The premise of The Loyalty Game is simple enough to explain in one sentence and unsettling enough that the explanation doesn’t help. Ana Madrigal (Janine Gutierrez) has spent seven years married to Ben Santos (Jericho Rosales), and somewhere in that stretch of ordinary domestic time, doubt moved in and never left.
What makes this Prime Video thriller worth sitting with is the mechanism it borrows from real life. Hire a stranger to test your partner’s fidelity, and let the proof arrive as a screenshot. That’s a genuinely modern kind of heartbreak, one where suspicion gets outsourced and love gets audited.
What the Testers Are Really For
The opening sequence, before we ever meet Ana, tells you everything about how this show wants you to feel. Mayet pays a woman named Angela to entrap her partner Matt, and the scheme works so cleanly that it curdles. A confrontation in the street becomes a car crash, and two people are dead before the theme song. That’s not a plot beat, that’s a warning label on the entire premise, and I found it the smartest choice in the episode precisely because nobody comments on it.
Ana’s own doubt builds through small, specific wreckage rather than one big accusation. The necklace at the party that doesn’t match the one she saw Ben buying. The midnight search through the house when he isn’t in bed. Mud on her own pajamas the next morning, proof that she was outside too, whatever Ben tells her about dreaming it. Each detail lands because it’s physical. You can’t gaslight mud.
Where the show earns real tension is in refusing to keep Ben’s secrets contained to the marriage. He’s covering up a fatal accident at Mariano’s sugar refinery, managing an unsympathetic boss’s son, and meeting a woman named Mara by episode’s end. The infidelity plot and the workplace cover-up plot are two separate machines running in the same house, and the moment they touch is the moment this show could become something more than a domestic thriller.
Two People Playing Different Games
Rosales plays Ben as a man performing calm over something that isn’t calm at all, and the gaslighting scene is the best evidence of it. He doesn’t oversell the lie about her dreaming. He just lets it sit there, flat and reasonable, which is scarier than a big denial would be.
Gutierrez gives Ana a physical vocabulary for doubt, the way she moves through the dark house looking for him, the way her hands go still at the party when she clocks the necklace. Her past trauma is gestured at rather than explained, and I like that restraint so far. It gives her fear a shape without handing us a diagnosis.
The Testers themselves get less room, but Yen Santos and Elisse Joson use what they have. A tester doing this work to support a child is a different person than one doing it as a side hustle, and the show at least gestures toward that difference instead of treating the group as a uniform service industry.
The Reveal That Costs the Show Its Best Card
Here’s my actual complaint, and it’s a design complaint more than a performance one. The premise runs on not knowing, and the show shows us Ben meeting Mara in secret before the first hour ends. That single choice drains the tension out of the marriage plot and replaces it with a smaller question: who is Mara. I don’t think that trade was worth making.
The editing doesn’t help. The crash and the refinery accident both get chopped into hard, static cuts that flatten what should be the episode’s two most visceral moments, and the seven-year time jump happens with no visible cost on anyone’s face. Compare that to how patiently the show handles the mud on the pajamas, one quiet, specific image doing more work than either big set piece.
I’m not ready to write this one off. The refinery plot and the marriage plot are circling each other, and if the show trusts its audience to sit in uncertainty the way it trusted us with that cold open, there’s a sharper version of itself still available.
The Loyalty Game premiered globally on July 3, 2026, and is available exclusively for streaming on Prime Video. The suspense thriller series follows a seemingly perfect couple whose lives unravel after the wife grows suspicious of her husband and hires a team of undercover “loyalty testers” to evaluate his fidelity, sparking a dangerous game of secrets and manipulation.
Where to Watch The Loyalty Game Online
Full Credits
Title: The Loyalty Game
Distributor: Prime Video, ABS-CBN Studios
Release date: July 3, 2026
Rating: TV-MA
Running time: 60 minutes per episode
Director: Mae Cruz-Alviar
Writers: Ian Loreños, Jay Fernando
Producers and Executive Producers: Carlo L. Katigbak, Cory V. Vidanes, Laurenti M. Dyogi
Cast: Jericho Rosales, Janine Gutierrez, Charlie Dizon, Sofia Andres, Yassi Pressman, Yen Santos, Elisse Joson, Kira Balinger, Maika Rivera, Carmina Villarroel
The Review
The Loyalty Game
The Loyalty Game hands you a premise built for held breath, then keeps checking its own pulse too early. The mud on Ana's pajamas does more damage than any crash sequence. Ben's flat, reasonable lies land harder than the plot's bigger swings. But showing us his meeting with Mara before the hour ends takes the air out of the marriage the whole show is supposed to be about. I still want to know what the refinery cover-up does to these two people. I just wish the show trusted me to wonder longer.
PROS
- The mud-stained pajamas as quiet, damning evidence
- Rosales playing Ben's lies flat and calm instead of dramatic
- The Mayet cold open functioning as a thematic warning shot
- Individual motivations given to the Testers, not just a uniform service
CONS
- Revealing Ben and Mara's meeting drains the marriage plot's tension
- Hard, static cuts flatten the crash and refinery accident
- The seven-year time jump with no visible cost on anyone
- Ana's trauma gestured at without enough shape yet





















































