The TV series "No Limits" closes with a complete ending, true to the spirit that the film pursued from the beginning: No need for dramatization, still enough to touch emotions with very real stories of peacetime soldiers.
From the beginning, the film clearly defined the direction when depicting the image of a soldier in a setting without gunfire, especially the rescue force. The central character, Lieutenant Colonel Dao Minh Kien (played by Steven Nguyen), appears as a daring soldier, always ready to rush into dangerous places to regain life for others.
Not only tasks, the film also delves into the character's inner world. Kien carries past obsessions and feelings of remorse for his comrades, thereby always keeping distance from personal feelings. His relationship with Lam Anh (played by Minh Trang) - a female soldier he once rescued - therefore becomes a xuyên suốt emotional axis, where reason and emotions constantly struggle.
In parallel with the main line, the film scores points thanks to the close supporting character system. Loi (played by To Dung) from a person with many complaints gradually changes, revealing a clear inner depth. The couple Loi - Khanh Linh (played by Anh Dao) brings a gentle color, balancing the tense atmosphere, and is also a line loved by audiences thanks to its naturalness.

If the secondary line creates a feeling of closeness, then Minh Kien's line leaves an aftertaste with maturity. In the last episode, he no longer avoids it but chooses to face his feelings.
The meeting with Lam Anh's family, especially the strict father, became an important challenge. No longer being roundabout, Kien frankly expressed: Not perfect but sincere enough to love and accompany. It was that simplicity that made the nod of acceptance more meaningful than any constraint.
The ending is fully pushed up in the "unique" wedding of Loi and Linh, where the groom wears militia clothes, the bride wears simple but warm ao dai. Here, Kien - Lam Anh's story also closes with a gentle moment: the bouquet of wedding flowers, the proposal and the sentence "I love you" not ostentatious but full after a journey of many unfinished things.

Without a dramatic climax, "No Limits" chooses to end with a wedding, a word of acceptance, a love spoken at the right time. It is that simplicity that creates an aftertaste, when soldiers in peacetime not only complete their tasks, but also learn to keep their own happiness.