Jinx: Steady Passionate 🌹 Devotion 💍

Kim Dan’s birthday and his presents

As the narrative of Jinx moves toward the decisive window of December 24th to (chapter 89) December 26th (chapter 97), readers are confronted with a question that seems simple yet resists any easy answer: what exactly has Joo Jaekyung prepared for Kim Dan’s birthday?

For many, the answer appears obvious. (chapter 97) The bouquet of red roses—long associated with romantic passion, desire, and confession—seems to speak for itself. Paired with the appearance of a strawberry cake and the long-anticipated possibility of couple rings (chapter 97), the scene appears easy to decode. It suggests a champion finally ready to step out from behind his walls and express what words have long concealed. But are these gifts the true center of the moment, or only its most visible layer? Is Jaekyung merely celebrating a birthday, or trying to alter the future he and Kim Dan might share?

Yet Jinx rarely reveals itself through what is most obvious at first glance. Again and again, significance emerges through timing (chapter 81), hesitation, gesture, and subtle changes in the spaces characters inhabit. A gift may matter less than the moment it is offered. A movement may reveal more than a confession. Even the introduction of something new into a familiar environment can carry emotional weight beyond words.

Perhaps the most important mystery lies not in what Kim Dan will receive, but in what Jaekyung himself is becoming. Is he still the man who equates care with possession and value with financial power? Or is he beginning, however awkwardly, to imagine another form of devotion—one expressed less through spectacle than through protection, constancy, and shared future?

To answer that question, we must look beyond the surface of roses and celebration. For the most meaningful present may not be the one that first captures the eye, but the one that reveals a transformation of the heart.

When Gifts Speak Volumes

At first glance, Chapter 97 appears easy to interpret. A bouquet of red roses, a strawberry cake marked Happy Birthday, and a pair of rings seem to point toward an obvious conclusion: (chapter 97) Joo Jaekyung has prepared birthday presents for Kim Dan. Yet the chapter becomes far more complex, once we recognize that these presents do not carry fixed meanings in themselves. In this story, gifts are shaped less by appearance than by intention, timing, and emotional context.

Red Roses: Desire and Reconciliation

The bouquet of red roses offers the clearest example. Traditionally, red roses signify romantic love, passion, desire, and confession. On the surface, they appear to announce a straightforward romantic gesture. Yet the surrounding context changes their meaning. Jaekyung brings them after acknowledging that he had treated Kim Dan badly. (chapter 97) Because of this, the flowers express more than attraction alone. They also function as apology and reconciliation. Their romantic symbolism remains, but it is deepened by remorse and by the desire to restore closeness after harm.

This double meaning is important. The roses do not erase desire; they refine it. Passion is no longer detached from responsibility. Attraction is joined to remorse. In that sense, the gesture marks growth: Jaekyung does not simply want Kim Dan—he wants to restore closeness with him. If intimacy follows that night (chapter 97), it would carry a different significance than in the past. It would no longer be defined by the old “jinx” logic of transactional or ritualized sex, but by reconciliation and mutual affection. The act would cease to be mere release and become an expression of true love.

The bouquet of red roses carries yet another layer of meaning when placed beside the couple’s earlier conversation about flowers. When Kim Dan once received pink roses from Choi Heesung (chapter 31), he explained that he liked flowers because of their scent. (chapter 31) The statement seemed simple at the time, almost shyly innocent, yet it reveals something essential about his character. Kim Dan values not spectacle, status, or monetary worth, but the quiet emotional effect an object can have. He does not love flowers because they are expensive. He loves the atmosphere they create, the comfort they bring, and the mood they awaken.

This detail becomes even more significant when contrasted with Joo Jaekyung’s immediate response: (chapter 31) At first, the line sounds like blunt indifference. Yet its emotional effect falls most sharply on Kim Dan. Having just admitted that he likes flowers because of their scent, Kim Dan is suddenly placed in an awkward position. Thus he apologizes. The rejection no longer concerns flowers alone. It risks sounding like a rejection of what Kim Dan himself has brought into the shared space.

