Since you did not specify a particular book, movie, or video game, I have interpreted your request as a critique of relationships and romantic storylines as a narrative device in modern fiction (literature, film, and television).
The "Meet-Cute": This is the pivotal moment when characters first cross paths. It should set the tone—whether it's humorous, antagonistic, or fated—and immediately establish a spark or conflict. tamil.sex.4.com
The kiss cannot happen until both characters have sacrificed something. Not a grand, cinematic sacrifice (jumping in front of a bullet), but a small, intimate one (admitting they were wrong, forgiving a grave mistake, or choosing the hard truth over an easy lie). Since you did not specify a particular book,
A Guide to Successful Sex Life (Tamil): An instructional book focused on relationship health and sexual wellness. Enemies to Lovers (Glare, then kiss)
The pandemic and the rise of online life have normalized romantic storylines that begin in Discord servers, video games, or Zoom calls. The "pen-pal" trope is back, updated for the 21st century. The question is no longer "Will they kiss?" but "Will their online selves align with their real-world identities?"
Fake Dating: Characters pretend to be in a relationship for external reasons, only to develop real feelings. Narrative Drivers in Fiction
For forgiveness:
“I’m not over it. But I’m over being without you.”