Please support the authors by reading Manhwas on the official websites. This is where you can read the Manhwa: Jinx But be aware that the Manhwa is a mature Yaoi, which means, it is about homosexuality with explicit scenes. Here is the link of the table of contents about Jinx. Here is the link where you can find the table of contents of analyzed Manhwas. Here are the links, if you are interested in the first work from Mingwa, BJ Alex,  and the 2 previous essays about Jinx Breathless in the Light – part 2 and Love is in the Air -part 1
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Finally a Love Confession?
Among all the scenes in Jinx, none has ignited more speculation than the moment inside the Ferris wheel cabinâthose few seconds when Joo Jaekyungâs lips move
(chapter 84), the fireworks erupt, and Kim Dan turns his head too late.
(chapter 84) Readers have replayed the blurred panel again and again, straining to decipher the muffled shapes of his mouth. Some are convinced that this is the confession, the moment the wolf finally says aloud what his body has been whispering for months. One Jinx-phile, @4992cb even insisted she had cracked the code: five syllables,
just enough to match the Korean ìąìíŽ êčëš (jo-a-hae Kim Dan)ââI like you, Kim Dan.â
And truthfully, the scene encourages such a reading. Fireworks often accompany love confessions in East Asian media
(chapter 84) âespecially Japanese summer festivals where boys and girls, dressed in yukata, confess beneath crackling skies. Fireworks symbolize joy, romance, fleeting courage. It is no wonder many readers assumed that Mingwa was drawing on this cultural grammar: purple night sky, glowing lights, two lonely figures suspended above the world. A confession seems almost inevitable. And if it truly was a love declaration, then the championâs refusal to repeat himself
(chapter 84) would make perfect narrative senseâconfession lost, moment gone, courage spent.
But before we accept the romantic surface, we must pause. Something about the staging feels offâdeliberately off. Why would Mingwa construct a confession that the receiver cannot hear?
(chapter 84) Why give Kim Dan the long-awaited moment he has yearned for, only to snatch it away with the noise of exploding light? Yes, despite his words, Kim Dan still had the hope to be loved by the athlete. Hence he kept thinking about the athlete’s motivations for his “stay and care at the seaside town”.
(chapter 62)
(chapter 77) Why does Joo Jaekyung speak exactly when the fireworks begin, as if choosing the one moment when he is guaranteed to be drowned out?
(chapter 84) And most importantly: what emotion pushed him to open his mouth in the first place?
(chapter 84) Was he truly confessing loveâor was he trying to verbalize something far more raw, far more primitive, far more difficult?
Before we can decode the stolen syllables, we need to examine the entire machinery around this moment: the championâs posture, the lighting, the soundscape, the timing, and the emotional triggers accumulated over previous chapters. Only then can we begin to understand what he tried to say, and why the author ensured that Kim Danâthe boy who has always longed to be chosenâcould not hear it.
The Mechanics of a Stolen Confession
Everything about the Ferris wheel cabin â the positioning, the posture, the lighting â undermines the idea that Joo Jaekyung was intentionally directing his words toward Kim Dan. The mechanics of his body say more than the bubble ever could. To begin with, Jaekyung is not fully facing Kim Dan when he begins to speak.
(chapter 84) How do we know this? His body tells the truth before any words do: his torso is angled half-way toward the window and half-way toward Kim Dan, caught between desire and retreat. His arms remain crossed â a classic defensive posture â as if he is bracing himself against the very feelings he is trying to verbalize. This is not the stance of someone delivering a confident love confession; it is the posture of a man attempting something dangerous, something he is afraid to expose.
Only his head turns slightly toward Kim Dan, a diagonal tilt rather than a direct orientation.
(chapter 84) It signals hesitation, testing the water, not a deliberate act of addressing someone face-to-face. And the light confirms this: the violet firework glow still falls on the same side of his face as in the previous panel, proving that he did not rotate his body or head enough to truly face Kim Dan while speaking.
(chapter 84) He remains more oriented toward the window, toward the blur of lights outside â toward a safer, less intimate direction.
This halfway posture makes everything clear: Jaekyung is speaking from a place of longing mixed with fear, practicing honesty without yet daring to look directly at the person who provokes it. It is because as soon as his fated partner asks him to repeat, he turns slightly his head away, to the window.