This matters because scent crosses boundaries in ways other objects do not. A fragrance cannot be neatly contained. It lingers, spreads through rooms (chapter 31), and remains in the air. In that sense, Kim Dan may feel he has trespassed—that he has filled Jaekyung’s penthouse with something unwanted, leaving behind traces of himself where he had no right to do so. That’s how it dawned on me why the athlete refused to have the room cleaned for quite some time (chapter 55), he wanted to keep the physical therapist’s scent there.

But let’s return our attention to the scene with the pink roses. For a man as careful and self-effacing as Kim Dan, such a moment would naturally produce embarrassment. The shame lies not only in differing tastes, but in the fear of being too present. His preference seems to have occupied space that was never truly his. And now, you understand why he didn’t leave the elevator at the same time. (chapter 31) He wanted to be considerate of Joo Jaekyung, making sure that the flowers’ fragrance would not bother his “landlord”.

Striking is that the line “I hate flowers” is more than just blunt indifference. Yet later revelations about Jaekyung’s childhood allow it to be read differently. His past is marked by humiliation, deprivation, and social contempt. (chapter 72) He was mocked as dirty, poor, and (chapter 72) “smelly.” Odor, in his early life, was not associated with beauty or tenderness, but with shame. Smell became tied to exclusion.

That distinction matters because scent is one of the most powerful carriers of memory. Unlike rational thought, fragrance can bypass language and return a person directly to emotion. For Kim Dan, the smell of flowers “puts [him] in a good mood.” (chapter 31) For Jaekyung, sensory memory may have operated in the opposite direction, linking smell to poverty, rejection, and pain.

Seen in this light, the red roses of Chapter 97 are profoundly symbolic. The celebrity does not merely buy a conventional romantic gift. He chooses an object tied to a sensory world he once rejected. Whether consciously or not, he reaches toward what he had previously denied. (chapter 97) This contrast gives the bouquet an additional significance. The red roses do not merely symbolize romance or apology; they also possess an immediate emotional function. Because the wolf remembers that flowers can cheer up his fated partner, his choice of gift becomes quietly strategic as well as affectionate. He is not only offering an object, but shaping the atmosphere in which the encounter will unfold.

The fragrance of the roses can soften tension, brighten the space, and reduce the emotional distance created by their recent conflict. In that sense, Jaekyung is doing more than saying I’m sorry. He is creating the conditions in which that apology may be more easily accepted. Rather than forcing reconciliation through words or authority, he approaches Kim Dan through something known to bring him comfort.

The gesture therefore reveals a subtle but important evolution. The MMA fighter is no longer acting only from impulse or pride. He is observing, remembering, and responding to Kim Dan’s inner world. What he offers is not simply flowers, but consideration.

At the same time, the bouquet suggests the rewriting of scent itself. What was once connected to humiliation is now reintroduced through affection. What once belonged to trauma is placed inside a gesture of care. This is why the flowers can be understood as therapeutic for Jaekyung as well. In offering them to his fated partner, he may also be exposing himself to a new emotional association. The fragrance of flowers no longer belongs only to distance or discomfort. Through Kim Dan, it can become linked to warmth, intimacy, and home.

The color deepens this transformation. Earlier pink roses symbolized admiration, gratitude, joy, grace, and gentle affection. (chapter 31) Red roses carry stronger meanings: passion, desire, courage, and declared love. The movement from pink to red mirrors the movement of the relationship itself—from undecisive tenderness to chosen intensity. (chapter 97)

Most importantly, the bouquet reveals how Kim Dan changes Jaekyung’s relationship to the world. Kim Dan does not simply receive gifts; he rehumanizes meanings that trauma had distorted. Through him, even something as ordinary as scent can be recovered. In that sense, the roses speak not only to Kim Dan, but to the wounded child Jaekyung once was.

