The episode opens by introducing us to , a young, fiery woman who is tired of the double standards at her family home. She’s expected to cook, clean, and obey, while her brother enjoys freedom. On the flip side, we meet Faris (Sheheryar Munawar in top form) , a sensitive and organized man who is fed up with being the sole breadwinner for his demanding family. He dreams of running a kitchen, not a business.
Special shoutout to the supporting cast: Rabi’s khala (aunt) steals every scene with her dramatic sighs, and Faris’s younger sister acts as the secret ally, forwarding his "male duties" list to him as a joke.
The wait is finally over! The new Pakistani drama has dropped its much-anticipated first episode, and if the premiere is anything to go by, we are in for a rollercoaster of laughs, love, and life lessons. Phir Se Adla Badli Episode 1 -- HiWEBxSERIES.com
If you loved Chupke Chupke or Sun Mere Dil , this is your next binge. Head over to to catch the full episode and join the conversation: Would you swap lives with your partner for a week?
The writers do an excellent job here—within the first 15 minutes, we see the exhaustion on both faces. Rabi sneaks out to play cricket with local kids; Faris secretly watches cooking tutorials on his laptop. The parallel editing is sharp, highlighting their shared misery under different roofs. The episode opens by introducing us to ,
By HiWEBxSERIES.com Review Desk
The "Adla Badli" (exchange) doesn't happen magically. Instead, Episode 1 cleverly plants the seeds. During a hilarious chance encounter at a local food festival (Rabi is stealing samosas, Faris is critiquing the chef), they accidentally swap phones. But the real exchange is emotional: Rabi discovers Faris’s recipe blog, and Faris finds Rabi’s list of "rebellious dreams." He dreams of running a kitchen, not a business
Picking up on a theme that feels both nostalgic and refreshingly modern, Episode 1 wastes no time setting the stage for a classic yet quirky premise:
By the cliffhanger ending, their families arrange a meeting for a potential marriage—but neither wants the "traditional" partner. The final shot shows Rabi and Faris locking eyes, not with love, but with a mischievous, mutual understanding: What if we swapped roles instead of rings?