Close Menu
    FILM TERRAIN
    • About
    • Blog
    • Culture
    • People
    • Craft
    • Industry
    • Story
    FILM TERRAIN
    Home»Blog»Off Campus Was Supposed To Be About Garrett And Hannah. So Why Was Everyone Watching Logan And Allie?
    Blog

    Off Campus Was Supposed To Be About Garrett And Hannah. So Why Was Everyone Watching Logan And Allie?

    By Riya SinghJune 2, 2026

    Off Campus' Season 2 to Focus on Allie and Dean Mika Abdalla and Stephen  Kalyn

    The hockey captain got the girl. The second leads got the internet.

    There is a very specific thing that happens when a romance adaptation becomes successful.

    The writers tell you who the main couple is.

    The audience disagrees.

    And suddenly an entire fandom is spending more time making edits of two people who technically aren’t together than discussing the couple the story was actually written around.

    Which is exactly what happened with Off Campus.

    Prime Video’s adaptation of Elle Kennedy’s bestselling hockey romance series arrived carrying all the ingredients required for internet obsession. Attractive athletes. Fake dating. College parties. Emotional baggage. Hockey boys with suspiciously good hair. The promise of multiple interconnected love stories.

    On paper, season one belonged to Garrett Graham and Hannah Wells.

    In reality?

    A large portion of the audience left Briar University thinking about John Logan and Allie Hayes.

    And honestly, I get it.

    Because while Garrett and Hannah gave us the romance we expected, Logan and Allie gave us the chemistry we couldn’t stop thinking about.

    Garrett And Hannah Were The Heart Of The Story

    Let’s be fair first.

    Garrett and Hannah work.

    That’s why the books became successful in the first place.

    The fake-dating setup remains one of romance fiction’s most reliable weapons. Hannah tutoring Garrett while he helps her make another guy jealous is exactly the kind of ridiculous arrangement that inevitably produces feelings.

    And when the show sticks to their emotional journey, it shines.

    Hannah’s guardedness.

    Garrett’s surprising emotional maturity.

    The way he slowly becomes one of the few people who actually listens to her.

    The chemistry is there.

    The emotional beats land.

    The relationship develops naturally.

    It’s sweet.

    Comforting.

    Reliable.

    Which is precisely the problem.

    Because while Garrett and Hannah were busy being healthy, emotionally functional, and communicative…

    Logan and Allie were setting the screen on fire.

    Logan Was Never Supposed To Be This Interesting

    One of the biggest surprises of Off Campus is how much attention Logan ended up commanding.

    Partly because Antonio Cipriano plays him with an emotional vulnerability that constantly threatens to steal scenes.

    But mostly because Logan exists in that dangerous romance category known as the almost-love interest.

    The character who isn’t technically the romantic lead.

    The character who spends most of the season wanting something he can’t have.

    The character whose feelings arrive at exactly the wrong time.

    And unfortunately for Garrett, audiences have historically loved those characters.

    Logan’s crush on Hannah could have easily turned him into the annoying obstacle standing between the main couple.

    Instead, it made him heartbreakingly human.

    He wasn’t villainous.

    He wasn’t manipulative.

    He wasn’t trying to sabotage anyone.

    He was simply stuck.

    Watching someone he cared about fall in love with his best friend.

    And viewers responded to that.

    Hard.

    Then Allie Walked In

    And suddenly everything changed.

    Because chemistry is a funny thing.

    You can spend an entire season carefully building one romance.

    Then two characters share three scenes together and the audience collectively loses its mind.

    That’s what happened with Logan and Allie.

    Their dynamic feels messier.

    Sharper.

    More unpredictable.

    There’s tension underneath every interaction.

    The kind of tension that makes viewers immediately start searching for spoilers.

    Not because they’re together.

    But because everyone wants them to be.

    And unlike Garrett and Hannah, who largely follow a familiar romance trajectory, Logan and Allie feel unfinished.

