jiang Ge, now dying, needs the last available specialist slot, Sese kowtows until her forehead bleeds to secure it... only for Duan to steal the appointment for Xie Yingying's trivial ailment. At Jiang Ge's funeral, Sese crashes her car into Duan's Mercedes with his lover inside, revealing three truths mid-collision: 1) Jiang Ge was Duan's savior, 2) Duan's thugs had beaten his dying brother for ""seducing"" Sese, 3) The moon necklace Duan gifted Xie was a replica of Jiang Ge's original to Sese. As Sese's coma begins, her spirit watches Duan's redemption arc: he recreates the shattered necklace, exposes Xie's lies (leading to her fatal car chase), and crawls bare-kneed across the city to the hospital. She wakes only to spit blood onto his moon necklace replica, whispering ""Bury me with Jiang Ge"" before dying. Thirty years later, when young lovers named ""Sese"" and ""Jiang Ge"" pass their derelict mansion, the now-geriatric Duan drops his walking frame to kneel once more—realizing too late that some debts can never be repaid. "

It's Coming
"Wang Liang's peaceful life shatters when a mysterious creature kills his chickens, leaving behind eerie green blood. Ignoring his grandmother's warnings about a vengeful legendary beast, the ""Old Cat Monkey,"" he provokes it. The creature attacks that very night, and his grandmother reveals a tragic family secret: Wang Liang's parents and grandfather were killed by the same beast. Trapped at home with his wife in labor, the family faces a dire situation. His grandmother bravely sacrifices herself as a diversion. Thankfully, the village chief arrives with help, driving the beast away. Believing the danger has passed, Wang Liang rushes his wife to the hospital but is stalked by strange lights and sounds. In a desperate confrontation, he discovers it was actually the village chief's men following to protect them. However, peace is short-lived. After his child is born, the ""Old Cat Monkey"" returns, setting fire to their home. In a final showdown, the village chief and villagers capture the creature, unveiling the shocking truth: the ""monster"" was a human villain in disguise all along. With the menace exposed, Wang Liang's family finally finds true safety."

The Seventh Day of the Goat
"Fresh graduate Zhang Lijuan returns to her rural hometown, only to find her mother Wang Huilan obsessively serving her boiled goat heads for seven consecutive days—each meal colder and more rancid than the last. Her father Zhang Changqing avoids eye contact, whispering to the empty barn at night. The horror escalates when Lijuan's phone floods with anonymous ""RUN"" texts. Mirrors reflect her mother's face stretching into impossible grins, while midnight drips sync with a distorted lullaby from her childhood. Every escape attempt loops her back to the porch, where the goat skulls hanging above the door seem to multiply. When her father finally acknowledges the terror, his brief moment of shared fear twists into manic laughter—""Just testing your city-girl nerves!"" But Lijuan finds proof this is no prank: the family photo album shows generations of daughters disappearing on their seventh day home, all with goat's blood smeared on their portraits. The real horror dawns as she realizes the goat heads weren't meant to feed her... but to prepare her. "

The Cursed Mirror
While working in the fields, Zhang Qiang and Li Xiu follow a strangely behaving weasel into an abandoned mansion in the mountains. Inside, Zhang Qiang accidentally steps on a small mound, uncovering a rosewood box containing an ancient bronze mirror. The mirror is eerie—its surface is covered in green rust and blood-red streaks, while its back bears a grotesque nuo (exorcism) mask design, exuding an unsettling aura. Despite warnings from villagers like Old Man Chen and Granny Zhang about the mansion’s curse and the mirror’s dark nature, Zhang Qiang takes it home, hoping to sell it for profit. From then on, a series of bizarre events unfold: midnight knocks with no one there, the weasel’s repeated eerie appearances, livestock dying mysteriously, and ghostly wails echoing from the village at night. Most horrifyingly, no matter where Zhang Qiang discards the mirror—whether in a river, the wilderness, or deep in the mountains—it always returns, sometimes even reappearing on village walls, surrounded by terrifying nuo mask paintings. Tormented, Zhang Qiang and Li Xiu return to the mansion at night to investigate. Shrouded in thick fog, the estate is even more sinister: scratching sounds come from the well, shadowy figures loom in the mist, and Zhang Qiang glimpses glowing eyes in the well’s depths before finding a bloody handprint on his face. Granny Zhang reveals that the mansion once belonged to a nuo dance performer, and his descendant, Erzhu, was driven mad by its dark history. Zhang Qiang stages a fake plan to melt the mirror, then lies in wait—only to catch the stalker: Erzhu, who had been pretending to be insane. Erzhu confesses that he fabricated the hauntings to protect his ancestral home and the mirror (a family heirloom meant as a dowry). The mirror’s “returns” were his doing—he secretly retrieved it and staged the creepy scenes. After Zhang Qiang apologizes sincerely, Erzhu takes the mirror away, and the disturbances finally cease.