The Strawberry Cake: One Object, Many Readings

The cake works in a similarly revealing way. (chapter 97) Its packaging openly displays the words Happy Birthday, inviting the reader to assume that its purpose is self-evident. Yet the narrative itself unsettles that assumption. (chapter 97) Kim Dan also purchases the same kind of cake, but not to celebrate his own birthday. He chooses it to honor Jaekyung, expressing pride, care, and happiness for the champion’s success. (chapter 97) Gratitude and admiration replace regret as the emotional core of the gesture. The same object therefore carries different meanings in different hands.

This parallel reveals that the cake does not inherently mean “birthday.” Its significance depends on the giver and the feeling expressed through it. In Jaekyung’s hands, it becomes part of an effort to repair tension and reopen warmth. In Kim Dan’s hands, it becomes admiration and support. The printed message remains the same, but the emotional message changes. The same object becomes two messages: one says, I’m sorry. The other says, I’m proud of you. Without coordination, both men choose the same symbolic language: Love. They are beginning to meet each other in thought. To conclude, the cake reveals emotional convergence.

The cake gains additional meaning when placed within its seasonal context. In South Korea, the strawberry shortcake-style dessert displayed in bakeries each December is strongly associated with Christmas celebrations.

For more information, read this article: All Koreans need for Christmas is … a cake?https://www.koreaherald.com/article/3280348 / picture is quoted from https://www.orientalmart.co.uk/blog/how-christmas-celebrated-south-korea

Covered in white cream and topped with bright strawberries, it visually echoes the festive colors of winter and has become a familiar part of romantic holiday culture. It is not merely something people eat; it is an object tied to atmosphere, celebration, and shared occasions.

The cultural backdrop changes how the scene can be read, but not necessarily how the characters themselves understand it. On December 24th, roses and a strawberry cream cake naturally evoke the visual language of romance and couple celebration. To an outside observer, such gifts can resemble the signs of a private date or an intimate evening together. Yet the scene suggests that neither Kim Dan nor Jaekyung fully approaches it through that lens.

Kim Dan’s attention is drawn to a family leaving the bakery (chapter 97), which subtly shifts the emotional frame. Rather than reading the setting as romantic spectacle, he may register warmth, celebration, and shared belonging. True to his character, domestic happiness may speak to him more immediately than public codes of romance.

Jaekyung’s position is different, but no less revealing. He appears motivated first by personal memory and immediate need. He remembers flowers in connection with Kim Dan and seeks a way to repair the distance created by recent conflict. (chapter 31) His impulse is intimate rather than seasonal. He is not setting out to perform Christmas romance; he is trying, in the only way he can, to reconcile.

At the same time, that private intention takes shape within a very specific environment. Because he is shopping on Christmas Eve, he moves through spaces already saturated with festive displays, bakery counters, bouquets, and seasonal rituals of affection. The desire originates within him, but the language available to express it is supplied by the world around him. This helps explain his visible hesitation. (chapter 97) He questions whether it would be strange to give such presents and admits that he no longer even knows what to do. The uncertainty suggests that he has not fully mastered the symbolic code he is using. He senses that flowers, cake, and rings matter, yet he cannot entirely explain why they feel right or whether they will make him look foolish.

That tension makes the scene especially moving. Kim Dan sees warmth (chapter 97) where others might see romance. Jaekyung reaches for gestures of affection whose wider meanings he only partially understands. Neither man consciously names the moment as a couple’s ritual, yet their actions begin to inhabit that language all the same. Personal feeling leads, while culture quietly gives it form.

This gives the moment a special subtlety. The gifts carry meanings larger than either man explicitly names. Their relationship begins to appear as a couple’s bond, even before they fully recognize it themselves. Culture speaks around them before they can speak for themselves.

