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49% of Indian women say pop culture is shaping their dating expectations

From K-Drama to Real Life: happn is unveiling a new dating trend: “No Saviour Season,” where women seek equality and emotional intelligence

March 05, 2026 A noticeable shift is shaping how women approach romance today. The focus is moving away from grand gestures toward mutual effort and honest communication, influenced in part by strong K-drama characters and independent on-screen female leads. happn, the real-life dating app, is calling this emerging shift “No Saviour Season,” a cultural trend where women are no longer drawn to rescue narratives, but to relationships built on understanding and equality. According to a recent survey by happn, Indian women today prioritise emotional intelligence, effort, and mutual respect over outdated romantic ideals. 

Among Indian users, pop culture is also playing a visible role in this shift. Nearly 49% say emotionally expressive characters influence what they find attractive, showing that reel love stories are quietly reframing real-life expectations. The idea of a strong yet emotionally aware partner is no longer niche; it’s becoming a widely appreciated standard in modern relationships. 62% prefer a balanced mix of strength and emotional expression over traditionally dominant portrayals. 

At the same time, female leads are evolving too: 36% resonate most with independent and emotionally strong women, signalling a growing rejection of outdated romance tropes. The days of waiting to be chosen or tolerating uneven effort are fading fast. In fact, accepting less than mutual effort (36%) and waiting to be pursued (30%) are among the most rejected dating narratives today. 

This is what “No Saviour Season” represents: not giving up on love, but raising the standard. Not anti-romance, but pro-reciprocity. Even gestures of affection are being redefined. Grand declarations are taking a backseat to intentional effort: 34% value acts that reflect mutual investment, while 31% prefer meaningful conversations over performative displays. Romance, today, feels slower, and more emotionally literate.

As K-dramas continue to dominate streaming queues, their emotional blueprint seems to be influencing something deeper: a generation of women raising the standard for what modern love should look like. And this Women’s Day, it’s clear: romance isn’t being rejected. It’s being rewritten. 

Karima Ben Abdelmalek, CEO and President of happn, said: “What we’re seeing is a cultural recalibration of romance. Women are no longer drawn to intensity without intention. Emotional intelligence, equality, and mutual effort are becoming the true markers of attraction. At happn, we see users prioritising partners who feel aligned, not overpowering. ‘No Saviour Season’ captures that moment perfectly: love built on choice, not rescue.”

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