Dramas

Meri Zindagi Hai Tu Final Review: Did Kamyar and Ayra Get Their Happily Ever After?

Meri-Zindagi-Hai-Tu-Final-Review

After 35 episodes of intense emotional whiplash, ARY Digital’s blockbuster Meri Zindagi Hai Tu has officially rolled its final credits. Starring the powerhouse duo of Bilal Abbas Khan and Hania Aamir, the drama dominated the Thursday night TRP charts and sparked endless debates on Twitter. The premise wasn’t entirely new — a marriage tested by external obsessive interference — but the execution, acting, and handling of trauma set it apart from standard prime-time soap operas.

Now that the dust has settled on Fariya’s toxic plotting and Kamyar’s emotional breakdown, here is our unfiltered final verdict on whether the writers actually stuck the landing.

1. Meri Zindagi Hai Tu Review – Fariya Resolution

The biggest question heading into the finale was how the writers would handle Fariya’s exit.

In most Pakistani dramas, the “obsessive other woman” is usually punished with a sudden, tragic car accident or sent to a psychiatric ward in the final five minutes. Thankfully, Meri Zindagi Hai Tu took a much more grounded route.

Fariya wasn’t killed off; she was forced to face a total social and familial reckoning. Watching her realize that her manipulative gaslighting had alienated everyone who actually cared about her was a far more satisfying and realistic punishment than a dramatic hospital scene.

2. Ayra’s Iron-Clad Boundaries

Hania Aamir delivered one of the strongest performances of her career as Ayra.

The most refreshing aspect of this finale was that Ayra did not immediately forgive Kamyar the second the truth came out. When Kamyar realized how badly he had been manipulated by Fariya and came begging for forgiveness, Ayra held her ground. The writers allowed her to process her anger and betrayal, forcing Kamyar to actively rebuild the trust he had shattered rather than relying on a simple “I’m sorry” to fix the marriage.

3. Kamyar’s Growth

Bilal Abbas Khan knows exactly how to play a flawed, emotionally stunted male lead without making him completely unredeemable.

Instead of turning Kamyar into the typical “angry young man” who yells to solve his problems, the finale focused heavily on his emotional unlearning. The scenes where he finally seeks professional help to unpack his deep-seated insecurities — the exact insecurities Fariya weaponized against him — were brilliantly acted and provided a much-needed spotlight on men’s mental health in local television.


The Verdict: 4/5 Stars Meri Zindagi Hai Tu proves that you don’t need a perfectly pristine male lead or a weeping, helpless heroine to capture an audience. By leaning into realistic boundaries, therapy, and consequence-driven plotlines, ARY delivered a highly satisfying, mature romance that avoided the trap of a rushed, magical reset button in the last episode.

Related posts
Dramas

The Eid Wrap-Up: Which 2026 Ramadan Drama Actually Won the Ratings War?

Dramas

Ishq Mein Tere Sadqay Final Review: Did Geo TV Actually Nail the Landing?

Dramas

Ishq Mein Tere Sadqay Initial Review: Is Geo TV's New Love Triangle Worth Your Time?

Dramas

Neeli Kothi Review: Did Hum TV's Mystery Romance Deliver?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Worth reading...
Ishq Mein Tere Sadqay Final Review: Did Geo TV Actually Nail the Landing?