This makes the writing on the box especially significant. Happy Birthday offers an innocent and socially acceptable explanation for gifts that might otherwise appear overtly romantic. (chapter 97) The label clarifies the scene on the surface, yet it may also conceal its deeper meaning. What looks like a birthday errand can simultaneously function as an intimate gesture between two people, whose bond is becoming harder to hide.

The timing of Jaekyung’s gesture strengthens this reading even further. Kim Dan’s birthday falls on December 26th, yet the flowers and cake are brought on the night of December 24th. This is not merely an early delivery. It creates a practical contradiction. (chapter 97) Both gifts are highly perishable. (chapter 97) Fresh roses begin to droop with time, and a cream cake topped with strawberries is meant to be enjoyed while fresh. If these objects were truly intended as the final birthday presents for the actual day, they would be oddly chosen. By the time December 26th arrived, the flowers would already be fading and the cake would have lost the freshness that gives it value.

This everyday logic matters because it shifts the interpretation at the most basic level. Even before symbolism enters the discussion, the objects do not behave like conventional birthday presents. They belong to the present moment, not to a celebration two days away. (chapter 97) That present moment is emotional rather than calendrical. Jaekyung does not bring them because the date demands it, but because the relationship does. The gifts answer urgency: recent conflict, approaching uncertainty, and the desire to restore warmth before the match intervenes and the doctor leaves him.

In that sense, their perishability becomes meaningful in itself. These are objects made to be experienced now, just as reconciliation must happen now. They are temporary gifts chosen for an immediate wound, while the more lasting question of the future is carried elsewhere.

The Couple Rings: Equality and Commitment

Once the flowers and cake are recognized as gestures for the present rather than true birthday presents, one visible possibility remains: the couple rings. (chapter 97) They seem, at last, to be the real gift. Their permanence contrasts with the fragility of roses and cream cake, and their symbolism suits an important personal occasion far more naturally.

And yet even here, the scene proves more complex than it first appears.The rings belong to another emotional layer altogether. Unlike the flowers and cake, they are already in Jaekyung’s possession. He carries them with him (chapter 97) and admits that he has gone back and forth countless times about giving them. (chapter 97) This hesitation suggests that they were acquired well before the events of the chapter and tied to a longer internal struggle. An earlier panel strengthens this interpretation. (chapter 97) While still at the gym, before any flowers or cake appear, Jaekyung tells himself that he has to give Kim Dan something. The wording is important. He does not think about buying something, searching for something, or choosing something later. He speaks as someone who already has a gift in mind and already has it with him.

That object can hardly be the flowers or the cake. Both appear freshly purchased and belong to the practical errands of the journey home. The roses are newly arranged, and the cream cake with strawberries is clearly meant for immediate consumption. They are gifts obtained on the way, not items long carried in secret.

The rings fit the evidence far more convincingly. Small enough to remain hidden in his pocket, already burdened with emotional hesitation, and linked to a decision he has postponed many times (chapter 97), they are the only visible present that explains the panel at the gym. Jaekyung leaves early because he intends to act, but before returning home he stops at the bakery and flower shop, adding new gestures of apology and warmth to the older gift he had already prepared.

This also explains the subtle irony of the sequence. Though he departs the gym early, he does not arrive home immediately. The delay itself becomes meaningful: between decision and confession (chapter 97), he gathers the courage—and the accompanying symbols—needed to finally face Kim Dan.

Yet among everything he carries or acquires that evening, one object stands apart from the rest. The flowers and cake belong to the immediate moment: they soothe tension, create warmth, and answer a present emotional need. The rings, by contrast, reach beyond the night itself. They are not meant to be enjoyed briefly or consumed in passing, but to endure. For that reason, they carry the greatest symbolic weight of all.

