7 Engagements and One Kevan-Sized Disaster: LIB 10

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7 Engagements and One Kevan-Sized Disaster: LIB 10

Love Is Blind Season 10 has barely opened its pod doors! And already the emotional chaos, impulsive engagements, and questionable judgment calls are flowing stronger than the cast’s blind optimism. The first six episodes waste no time proving that love might be blind. But it’s definitely not logical.

This season’s Ohio singles walk into the pods hoping to find soulmates, and somehow, seven couples leave engaged. Yes, seven people confidently promise forever to someone they’ve never seen, never smelled, and never watched eat soup too loudly. Romance is alive and deeply unhinged.

7 Engagements

7 Engagements and One Kevan-Sized Disaster: LIB 10

One of the earliest and most stable engagements comes from Vic and Christine, who immediately stand out for their emotional maturity. Their connection forms quickly through shared values, faith, and honest conversations that don’t involve unnecessary dramatics or emotional gymnastics.

In Love Is Blind terms, that makes them unicorns. They’re so solid, in fact, that producers send them off separately rather than risk contaminating their calm energy with the rest of the cast’s chaos. Watching them feels like watching the one couple at a party that actually communicates while everyone else argues in the kitchen.

Dilemmas Brew With One Couple Out Of 7 Engagements

Jordan and Amber bring one of the season’s first major dilemmas. Jordan initially admits that dating someone with a child is something he’s unsure about—but then falls deeply for Amber, who is a devoted mother. His internal conflict creates tension, but his feelings ultimately win out, and he proposes. It’s a sweet moment, but viewers can’t help but wonder if Jordan truly understands the reality of stepping into a parental role. Falling in love in a pod is one thing. Helping with homework and school drop-offs is another level entirely.

Connor and Brianna’s journey is anything but smooth. Connor forms strong connections with both Brianna and Emma, creating one of the season’s first messy love triangles. In the end, he chooses Brianna, leaving Emma heartbroken—but not for long. Emma finds her own happy ending when Mike proposes, and the two form a bond built on emotional honesty and vulnerability. Their connection feels genuine, though slightly fragile, like a new phone without a protective case. One emotional drop, and things could crack fast.

7 Engagements and One Kevan-Sized Disaster: LIB 10

Chris and Jessica also find themselves swept up in pod romance, bonding over shared goals and deep personal conversations. Their engagement feels sincere, but there’s an undercurrent of uncertainty as they transition from emotional intimacy to real-world chemistry. Watching them interact is both hopeful and nerve-wracking, like watching someone parallel park while five people yell conflicting instructions.

Alex and Ashley’s engagement starts strong but quickly shows cracks. Alex makes the classic reality TV mistake of admitting that Ashley isn’t his “usual type.” Nothing boosts confidence like hearing you’re someone’s emotional exception rather than their physical preference. Ashley handles the comment with impressive composure, but viewers immediately recognize the red flag waving aggressively in the background.

Last Couple To Say YES!

Brittany and Devonte round out the engaged couples, though their connection feels slightly uneven. They share emotional chemistry, but moments of awkwardness hint that their physical connection may not be as effortless. Their interactions sometimes feel less like a passionate romance and more like two coworkers trying to decide whether to hug or wave.

7 Engagements and One Kevan-Sized Disaster: LIB 10

Of course, not everyone finds love, and that’s where Kevan becomes one of the season’s biggest emotional question marks. Kevan forms meaningful connections and shows genuine vulnerability, but his indecision ultimately becomes his downfall.

He struggles to fully commit, constantly questioning whether his feelings are strong enough or if something better might be waiting behind the next pod door. His hesitation leaves the women involved emotionally drained and viewers collectively yelling at their screens. Kevan becomes the human embodiment of overthinking—proof that sometimes the biggest obstacle to love isn’t incompatibility, but fear.

The first six episodes deliver everything fans love about Love Is Blind: emotional vulnerability, messy triangles, impulsive proposals, and moments of genuine connection mixed with absolute confusion. It’s a social experiment where people fall deeply in love without seeing each other—and then immediately panic when the second reality sets in.

Because nothing says lifelong commitment quite like proposing to someone before you’ve seen how they act in traffic.