In the whirlwind world of Culpa Nuestra, the third and final chapter of Mercedes Ron’s scorching Culpables trilogy that dropped on Prime Video October 16, 2025, Nick Leister (Gabriel Guevara) and Noah Morán (Nicole Wallace) don’t just steal scenes—they hijack hearts, leaving fans like you breathless and begging for more. “Dù ở trong phim hay ngoài đời, họ đều khiến tôi không thể rời mắt” captures it perfectly: Whether it’s the pulse-racing tension of their forbidden step-sibling romance on screen or the electric, arm-around-each-other promo poses that scream unspoken chemistry off it, this duo’s magnetic pull is undeniable. With the film racking 50 million streams in its first week and topping Prime’s global charts, Nick and Noah aren’t just characters—they’re a phenomenon, blending YA angst with a spark so real it blurs the lines between reel and reality. As October’s binge darling, Culpa Nuestra proves: Some pairs are too captivating to ignore.

The trilogy’s allure kicked off with Culpa Mía (2023), where Guevara’s brooding bad-boy Nick and Wallace’s fiery Noah ignited a slow-burn that hooked 200 million viewers worldwide. Fast-forward to Culpa Tuya (2024) and now Culpa Nuestra, and their dynamic evolves from explosive clashes to a mature, shadowed reunion four years post-breakup—think wedding reunions laced with corporate intrigue and lingering “what ifs.” Directed by Domingo González, the finale doesn’t shy from the heat: A rain-soaked kiss synced to Rosalía’s haunting remix has TikTok ablaze with 5 million #NickNoahKiss edits, fans gushing over the “eye-f*cking” intensity that makes every glance feel loaded. Wallace, 23, channels Noah’s vulnerability with a raw edge—her trembling lip in a vulnerability breakdown scene earned whispers of Goya nods—while Guevara, 23, amps Nick’s quiet storm, his 6’2″ frame towering over her 5’5″ in lifts that echo the original but hit harder with years of ache. “Their chemistry? It’s the trilogy’s lifeline,” Ron told Teen Vogue in September, crediting their off-screen rapport for the on-screen blaze.

But it’s the off-screen magic that has us glued. Despite rumors of a frosty set dynamic—stemming from Guevara’s 2023 legal drama that briefly paused promo—fans spot the sparks everywhere: A October 12 Madrid premiere clip of Guevara whispering in Wallace’s ear, her blush lighting up the red carpet, went viral with 2 million views, captioned “Real-life Culpa Nuestra vibes.” X users like @always_gabicole geek out over “Gabi and Nicole returns instead of Nick and Noah,” with posts racking 144 likes for their arm-in-arm candids. Even amid the “not cool in real life” whispers (a September X post with 63 views questions their bond), the consensus? Undeniable pull. One fan tweeted post-finale, “If they hate each other, they didn’t let it show—what f**** awesome chemistry,” echoing 3K likes on a Telegraph India roundup. Wallace’s Instagram, at 1.8 million followers, teases with BTS laughs mid-rain scene (“Noah’s tears or mine?”), while Guevara’s gym selfies and tattoo reveals fuel the thirst—fans edit them into “real-life Nick & Noah” montages hitting 1.5 million TikTok plays.

Critics note the evolution: Hauterrfly’s review laments a “stiff” sequel dip but concedes the finale’s “sizzling” recovery, with Wallace and Guevara’s “electric” return making it “the best possible trilogy.” Reddit’s r/romancemovies debates the “forced” moments but admits, “The only scene I liked was the car chase—they still have it,” with 61 comments praising the gaze that “makes you root for them.” Off-screen, their history adds layers: Both Skam España alums (Wallace as Nora, Guevara as Cristian), they bonded pre-Culpa Mía, with Wallace joking in Elle, “Gabi’s my safe space—those scenes? We laugh through the awkward.” Despite the hiatus drama, their October 20 IG Live—500K viewers tearing up over fan letters—proved the bond’s resilience.

The trilogy’s end? A happy tease—Nick and Noah wed with a kid—but fans mourn the “end of an era,” as one X post with 1.5K likes sighs, “Belom bisa move on… makes you feel so much.” Ron confirms no fourth book, but whispers of an English remake (Zendaya for Noah?) swirl. For now, in Culpa Nuestra‘s glow, Nick and Noah—Gabriel and Nicole—remind us: Some chemistry defies screens, pulling us in from defiance to devotion. Can’t look away? Neither can we. What’s your ultimate gaze moment?