Flowers can wilt, cake is consumed, but a ring endures. (chapter 97) Its circular form traditionally signifies continuity, fidelity, and mutual belonging. Most importantly, a ring cannot fully function within hierarchy. It gains meaning through reciprocity. One person may offer it, but its true significance depends on acceptance. In that sense, the rings challenge the old imbalance that has defined their bond: wealth versus debt, fame versus obscurity, strength versus vulnerability. If the wolf offers couple rings, he is not simply giving an object. He is inviting Kim Dan into a shared definition of the relationship. That is a radically different gesture from transactional generosity. It says not I provide for you, but let us belong to one another.

This is also why the rings cannot be understood as an ordinary birthday present. A birthday gift is usually directed toward one person alone. Couple rings follow another logic entirely: the giver receives one as well. The gesture is not centered on an individual celebration, but on the creation of a mutual bond. They do not say this day belongs to you so much as our future belongs to us.

And yet even this is not the final step. Commitment of the heart must still be matched by conditions in which that commitment can live.

For that reason, the rings signify something deeper than celebration. They do not simply mark a date. They express commitment, vulnerability, and the fear of loss. More than any other object in the chapter, they reach toward the future. Seen in this light, none of the visible presents can be reduced to simple birthday gifts. The flowers speak of love and apology. (chapter 97) The cake proves that even obvious symbols can be redefined by intention. The rings embody permanence and the hope that what exists now might continue beyond the match. (chapter 97)

Thus I conclude that even the rings do not complete the transformation. The roses may apologize, the cake may reconcile, and the rings may promise continuity, but all three remain symbolic gestures. They express feeling without necessarily changing the conditions in which that feeling must survive. In this story, love is tested not by sentiment alone, but by circumstances and actions. What use is confession without safety? What use is commitment without freedom? What use is tenderness if the surrounding world remains invasive, unstable, or controlling?

For Kim Dan, the deepest issue has never been exhaustion alone. His life has long been structured by dependence: on institutions, on precarious work, on family obligation, and finally on Jaekyung’s benevolence and protection. Flowers, cake, and even rings may express attachment, but they do not resolve the question of autonomy. Until now, the physical therapist has rarely been treated as a fully self-determining adult. (chapter 78) More often, he has been positioned as a servant to be used or a child to be guided. (chapter 89) His choices have repeatedly been shaped, directed, or provoked by the will of others rather than emerging freely as his own.

If the story ended with the rings, Kim Dan would be a loved dependent, but still a dependent. He would remain the one waiting in the penthouse (chapter 96), the one being driven, the one whose safety exists only when Jaekyung is physically present.

To love him fully, then, requires more than symbolic devotion. It requires the creation of conditions in which he can move freely, choose freely, and exist securely without total reliance on another person. And that is precisely where the question of the true birthday gift returns.

The Architecture of the Sanctuary

And once these meanings are recognized, a final question naturally emerges: does the champion truly have a birthday gift for Kim Dan after all—and if so, where is it?

The answer may begin not among the visible presents, but in a detail far easier to overlook: the parking garage. (chapter 97) The moment the flowers, cake, and rings are understood as gestures serving other emotional purposes, the possibility of another gift comes sharply into view. If those objects are not the true birthday present, then the narrative invites us to search elsewhere. One panel quietly draws attention to exactly such a possibility: for the first time, a third car appears.

This detail gains force when placed beside earlier chapters. The garage shown in Chapter 97 does not simply contain another vehicle; it reflects an evolution already underway. In Chapter 18, the space appears more functional and exposed. (chapter 18) By Chapter 32, the parking area has changed noticeably. (chapter 32) It is larger, more exclusive, and more carefully structured, resembling a private VIP bay rather than an ordinary shared garage. The environment itself has become more protected.

That architectural change matters. A private bay separates the vehicles from the risks of crowded public parking: scratches, collisions, intrusion, unwanted proximity. (chapter 97) The cars are no longer stored merely for convenience. They are sheltered. Even before any emotional interpretation, the space communicates a desire for control, security, and preservation.