(chapter 84) When someone truly wants to be understood, they turn instinctively toward the listener. But when Jaekyung turns away, he is not refusing vulnerability â he is choosing fear. Turning his head toward the window is an instinctive retreat into the only safety he knows: distance.
This is crucial: he begins to speak while refusing to meet the therapistâs gaze.
(chapter 84) The words escape sideways â literally.
Then comes the second mechanical detail: timing. He opens his mouth precisely at the moment the fireworks erupt. Deep down, he knows the noise will drown his voice. This is not accidental. It mirrors episodes 76
(chapter 76) and 79
(chapter 79), where he âspeaksâ only when the other man cannot truly hear him. At the hostel, the mumbling was barely audible: yet according to my observation and deduction, doc Dan seems to have caught something. as later we discover this scene from the champion’s memory:
(chapter 77) He already knew that the athlete was standing next to him. However, observe that this vision focused on the doctor’s gaze was accompanied with silence. This means, doc Dan acted, as if he had heard nothing. So if he heard, what did the physical therapist catch exactly in the kitchen? âI lostâŠâ, but it was devoid of any context. Doc Dan had no idea what the director Hwang Byungchul had advised to his former student.
(chapter 75) He could not know that âI lostâ referred to something far more intimate: Jaekyung losing control over his own emotional detachment, he was totally vulnerable in front of doc Dan. His heart was stronger than his “mind and fists”. Naturally, if Kim Dan interpreted the phrase at all, he would connect it to the only âlossâ he understood: the tie with Baek Junmin. A humiliating defeat. A source of shame. This misinterpretation perfectly explains why in the cabin, the hamster immediately assumes that the champion is once again determined to regain his title:
(chapter 84) He is taking the champion’s words at face-value.
(chapter 77) He trusts the explanation Jaekyung himself gave under the tree. And here lies the deeper revelation: Kim Danâs misunderstanding exposes the true meaning of the tree confession. Why did Jaekyung suddenly accept the match? Why frame it entirely in terms of âI need you for these two fightsâ?
Because work was the only safe language he had left for reconnecting with the therapist. He could not say, âPlease stay with me.â He could not say, âI donât want to lose you.â So he said the only thing he believed he was allowed to say:
âI need you for my return match⊠and my title match.â
It is a substitution â a mask â a plea disguised as practicality.
(chapter 84) A deadline designed to keep Kim Dan close without revealing the depth of the emotional dependency underneath. Finally, before we even analyze posture or timing, we must acknowledge the ghost that is sitting inside the cabin with them â Jaekyungâs own admission of dishonesty. Just minutes earlier, the narrative revealed again a thought he had never dared to voice aloud:
(chapter 84) This line is essential, because it exposes the truth behind every failed confession that came before it: Jaekyung did not rekindle with doc Dan with honesty. His first instinct was deception (lie by omission), not vulnerability. Keeping Kim Dan near him mattered more than telling him the truth. So his “love” was still more influenced by possessiveness.
And that is precisely why his apology in the cabin lands with such weight.
(chapter 84) For the first time, he admits wrongdoing without deflecting, without rage, without pride. This apology is not strategic; it is confessional. A tone we have never heard from him before. It is no coincidence that just before, he employed this expression:
(chapter 84) This is the language of surrender â not to defeat, but to vulnerability and selflessness. The champion who once insisted on keeping Kim Dan âone way or anotherâ (chapter 84) now articulates the opposite impulse: the willingness to release him, to give him a choice.
(chapter 84) Kim Dan can actually never forgive him. He is giving up, on his possessive love â the possessiveness that fueled all his earlier attempts to hold onto Dan through contracts, pressure, intimidation, manipulations or work-related obligations.
Here, his grip loosens. Here, his desire is no longer expressed as ownership, but as remorse. And this shift matters profoundly for the blurred confession.
(chapter 84) By apologizing, Jaekyung crosses a threshold he has never crossed before: he speaks without power, without defense, without dominance.
