Google just dropped Pakistan’s Most Searched Dramas of 2025, and while the full top 10 is a chaotic buffet of vibes, plot twists, and questionable life choices, we decided to focus on the seven that really tell the story of our national viewing habits. Think of it as the “essentials-only” version — the dramas that actually reveal who we are when left alone with our screens and Google’s search bar.

These seven shows are not just trending; they’re basically personality tests. From healing heroes to revenge queens, from cybertruck cameos to 62-episode endurance tests, each one reflects a different shade of the wonderfully confusing Pakistani drama audience. It’s emotional cardio, cultural anthropology, and pure entertainment rolled into one.
This list isn’t just data — it’s a mirror. A slightly chaotic, very entertaining mirror reflecting who we are, what we fantasise about, and how we secretly behave when no one’s watching (except Google… always watching).
Sher
Sher at no. 1 and honestly, not shocking. When Danish Taimoor finally chooses to play a hero who heals without the resident toxic alpha roaring in the background, Pakistani audiences naturally say, “Now this… we can get behind.” A wholesome hero? Revolutionary.
Mohra
At no. 5 but absolutely deserved higher. Alizay is single-handedly fixing every generational wrong done to her family — and she’s doing it with such clean execution that even Star Plus heroines might want to enroll in her masterclass. Strategic vengeance? We love to see it
Iqtidar
Landing at no. 6, this one basically knighted Ali Raza as Pakistan’s newest rising star, while Anmol Baloch remains the queen of “the heroine we love to watch.” Also, yes — 62 episodes are somehow still socially acceptable in 2025. Our attention spans are crying.
Parwarish
Sitting at no. 7, but let’s be real — if Gen Z actually watched Pakistani dramas, this would’ve been no. 1. But who are we to judge the Sher audience? Free will exists. So do remote controls.
Meri Zindagi Hai Tu
Meri Zindagi Hai Tu on no. 8, we get Bilal Abbas and Hania Aamir together onscreen for the first time — plus a cybertruck cameo that stole the episode and possibly the budget. Will it return? Will it become the main lead? Will a second cameo push this drama to no. 1? Nobody knows, but we’re invested.
Dayan
At no. 9, proof that Mehwish Hayat and Ahsan Khan still have the kind of chemistry that could power half the national grid. Everyone who wasn’t watching Parwarish was clearly watching Dayan. Different strokes, different dramas — Pakistan delivers both.
Dunyapur
And then there’s no. 10. A drama packed with potential — the kind that should’ve soared to no. 1. But add a zero and here we are. Not pointing fingers, but Ramsha Khan and Khushhal? A pairing we could happily watch on repeat. Some couples are just built for screen domination.
How many have you watched?

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