Manhua fans have been buzzing about 'Heal with Time,' and I totally get why—it's one of those stories that hits you right in the feels. As far as I know, there hasn't been an official anime or live-action adaptation yet, which is a shame because the emotional depth and character growth in the manhua would translate beautifully to screen. The art style alone, with its delicate lines and expressive characters, feels like it’s begging for an animated treatment. I’ve seen fan-made animations and edits floating around online, though, and some of them are surprisingly well done—proof that the demand is there!
That said, the manhua itself is still ongoing, and adaptations often wait until a series has enough material or a solid ending. 'Heal with Time' has a dedicated fanbase, so I wouldn’t be surprised if studios are keeping an eye on it. If it ever gets picked up, I’d love to see a studio like MAPPA or Kyoto Animation handle it—they’ve got the chops to do justice to the story’s bittersweet tone. Until then, I’ll just keep rereading my favorite arcs and daydreaming about what could be.
2025-09-15 15:01:14
4
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
LOVE TAKES TIME
Emma Swan
9.9
33.3K
His smoldering golden gaze struck sparks from hers.
“I wanted you the first time I saw you nearly three years ago. Now I want you even more.”
“Me too... I've been waiting for this for so long… Three years might seem an eternity sometimes. Touch me, Diego. Please,” she mumbled shakily.
“I will, 'cariño'… And I won’t stop. Not until you beg me to.”
"Then... Don’t you ever stop…” she whispered urgently, shifting her hips in a restive movement against the sheet, wildly, wickedly conscious of the growing ache at the very heart of her.
“Never…”
"Is this a promise?"
"A certainty."
For sexy, mysterious Mexican aristocrat Diego Francisco Martinez del Río, Duque de Altamira, Jacqueline Maxwell was a gypsy, a weirdo living in awful conditions. And she was raising his orphaned baby niece in… a trailer!
So unacceptable!
Since she wasn’t giving up on little Azura, and his niece was very fond of her aunt, Diego offered to marry Jacqueline and raise the little girl together. Yes, she was poor but she was a real beauty, and with a little help, Jacqueline might become a perfect wife for a Duque. Graceful, beautiful... delightful, even.
Jacqueline Maxwell knew Diego and his kind all too well. He was as stunning and charming as the devil himself, but twice as ruthless and heartless. He was just a playboy interested in one thing and one thing only. And it had nothing to do with little Azura. Still, accepting his proposal of a marriage of convenience might be the end to all her worries regarding the little girl left in her care by Alyssa, her sister...
Dana Sosa watched her life collapse in one night. Arrested in her best friend’s apartment for a stabbing she didn’t commit, she was convicted on fake photos and a forced testimony. Three years later, she walks out of prison with nothing—no career, no reputation, and her family estate sold from under her while she was locked away.
The worst part? The man who didn’t fight for her was Mateo Tova, the billionaire she almost married. He believed the lies. He let her rot.
When Mateo’s stepbrother Remy bails her out, he offers her one thing: a job as Mateo’s personal secretary at Tovar Group. It’s not kindness. It’s revenge. But for Dana, it’s the only way back into the world that destroyed her.
Forced to work inches from the man who shattered her, Dana meets his coldness with sharper edges. He believes she cheated. She believes he abandoned her. Neither knows the truth—because someone made sure they never would.
As secrets surface and old feelings ignite, Dana starts to uncover the real plot behind it
The year my boyfriend is dead broke, I leave him. Later, he becomes a mafia boss and uses every means at his disposal to marry me.
Everyone says that I am the first love he can never forget, the wife he cares about the most. However, he then starts bringing home a different woman every night, making me a laughingstock.
Still, I don't cry or make a fuss. I quietly stay in my own room, never interrupting his affairs.
Elton Carter is furious. He pins me beneath him, kisses me harshly, and growls, "Aren't you jealous?"
He has no idea that I'm gravely ill.
He could buy half the city with violence, threats, and money. He could buy my freedom, my marriage… and each night bring a different woman home, oblivious to the truth.
Little does he know, I have just seven days left to live.
Two doctors working in a pandemic almost 400 years apart meet in the most unexpected way possible between rifts of reality, intertwining their hearts in the twisted threads of fate and time. Can they survive amidst the plague? Or will their love succumb to the wheels of cruel destiny?
Join Elvira as she clashes against tides of medieval struggles and the dangers of ignorance in the new world she had to survive in along with Jacques who is a plague doctor that searches for the cure boundlessly as well and bumps into a strange person who claims to be from the future and is a doctor. Together, they travel across medieval Europe towards ancient China to find something even more important than the cure itself, home.
My parents died in an accident when I was 16 years old. That leaves me and my stepbrother, Freddie Sanford, to rely on each other.
At 20 years old, I get drunk and confess my feelings to him. But instead of being gentle as usual, he lashes out in fury. "Rosalie Hunter, do you have no shame at all? I'm your brother!"
From that day on, he gets back together with his first love, Bianca Reed. His attitude toward me plummets and turns cold as ice.
What Freddie doesn't know is I'm sick. To me, every day feels like a countdown.
On the day of their wedding, I quietly reach the end of my life.
When I open my eyes again, I've returned to two years ago.
At the same time, I learn an unbelievable piece of news.
Freddie has been dead for three years.
Lara only wanted one thing in her life: to be happy with her child and husband.
However, that simple wish was shattered when Seno, her husband, cheated on her with his secretary.
It didn't end there; Lara was also confronted with mysteries about Seno's seemingly endless wealth.
Lara's encounter with an old acquaintance, who also happened to be her mother's killer, made her life even more difficult. Lara felt completely powerless.
Doctor Andre became the one person she didn't want to see. Ironically, he was the only one Lara could trust.
"I will never let you suffer, Lara."
Man, I was *just* thinking about 'Heal with Time' yesterday! It's one of those stories that stuck with me long after I finished reading. From what I've dug into, there isn't an official sequel announced yet, which bums me out because the ending left so much room for exploration. The way it blended emotional healing with subtle supernatural elements was chef's kiss. I've seen fan theories suggesting potential spin-offs—like following the side character Mei's journey as a time healer in a different era—but nothing concrete.
That said, the author's active on social media and has teased 'new projects' in the same universe. Could be a spiritual successor rather than a direct sequel? Either way, I’m glued to my notifications waiting for updates. The original’s themes of grief and second chances hit so hard that I’d *kill* for more content. Until then, I’ll probably reread it and ugly-cry again at 2 AM.
I've tracked every version of 'Broken Mirror: Hard To Mend' like a collector hunting for obscure pressings, and the range of adaptations is pretty wild.
There’s the big-screen adaptation that leans into the novel's noir elements: a tight two-hour film that trades some of the book's slower interior passages for visual metaphors and a more definitive ending. Then there’s the limited TV series that expands the secondary characters and keeps the novel's ambiguity intact across six episodes — it’s the version most fans recommend if you want depth.
Beyond screen versions, you'll find a stripped-down stage play that uses mirrors and minimal props to dramatize the psychological fractures, a serialized audio drama with full voice cast and an amazing ambient score, and a faithful graphic novel that reimagines scenes with stark black-and-white art. There are also fan-made visual novel ports, a couple of foreign-language remakes that relocate the story culturally, and a small but gorgeous radio-theatre adaptation. My favorite is the audio drama — it turns quiet moments into something tactile and eerie, which suits the book perfectly.