In episode 32, Kim Dan wondered about the number of Jaekyung’s cars, because he noticed the new car. (chapter 32), and many readers likely did the same. Attention naturally falls on wealth and quantity. Yet the more meaningful change may lie elsewhere: not in how many cars exist, but in the kind of space being created around them.

Personal transformation in this story is often reflected through architecture. Rooms, hallways, rooftops, doors, and thresholds do not simply contain events; they externalize inner states. Jaekyung’s world has long been luxurious, elevated, and impressive, yet also emotionally isolated. The penthouse functions as both reward and prison: a symbol of success that often feels sterile and inaccessible. It is therefore significant that one of the clearest signs of change appears below the tower rather than inside it.

The deepest change may not be that Jaekyung owns more. It may be that he has begun arranging what he owns for someone else.

The White Sedan: Why This Car Matters

Among the parked vehicles, one stands apart: the white sedan. (chapter 97) . Unlike Jaekyung’s earlier sports cars—machines associated with speed, aggression, (chapter 32) display, and public image—this vehicle speaks a different language. It is understated rather than theatrical, spacious rather than cramped, functional rather than performative.

The color matters as well. White can suggest clarity, neutrality, and renewal. Whether read symbolically or simply aesthetically, it sharply contrasts with the darker, more aggressive aura of luxury performance cars. It looks less like an extension of ego and more like the beginning of another chapter. On the other hand, white is the safest color on the road because it’s the most visible to other drivers at night. If this theory is true, then it indicates that Jaekyung is truly prioritizing Dan’s safety over his own “cool” aesthetic.

More importantly, the sedan fits Kim Dan far more naturally than it fits Jaekyung’s former image. Kim Dan has never been defined by extravagance or spectacle. He values usefulness, modesty, comfort, and quiet sincerity. A practical and comfortable vehicle suited for daily life reflects his character far more than a machine built to impress strangers.

For that reason, the sedan becomes another clue that the new car may not be intended for Jaekyung at all. It resembles Kim Dan’s needs more than Jaekyung’s branding. The car also offers something rare in the world of Jinx: invisibility. Fame has repeatedly exposed Jaekyung to surveillance, intrusion, and manipulation. Many readers will certainly recall this episode where a black car was detected following the champion’s gray SUV. (chapter 33) A discreet sedan blends into ordinary traffic in ways a recognizable celebrity vehicle cannot. If registered under Kim Dan’s name, it would create even greater privacy and unpredictability. Protection would no longer depend only on physical strength, but on foresight and anonymity. And if this car was purchased recently, no one would know about its existence. Not even Park Namwook! If Chapter 33 presented movement as secrecy, confusion, and anxious uncertainty —where the question was Where are they going, and why? (chapter 33) —then Chapter 97 becomes its positive reflection. The same motif of driving now signifies trust, mutual desire, and emotional security. What was once shadowed by suspicion is transformed into intimacy. The destination matters less than the person beside you. The journey is no longer something done to Kim Dan, but something they experience together. (chapter 97)

Yet perhaps the most important meaning is autonomy. If Dan owns or drives the car, Jaekyung is not merely giving him transportation. He is giving him the power to choose when to stay, when to leave, and where to go. He is literally placing the keys of departure in Kim Dan’s hands.

But due to his social class, it is clear that Kim Dan does not yet have a driving licence. Therefore the gift cannot be reduced to ownership alone. It would imply learning, practice, patience, and future development. In other words, the present becomes a shared project. That changes Jaekyung’s role as well. He is no longer simply the powerful man who provides solutions from above. He becomes someone who teaches, encourages, and accompanies Kim Dan as he acquires a new skill. Instead of keeping Dan dependent, he would actively help him become more independent.

This matters because it reverses earlier patterns in their relationship. (chapter 89) So often, Kim Dan has been pushed by crisis, debt, or necessity. Here, he would be pushed toward growth. The pressure would no longer come from fear, but from care. The physical therapist could drive his drunk lover back home.