The Omen Rooster: A Village’s Descent into Madness
The story begins when Xiaoshuai, a villager, notices that his six-year-old rooster, ""Golden Voice,"" has started crowing incessantly at midnight, shattering the peace of the village. Soon after, a series of bizarre events unfold—chains dragging on the ground, ""blood"" seeping from the stone bridge, dead fish floating in the river, unexplained red marks appearing on villagers, and livestock dying with eerie green eyes. Panic spreads like wildfire. Rumors quickly point to Golden Voice as the harbinger of doom. Xiaoshuai’s wife, Xiaomei, pleads with him to kill the rooster, and the villagers collectively pressure him. But Xiaoshuai refuses to believe his beloved rooster is to blame and sets out to uncover the truth. His investigation leads him to mysterious footprints by the river, specially made black ropes, and a terrifying incident where Xiaomei is attacked and disappears. Teaming up with the village chief, Xiaoshuai lays a trap—only to expose the real culprit: their neighbor, Auntie Er. Driven to madness by sleepless nights due to Golden Voice’s crowing, she orchestrated the entire horror show—mimicking rooster calls, poisoning the river, fabricating ""supernatural"" signs, and spreading rumors—all to manipulate the villagers into forcing Xiaoshuai to kill the rooster. In the end, Auntie Er breaks down in remorse, and the truth is revealed: every ""supernatural"" event was a carefully crafted hoax. The story critiques human malice, blind superstition, and mob mentality, delivering a message about rational thinking and resisting rumors. What began as a rooster’s midnight cry spiraled into a dark farce, exposing the trust crises and hidden cruelty in rural life.

Cursed Shoes: Erhua’s Haunted Week
Erhua was a girl who loved beauty more than anything. One day, while picking wild vegetables by the roadside, she spotted a pair of exquisite embroidered shoes. Seeing no one around, she decided to take them for herself. But as soon as she carried the shoes away, she unwittingly wandered into a graveyard—where terrifying things began to happen. When she and her friend Dazhu returned home, her grandfather was horrified upon seeing the shoes and sternly demanded she throw them away. Dazhu dragged Erhua to dispose of them, but she snatched the shoes back and secretly hid them in her room. The next morning, something sinister occurred—Erhua woke up to find herself dressed in funeral makeup. Realizing the danger, her grandfather ordered Dazhu to bury the shoes at the graveyard. But at the gravesite, another wave of horrors unfolded. A deranged old woman suddenly wailed, screaming that ""someone has come to marry Erhua!"" Panicked, Dazhu pulled Erhua away and fled home. That night, Erhua dreamed of a figure in funeral robes arriving to wed her. She jolted awake—only to find the buried embroidered shoes back on her feet. As a last resort, her grandfather told Dazhu to burn the shoes. But as Dazhu prepared the fire, the madwoman appeared, babbling incoherently before running off. The two chased her to an ancient mansion, only to discover it was a funeral hall. The old woman’s eerie voice echoed again, sending them fleeing in terror. That same night, the madwoman abducted Erhua and forced her into a wedding ceremony—with a paper effigy as the groom. Just as the ritual reached its peak, Dazhu burst in and rescued her. Calming the old woman, they learned the truth: she was a grieving mother who had lost her child. With the village chief’s help, she was sent to a nursing home. The nightmare finally ended, leaving Erhua with a hard lesson: never again would she covet abandoned things by the roadside.