For the first time, he tells Kim Dan something that is not a command, not a justification, not an excuse â but a truth about himself. Yet this emotional shift, as liberating as it is, does not make him ready to say âI love youâ or even âI like youâ in a clean, intentional, adult way. In fact, the opposite is true. When guilt falls away, he does not step into romantic maturity â he reverts to emotional childhood. This explicates why later he felt so embarrassed on his bed, hiding his face under the pillow.
(chapter 84) Thus for me, in the cabin the champion became, for a moment, the boy with no motherâs gaze, no fatherâs protection, no safe place to rest. He must have said something cheesy, something a young person would say. Purity returns before experience does. Honesty returns before articulation. And in that moment inside the cabin, Mingwa makes a decisive artistic choice: we do not see Jaekyungâs eyes.
(chapter 84) The panel hides them completely â not out of convenience, but out of protection. It is as if the author herself shields the wolfâs vulnerability from the reader, granting him a moment of privacy at the precise instant he attempts something emotionally dangerous.
Just as in episodes 76 and 79, his words are not fully directed at Kim Dan. They are spoken near him, not to him.
They slip out sideways â half internal, half external â the verbal equivalent of a heartbeat too quiet to be called speech. In other words, what happens inside the cabin is not the flowering of romantic eloquence. It is the first trembling attempt of someone who has never been loved to express the only version of love he knows: instinctive, needy, unpolished, raw.
This is why he cannot possibly be saying a line as adult and structured as âI love youâ or even âI like you.â
Such sentences require three things he does not possess yet:
- A sense that he himself is lovable â he does not. Hence he still views himself as nonredeemable and as a burden.
- A sense that Kim Dan feels the same â he has no proof. Besides, doc Dan keeps avoiding his gaze, feels uncomfortable in front of him. He is not speaking his mind. He keeps reminding him of their limited contract.
- A sense of equality in the relationship â they are not there yet. Joo Jaekyung feels now inferior with all his sins and wrongdoings. Due to his last words, it becomes clear that he is not expecting something in return.
What he can say at this stage â and what fits the emotional mechanics of the scene â is something far younger, far simpler, far more primal, like for example “Stay with me” or “I want to kiss you ” or “I want to hold you”…
These are not love declarations. They are the vocabulary of a neglected child whose first experience of safety has finally returned â and who now fears losing it more than anything else.
And crucially, this would explain everything about the staging:
- why he chooses fireworks (the sound protects him from being truly heard),
- why his body angles away (he speaks sideways, not directly),
- why his voice is blurred (because the reader is not meant to hear it yet),
- why he panics when Kim Dan asks him to repeat,
- why he instantly retracts with âNever mind.â
A man confessing love does not recoil. A child confessing need always does. It is also why the author hides the line. Not because it is a grand romantic confession, but because it is too emotionally naked, too immature, too early, too cheesy. A sentence like âI wish to …â, whispered by a man who has never held anyone without ownership, is more intimate than any polished âI love you.â
And Mingwa knows it. The confession is blurred not because it declares love, but because it reveals Jaekyungâs inexperience with love. He can finally be honest â but he cannot yet be articulate.
He can reach â but he cannot yet claim. He is pure â but not ready. Hence later, he is seen wearing a white t-shirt for the first time.
(chapter 84) This pigment stands for innocence, purity, new beginnings and even equity.
Innocence and purity: White is the beginning of everything, before anything is muddied or thinking is ‘colored’.
New beginnings: White represents the clean slate, helping us through times of stress, and allowing us put the past behind us and preparing us to move on.
Equality and unity: White represents the positive as well as the negative aspects of all colors. It contains an equal balance of all the colors of the spectrum. Quoted from https://www.empower-yourself-with-color-psychology.com/color-white.html
That is why the fireworks stole the words.
(chapter 84) Because they were not yet meant to be received, only meant to be released. The fireworks allow him to finally attempt a more honest sentence, but in conditions where it cannot reach its target.
Noise replaces courage.
Light replaces eye contact.
Fear replaces clarity.
A man who has only just begun to tell the truth about his wrongdoing cannot yet tell the full truth of his love.
His apology creates the emotional opening â but it also exposes how unprepared he is to verbalize the feelings that have been building silently for 84 chapters. So far, he has never verbalized his desires and emotions, hence he kissed doc Dan right away in the swimming pool.
