Netflix’s Sex Lives of College Girls meets Ali Hazelwood’s The Love Hypothosis in these interconnected stand-alones where college women pursuing STEM degrees find romance.

First year chemical engineering student Adriana “Ade” Blankin can’t possibly admit to being the daughter of her college’s former hockey coach. Not when at the end of last season he was arrested by the FBI for corruption, terminated and publicly shunned due to his part in an athletic scandal. Never mind that he was the source of disappointed fans and the cause of NCAA sanction what will affect the Minnesota team for years. 

But the days-to-day anxiety involved in hiding her identity has led to a case of insomnia so bad her GPA is near failing. No natural remedy has worked, save for the last one to try. Oxytocin. If having sex releases large doses of the hormone, then all she needs is the perfect guy to access the chemicals stored inside her and she’ll be sleeping like a baby.

Unfortunately, real life isn’t like the formulas in her textbooks Instead of a low-key solution, Ade pursues Dallas Reynolds, the dorm’s biggest playboy. His reputation mixed with Ade’s secret identity seems like an equation for disaster . . . but heartbreak might be the lease of Ade’s problems. Because Dallas as a secret of his own, explosive enough to turn her world upside down all over again.

Lacie Cunningham, a Ph.D student pursung a doctorate in math, has a romantic past that proves  love isn't worth the trouble . Better to use the optimal stopping theory to find her ideal match. Statistically speaking, she neds four more year's worth of dating "situationship" before the next best guy she meets will be The One. 

But when she happens on her great high school heartbreak, musician Justin Van Meer, her carefully laid plans of “math-making” begin to fall apart. The problem is, despite the gut-wrenching history between them, the more time she’s forced to spend with him the more she realizes she’ll never meet anyone more charming, more exciting, more wonderful to be with than it was to be with him.

Told in a dual timeline between past and present, Lacie must decide what’s more important—sensible reliance on a statistical strategy or a passionate fight for true love.