The Fake Empress: A Reign of Madness and Blood
"After the deaths of her parents, Su Qingqing, daughter of a merchant family in Great Xia, is taken in by her uncle’s household in Nanzhou Prefecture. Facing financial ruin, her uncle forces her into marriage during her mourning period to fund his son’s wedding. Fleeing the arrangement, Su Qingqing disrupts the imperial procession of Emperor Xiao He, who—moved by her plight and reminded of his beloved Shen Min’s similar hardships—grants her a token of favor, permitting her to serve in the palace after her filial mourning ends. Misinterpreting the emperor’s compassion as romantic interest, Su Qingqing storms the palace with two friends, Zhao Jiaojiao and Fang Yuanyuan, expelling court ladies, presiding over morning court from the throne, executing officials, and appointing her unqualified friends as Ministers of Revenue and War. Her reckless actions escalate: she castrates the Crown Prince of Great Liang, sabotages a diplomatic marriage alliance, and declares war on multiple nations in front of both emperors. A bedridden Emperor Xiao He watches helplessly as Su Qingqing seizes the throne, humiliates his uncle Prince Yu with the imperial disciplinary rod, and later deposes the Dowager Empress, sending her and the true empress Shen Min to a brothel. When Great Liang invades in retaliation, Su Qingqing’s disastrous ""campaign""—a lavish sightseeing tour—ends in her capture and the annihilation of 100,000 troops. To save herself, she betrays Great Xia, leading the enemy army to the capital. Only Emperor Xiao He’s last-minute recovery and heroic speech rally the people to repel the invaders. Su Qingqing is sentenced to marry a Xiongnu chieftain as punishment, while her accomplices are publicly executed. "

From Devil to Disciple: A Mother’s Love Unveiled
"Chi Fengmian, the once-feared Demon Emperor, is betrayed by his own mother and brother—only to reawaken in the frail body of Su Mian, a sickly disciple of the righteous Xiaoyao Sect. Though his body is weak, his soul still carries the sword intent of a supreme devil, and even a fraction of his power could shake the Eastern Continent. Yet, burned by past betrayal, he hides his strength, distrusting even his new mother, Ji Yunhe, who begs the sect leader for medicine to save him. But Sect Leader Ji Changling cares only for profit. To avoid conflict with rival sect Qingfu Sect, he forces Ji Yunhe to marry its cruel leader, Ye Qingshu—exchanging her dignity for the Blood Spirit Grass that can cure Su Mian. On the wedding day, as Yunhe endures public humiliation—leashed like a dog—Su Mian learns the truth. Too late. The medicine forbids him from using his power for one critical hour—but when Ye Qingshu’s blade descends on his mother, the Devil’s patience snaps. What good is a righteous sect… when only hell’s fury can save the woman who gave everything?"

Tender Farewel
Lu Ci learned that she had a terminal illness and less than a year to live. Just as she was feeling relieved that, as an orphan, no one would mourn her death, she found out that the orphanage she lived in was about to be demolished. What she didn’t know was that this was a scheme set up by her ex-boyfriend to force her to find him. As per Shen Xiuting's wishes, Lu Ci went to seek him out. When Lu Ci saw that the party responsible for demolishing the orphanage was Shen Xiuting, she felt both joy and surprise. Although she initially wanted to avoid him, she chose to appear before Shen Xiuting to plead with him to sell the orphanage to her for its survival. Shen Xiuting agreed, but only on the condition that Lu Ci would stay with him for three months, after which he would sell the orphanage to her. Lu Ci agreed, but Shen Xiuting did not keep his promise and went ahead with the demolition. When Shen Xiuting's mother learned that Lu Ci had reappeared in her son’s life, she pressured Lu Ci once again to leave him. With the orphanage demolished, her life nearing its end, and her lover about to marry someone else, Lu Ci felt overwhelmed by despair and chose to end her life. Fortunately, Shen Xiuting saved her. After going through a series of misunderstandings and pain, they finally opened up to each other. Shen Xiuting no longer concealed his love, and Lu Ci confessed to him about her terminal illness. Shen Xiuting accompanied Lu Ci to the hospital for treatment, but unfortunately, her condition continued to deteriorate. In the final moments of Lu Ci's life, Shen Xiuting held a wedding for her in the hospital. After the wedding, Lu Ci’s life faded away. Lu Ci's passing dealt a crushing blow to Shen Xiuting. After taking care of her affairs, he stood before her grave, wanting to follow her into the afterlife. However, he received seven letters that Lu Ci had left behind, arranged by Li Sisi. He lived like a walking corpse for seven years, and ultimately gave his life to save a child, with roses stained in blood as he rushed toward Lu Ci.