(chapter 81) Yet this is also the limit of what he can say.
But let’s return our attention to the scene in the penthouse
(chapter 79), which is similar to the scene in the kitchen and at the amusement park. Though the star was once again mumbling, this time Doc Dan reacted to his words. However, Jinx-philes can sense a divergence between the other two scenes
(chapter 76)
(chapter 84). It is because doc Dan was looking at him this time:
(chapter 79) Thus he could see the athlete’s mouth moving and hear sound. Nevertheless, observe that the moment the wolf reached to the doctor’s words, he bowed his head and looked down. From this
(chapter 79) to this
(chapter 79) As you can sense, he fears his lover’s gaze, a new version of this situation:
(chapter 79) However, he doesn’t fear coldness, but ridicule and mockery, the father’s gaze:
(chapter 73) Under this light, people can grasp why Joo Jaekyung was not facing doc Dan directly in the cabin. To conclude, the mechanism is identical, but amplified.
(chapter 84) Instead of mumbling, he lets the fireworks perform the silencing. It is not that the environment interrupts him; it is that he chooses a moment when interruption is guaranteed. However, one detail caught my attention: he’s getting physically closer to Doc Dan!! The distance is getting reduced. It was, as if he was practicing how to confess his affection. And so far, he never used the words « I love you ».
(Chapter 44)
(chapter 76) At the same time, Jinx-philes can detect the existence of another common denominator: the physical therapist’s gaze.
The Spark behind the Wolf’s Confession
To understand the blurred sentence â the words the firework stole â we must first shift our attention away from language entirely and back to what truly matters in this scene: vision. What drives Joo Jaekyung to the brink of confession in chapter 84 is not romance, nor timing, nor even the apology he had just managed to deliver. It is Kim Danâs gaze.
(chapter 84) He is moved by such a pure gaze, full of awe.
The panel makes this undeniable. Before speaking, the champion is watching the therapistâs face illuminated by fireworks, softened into wonder.
(chapter 84) This is not the gaze of a caretaker, nor a tired worker, nor a subordinate fulfilling a duty. It is the open, trusting gaze of a child witnessing beauty. And for Joo Jaekyung, that gaze is both intoxicating and devastating.
The champion has lived his entire life without soft eyes directed at him. His mother, always drawn from behind, is eyeless â a woman who never truly saw him.
(chapter 73) Besides, the head of her position is indicating that she was not looking at her son, the boy was hiding his face from Joo Jaewoong and his mother. Then his father mocked him, degraded him, and used resemblance as an insult: â
(chapter 73) Moreover, Hwang Byungchul reduced him to a lineage of failure or talent, not a person deserving recognition. He constantly compared him to his father
(chapter 74) or his mother (a poor but good mother), he was not seen for whom he was: a child, a boy. Jinx consistently links sight with recognition, and recognition with love.
(chapter 53) Jaekyung has never been granted either.
(Chapter 45) Thus when he got upset with the present, he indirectly expressed the wish to be « looked at ». Moreover, in his visions or memories, this is what he keeps seeing:
(chapter 54)
(chapter 75) Doc Dan’s gaze!
This is what makes the locker-room scene in chapter 51 so crucial. Kim Dan looks at him with shock, vulnerability, and a plea:
(chapter 51) And for the first time, Jaekyung freezes.
(chapter 51) His breath catches; his eyes widen. It is the moment he realizes his mistake. He never thought that doc Dan had been trusting him. That moment marks the first rupture in his emotional armor, not only because it hurt, but because it revealed. He realizes with terror that he wants to be seen by Kim Dan, but when he faced such a gaze, he could only feel guilty and bad. Thus it is not surprising that later, his nightmare let transpire his guilty conscience.
(chapter 54) He is the one who made his fated partner cry. No wonder why he first tried to find a new toy, he felt uncomfortable.
