Kayla Anise Richardson of the Philippines won the women’s 100m to add to 200m bronze in the Vietnamese capital.
But the night belonged to wonder kid Puripol, 16, who easily beat the rest of the field to silence the almost wholly local crowd at My Dinh stadium.
"Before the competition I was under a lot of pressure... but I made it and I’m very glad," he told reporters.
The teenager had already made headlines at the regional showpiece after twice breaking the Games record in the 200m, his best time of 20.37secs bringing gold.
"My target for this year is that I will try to consistently improve my record and break my own record," Puripol said.
He finished ahead of Thai teammate Soraoat Dapbang, who took silver, with Singapore's Marc Brian Louis in bronze.
Richardson found herself nearly neck-and-neck with her rivals as she crossed the finish line in 11.60secs to win women's gold, a mere 0.02secs in front of Singapore’s Veronica Shanti Pereira.
She eclipsed her performance when winning gold at the 2015 SEA Games, then clocking in at 11.76secs, and called Wednesday's triumph a "little personal victory".
"Just to be able to put it together for today feels amazing, I’m so grateful. I’ve such a great support system. I’m just so happy," the 24-year-old said.
Her bronze in the 200m came behind twin sister Kyla in silver, with Pereira taking gold.
Richardson, who holds dual citizenship in both the Philippines and the United States, said she was going to try and qualify for the World Athletics Championships in July.
The sprinter's main goal is the Paris 2024 Olympics.
"2024 is definitely a goldmine, it's reachable for both me and my sister so that’s definitely something that I’m keeping in mind throughout all these seasons coming up," she said.