The Good Demon
When Vivian Ye was a child, she endured brutal beatings from her father, leaving her with a deep-seated hatred for domestic violence. As an adult, she became a skilled and justice-driven karate instructor. However, the trauma from her past made her resistant to marriage, much to the dismay of her grandmother, Eleanor Yuan, who made it her mission to see Vivian married. Under Eleanor’s relentless pressure, Vivian reluctantly agreed to blind dates. But most suitors were intimidated by her profession as a martial arts instructor and quickly backed off. Desperate, Eleanor decided to "refine" Vivian’s dating profile, rebranding her granddaughter as a gentle kindergarten teacher. The change worked instantly—Vivian met the charming and refined veterinarian, Jason Ji. Jason was witty and gentlemanly, with only one flaw: he had been married before and now had a rebellious ten-year-old son, Jay. Despite Jay’s open hostility and defiance, Vivian was moved by Jason’s kindness and decided to marry him. When Jay realized his attempts to sabotage their relationship had failed, he tore up the family’s household registration booklet, forcing Vivian and Jason to postpone their marriage registration. Vivian moved in with the Ji family ahead of the wedding. Jay repeatedly tried to lure her into the basement—a place Jason had strictly forbidden her to enter. The basement was always damp, cold, and carried a faint scent of blood. Though Vivian nearly stepped inside several times, she always managed to avoid it at the last moment. Frustrated by her resistance, Jay grew increasingly desperate. Hidden in that basement was the darkest, most bloodthirsty desire. Then, during a strange power outage, Vivian was finally led deep into the basement—where she uncovered the horrifying truth about Jason and Jay. The cruelest member of the Ji family wasn’t Jay… it was Jason. The basement was lined with glass jars preserving the delicate hands of countless young women, their beauty frozen in formaldehyde—all to satisfy Jason’s twisted obsession. Jay showed Vivian footage of Jason beating his own mother to death. His ex-wife hadn’t died by suicide out of shame for an affair; she had been murdered by Jason. Jay, who hadn’t inherited his father’s violent nature, had deliberately acted like a spoiled, unruly child to scare away every woman Jason dated—just to protect them from harm. Instead of fleeing, Vivian chose to stay, determined to gather evidence and bring down the Ji family once and for all.

Dancing Shadows
In the ancient castle, the male lead, Frank, is dealing with Fu Ling, finally avenging his long-held grudge. As he does so, a melodious dance tune wafts through the air. Frank turns towards the source of the music. Not far away, in front of the castle's fountain, the female lead, Lucy, is dancing, so breathtakingly beautiful that it seems almost otherworldly. Frank catches a fleeting glimpse of her, and beneath his calm exterior, a madness born of years of longing for Lucy surges within him. He recalls the time when Lucy performed a ballet just for him. As Lucy finishes her dance, the second male lead, moved by her performance, appears. Lucy's father is also there, overjoyed for the two young people. Just then, black-clad bodyguards emerge from all directions. Frank approaches Lucy, kicks the second male lead aside, and introduces himself as Fu Jingnian, declaring that he has come today to marry Lucy. Both Lucy and her father are stunned by Frank's true identity. Seeing their shocked expressions, Frank confesses his love for Lucy and demands that she marry him. Lucy, taken aback by Frank's domineering attitude, angrily rebukes him, slapping him and declaring that he is the one who ruined her mother's life. She recounts how her mother was hit by Frank's relative, stating that the perpetrator deserved to go to hell but is instead living freely, while her mother suffers from severe depression, all due to the oppression of Frank's powerful family. She swears she will never marry Frank. Frank expresses deep regret for what happened to Lucy's mother but clarifies that he was not responsible. He promises to find the perpetrator and personally apologize to Lucy's family if she agrees to marry him. True to his word, Frank fulfills his promise, but only after confining Lucy by his side. From then on, Frank uses every means to forcibly claim Lucy, leading to a tumultuous love-hate relationship as Lucy initially does not love Frank. Over time, Frank gradually learns how to truly love someone, and Lucy begins to see Frank in a new light, eventually opening her heart to him, leading to a happy ending.

The Angry Wife
In her past life, Leona was weak, timid, and completely blinded by love. She let herself be manipulated by her husband’s family, working tirelessly for them while living in the fantasy he created for her. She was so devoted that she even took 30,000 yuan—money meant for her sick father’s medical treatment—to fund her husband’s startup. As a result, her father passed away at home due to complications from diabetes. Her mother was utterly heartbroken and disappointed in her.The final straw came when Leona sold her own blood to celebrate her husband's birthday, only to catch him cheating—right in front of her. The mistress, Zhao Qianqian, pushed her off the rooftop. In her dying moments, her soul left her body, allowing her to witness the horrifying truth: her husband’s entire family, including his mother and even their own son, had always known about Zhao Qianqian. To them, Leona was nothing more than a free housemaid.