In the Ferris wheel cabin of chapter 84, he encounters his fated partner’s gaze again â
(chapter 84) but now it is purified, childlike, unguarded. Kim Dan glows under the fireworks, mesmerized by beauty instead of violence, by wonder instead of fear. And Jaekyung wants â desperately â for that softness to be directed at him. Not at his victories. Not at his muscles. Not at the persona he built to survive. But at the man beneath all of it. A man worthy of admiration, affection, safety. A man who could be held, kept, loved. Thatâs why I wondered for a while if Joo Jaekyung had not copied Arnaud Gabrielâs flirt
(chapter 82), as the champion has always used his surroundings as a source of inspiration.
(Chapter 29) It would also fit with 5 syllabes in Korean. And it would be cheesy too. Yet, I have my doubts about this theory which I will explain further below. Nevertheless, one thing is sure. The champion loves the doctorâs eyes and they have the power to move not only his heart but also his mouth. He is encouraged to verbalize his emotions.
This is the true trigger of the confession. Not desire in the adult sense, and certainly not a strategic âI like youâ or âI love you,â but a longing to be seen â and therefore, to be wanted. Every wound in Jaekyungâs life is tied to vision: the eyeless mother who vanished, the father who asked whether she would even want to live with him if she saw what he had become, the locker-room moment that shattered his self-perception. All of this returns when he sees Kim Danâs shining eyes reflecting the fireworks.
He wants those eyes turned toward him with love. Not gratitude. Not dependence. Not fear. Love. What he wants most
and what he fears most come from the same place: Kim Danâs gaze.
(chapter 84) The gaze under the fireworks triggers emotions in him. Thus he blurted out something. But for me, he does not know how to say âI love you.â He cannot even say âI like you.â Those sentences belong to someone who has matured emotionally â someone who can identify feelings properly, but so far he keeps saying: “to stay by his side” and his « affection declarations » were all linked to negativity.. Thus my idea was that Joo Jaekyung could have said this: “I want to hold you!” (ìêł ì¶ìŽ ë). Let’s not forget that so far, the champion had never expressed such a longing before; a warm embrace. He would always follow his instincts:
(chapter 4)
(chapter 43)
(chapter 69) The hug represents a metaphor for “staying by his side, for home and to be seen”. Moreover, in French embrasser can mean kiss and hug. And strangely, I noticed that the protagonists were never looking at each other during an embrace.
(chapter 44) And let’s not forget that such a gesture is strongly intertwined with “childhood”.
(chapter 65) It is for “babies”. No wonder why he retracted immediately.
To conclude, the words that escape him in the dark â too soft to be caught, swallowed by the fireworkâs explosion â become the linguistic equivalent of reaching toward warmth without daring to touch it. The sentence he forms must fit his emotional stage: childlike, inexperienced, driven by instinct rather than maturity. It must reflect longing, not possession; desire, not declaration. And it must match the blurred outline of five syllables we see in the panel.
(chapter 84) ìêł ì¶ìŽ ë: I want to hold/hug you!
The Secret behind the Blurred Words
And now, you are wondering what other secret could be hidden behind these words. It is related to the physical therapist him. Why did Mingwa, the goddess of “narrative fate”, ensure that doc Dan couldn’t hear the athlete’s words?
(chapter 84) First, recall that in the previous parallel scenes (76 and 79), doc Dan is portrayed as someone who doesnât hear Jaekyungâs confessions. But as I argued earlier, we must question whether this is truly the case â especially the one in episode 76. The panel arrangement suggests that something was heard, but not acknowledged. Then during the fireworks, he does not say, âI couldnât hear what you said.â
He says: âI didnât catch that.â âCatchâ implies arms, grasping, holding â the very things stolen from him as a child.
And then comes the detail that betrays everything: the small drop on his cheek. A sign of discomfort⊠and something deeper: recognition. The drop on his face was not present before.
(chapter 84) For me, everything points to the same conclusion: doc Dan might have heard something â but he cannot yet allow himself to process it.