    Which is exactly why people became obsessed.

    Audiences love possibility more than certainty.

    It’s why second leads often become fan favourites.

    The fantasy remains intact because the relationship hasn’t happened yet.

    The Real Secret? Off Campus Accidentally Became An Ensemble Show

    The smartest thing the adaptation did was realizing that Briar University itself is the attraction.

    Not just one couple.

    Not even one book.

    The entire ecosystem.

    The hockey team.

    The friendships.

    The group dynamics.

    The overlapping relationships.

    The emotional chaos.

    The reason so many people are comparing Off Campus to Bridgerton isn’t because they’re remotely similar aesthetically.

    One has corsets.

    The other has hockey sticks.

    The comparison works because both shows understand something important:

    The main characters change.

    The universe stays.

    Every season introduces a new romantic centre while allowing audiences to remain attached to familiar faces.

    It’s a format built for obsession.

    And Off Campus knows it.

    Dean And Allie Might Be The Next Problem

    If season one taught us anything, it’s that viewers are not particularly interested in following the rules.

    The books have a roadmap.

    The fandom has other ideas.

    Which brings us to Dean and Allie.

    Because while Logan and Allie generated immediate chemistry discussions, Dean and Allie’s storyline quietly developed into one of the most talked-about subplots of the season.

    The casual arrangement.

    The emotional avoidance.

    The jealousy.

    The tension.

    The spectacular inability to communicate.

    A romance reader’s favourite ingredients.

    The show has already begun planting seeds much earlier than the books did.

    Which means future seasons may end up balancing multiple fan-favourite relationships simultaneously.

    A dangerous strategy.

    Because the moment you create more than one compelling couple, audiences start choosing sides.

    And they rarely choose quietly.

    Why The Second Leads Keep Winning

    This isn’t actually unique to Off Campus.

    It’s happened repeatedly across television.

    People loved Damon more than Stefan.

    Jess more than Dean.

    Pacey more than Dawson.

    Anthony Bridgerton more than Simon.

    Second leads often benefit from something main characters don’t.

    Mystery.

    The central couple must explain themselves.

    The secondary couple gets to simmer.

    And simmering is powerful.

    The audience fills in the blanks themselves.

    Projects possibilities onto unfinished storylines.

    Builds entire relationships from eye contact and one emotionally devastating conversation.

    Which is why Logan and Allie currently feel bigger than their actual screen time.

    The fandom has already written half the romance in its head.

    Maybe That’s The Real Magic Of Off Campus

    For all the conversations about hockey romances, adaptations, book accuracy and future seasons, Off Campus succeeds because it understands something simple.

    People don’t just watch for the couple.

    They watch for the world.

    Briar University feels lived in.

    Its friendships matter.

    Its side characters matter.

    Its future relationships matter.

    Every glance feels like setup for another story.

    Every secondary character feels like someone whose turn is eventually coming.

    And that’s exactly how romance franchises survive.

    Garrett and Hannah may have been season one’s official love story.

    But Logan and Allie became proof that the universe around them is just as compelling.

    Which is probably the best thing that could have happened to the show.

    Because if Off Campus really is becoming the college version of Bridgerton, then the future isn’t resting on one couple.

    It’s resting on the fact that viewers are already impatient for the next one.

    Related

    Is Gen Z Actually Bad At Dating, Or Are We Just Dating In Public For The First Time?
    The New Gen Z Status Symbol Isn’t Wealth. It’s Being Unreachable.
    The Underwire Question: Is It Actually Bad for You, or Are We Just Tired?
    When Your Waistband Becomes the Enemy: PCOS, Fibroids, and the Quiet Grief of Constant Bloating
    Met Gala 2026 Was a Fever Dream in Couture, Corsets, and Conceptual Chaos
    What Even Is the Met Gala? Inside Fashion’s Most Chaotic, Expensive, and Overanalyzed Night
    Copyright © 2026 Fliksho Media LLP. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.