This denial explains his expression in the shower at the hotel:
(chapter 84) Here, the doctor looks sad and wounded. His eyes are unfocused â he is not seeing the present. The water running down his eyelashes gives the impression of tears, even though he is not crying. His gaze is distant, fixed on something internal. His mouth looks tense, almost trembling. The mouth especially is a clue: Kim Danâs emotions always gather there when something from the past resurfaces.This is the expression of someone thrown into an involuntary flashback. He is inside a memory. This explicates why this scene is similar to the champion’s shower after the latter had met Baek Junmin:
(chapter 49)
(chapter 49) Both scenes show a man pulled violently into a buried memory. Thus, my assumption is simple: the champion said something that pierced straight into Kim Danâs oldest wound and brought his trauma to the surface. And this brings me to my next observation. Inside the cabin, there are not two people â there are three: the champion, the therapist, and the Teddy Bear.
(chapter 84) Furthermore, we have a window. We have a phone (dead, but present). We have a childlike toy â symbol of stolen innocence.
(chapter 84) And now, look again at episode 19:
(chapter 19) A window with no view. Three figures: halmoni, the boy, and the phone placed between them like a knife. And the sound structure is identical, but reversed:
silence â sound â silence in episode 19
vs
sound â silence â sound in episode 84, as the Teddy Bear is a silent “witness”. In both scenes, something is stolen.
In both scenes, a child loses something he cannot name. Thus, what Jaekyung said must have resembled the emotional tone â if not the wording â of the words spoken over the phone on that catastrophic day.
This explains why Kim Dan ends the scene wearing black instead of white.
(chapter 84) It is not a fashion choice. It marks the moment when innocence collapses and the past reopens.
And now compare the cabin
(chapter 84) with the memory that precedes the parentsâ disappearance. You will notice the huge difference: the overwhelming silence inside the house. The halmoni sits beside the phone. She must have heard everything. She must have heard the child as well, if the latter spoke She holds him tightly by the shoulder â as if trying to support him.
(Chapter 19) To conclude, she knew something was happening. This recollection represents a repressed memory, and so far doc Dan has always avoided to face his biggest fear: his abandonment issues and the loss of his “parents”.
(chapter 56) In other words, wearing black is more than just a change of personality or mourning. It becomes the color of mystery, the beginning of descent into truth.
(chapter 84) However, observe that doc Dan is holding, even squeezing the teddy bear’s hand, a sign that he is rekindling with his lost childhood. We are getting closer to the revelation behind the photograph â the day doc Dan has never willingly shown to Joo Jaekyung.
(chapter 19). Observe that in the penthouse, doc Dan has never placed the frame
(chapter 79) on the night table.
And what is the other denominator between episode 19 and the amusement park?
Theft.
Stolen childhood.
Stolen confession.
Stolen clarity.
(chapter 84)
Exactly like in the cabin,
(chapter 19) the words on the phone are inaudible. And now, you comprehend why I came to link the athlete’s blurred words to embrace and longing, as the grandmother’s embrace couldn’t diminish or erase the child’s pain. Finally, Jinx-philes can detect another pattern, the absence of gaze. Not only the boy can not see the person on the phone, but also the characters are turning their back to the readers which reinforces the mystery surrounding the conversation and the reactions of the listeners.
Now, connect it with the lost teddy bear
(chapter 21) and
(chapter 47). Dan once had toys â proof that once, someone loved him enough to give him gifts which contrasts to the wolf’s childhood.
(chapter 84) Every time innocence is ripped away, a teddy bear disappears from the story.
So what if Jaekyungâs whispered sentence â a gift of raw affection â triggered the memory of another gift? What if the words under the fireworks echoed the tone of something said just before Danâs world collapsed?
If this is the case, then doc Dan did not miss the confession entirely.
(chapter 84) He remembered something far more painful. It is important, because by remembering his past, he can regain his own identity and get stronger mentally and emotionally. The scene in the cabin represents the positive version of the locker room, which signifies the return of “trust”. That’s why I am more than ever convinced that something at the weight-in
(chapter 82) will happen linked to the protagonists’ past (recent and childhood). Let’s not forget that doc Dan still has no idea what Joo Jaekyung went through after his departure: the slap, the drinking, the headache and the indifference of Team Black, just like the athlete has no idea about the blacklisting and bullying in the physical therapist’s past.
(chapter 84) So by wearing black, doc Dan indicates that he is gradually becoming responsible for Team Blackand Joo Jaekyung the athlete.
(chapter 84) They should realize that their life is not so different from each other, in fact they share the same pain and trauma.
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