The symbolism is rich: learning to drive means learning confidence, judgment, orientation, and trust in one’s own decisions. It is not only about operating a vehicle; it is about entering a wider world. Seen in that light, the gift would expand Kim Dan’s life on multiple levels. It offers mobility in the present, autonomy in the future, and a new horizon of possibility. He could suggest to his lover to go on a trip: (chapter 47) Jaekyung would not merely be giving him a car. He would be helping him become someone who can go further than before.

And that changes everything. If Kim Dan remains after receiving the freedom to leave, then his staying becomes meaningful in an entirely new way. In other words, the white car stands for blind faith.

Rings Before Keys: Commitment and Shared Future

Even so, the car cannot come first. Among all visible presents, the couple rings carry the greatest symbolic weight. Unlike flowers or cake, a ring endures. It signifies continuity, reciprocity, and chosen connection. Its circular form evokes a bond without hierarchy, beginning, or end.

That symbolism matters because Jaekyung and Kim Dan’s history has long been shaped by imbalance: wealth against debt, fame against obscurity, strength against vulnerability. In such a relationship, an expensive gift can easily reproduce the old pattern of giver and receiver, power and dependence.

A ring resists that logic. (chapter 97) Its meaning does not come from price, but from mutual consent. It only becomes meaningful when accepted. For perhaps the first time, Jaekyung would be offering something that requires equality.

This is why the order matters. If the car came first, it could still appear as another transaction. But if the rings come first, the emotional foundation changes. Commitment precedes comfort. The relationship is defined before support is expanded.

Kim Dan once gave from scarcity. (chapter 42) He worked exhausting night shifts and spent money he could barely spare in order to offer something meaningful. The value of the keychain was not only monetary; it represented sacrifice, attention, and a sincere desire to make Joo Jaekyung happy.

If Jaekyung now offered only a confession with rings (chapter 97) and nothing else, the scene could risk feeling emotionally incomplete—not because the rings are insignificant, but because the story has already established a language of giving in which effort matters. Kim Dan gave beyond his means. Readers therefore expect Jaekyung, who possesses far greater resources, to respond not merely with sentiment, but with a gesture that shows equal thoughtfulness and concrete care.

That is why the possibility of another gift carries such force. It is not about luxury for its own sake. It is about demonstrating that Jaekyung has understood who Kim Dan is and what he actually needs. The true opposite of Kim Dan’s earlier sacrifice would not be expensive jewelry alone, but something shaped around Dan’s daily life, freedom, and well-being.

In that sense, the issue is not whether Jaekyung appears stingy. It is whether his love remains symbolic only, or becomes materially attentive. The narrative stakes are higher than generosity: they concern transformation.

Under those conditions, the white sedan acquires a different meaning. (chapter 97) It is no longer a trophy or display object. It becomes shared infrastructure. If the rings secure the emotional bond (chapter 97), the car secures the practical conditions in which that bond can live. For Kim Dan, that practical dimension matters profoundly. Until now, movement has rarely belonged fully to him. He walks (chapter 21), uses public transportation (chapter 11), takes taxis (chapter 1), or is driven by others. (chapter 32) Even mobility itself has often depended on circumstance and on the decisions of other people. (chapter 95) A car therefore symbolizes more than comfort: it represents agency, adulthood, and the power to move by his own will. Yet the emotional meaning goes even further. In Chapter 97, the question is no longer only where one goes, but with whom one travels. What was once denied to Kim Dan as independence now returns to him as both freedom and companionship. He is no longer merely carried by another person’s choices; he gains the ability to choose for himself while sharing the road with someone who chooses him in return.

The gift would also transform responsibility. Until now, Jaekyung has often been driven, managed, and accompanied by others on decisive days. His manager and coach occupied the space of trust around him—at least when he remained profitable and useful. (chapter 5) Yet when he was injured and vulnerable, that support proved conditional and incomplete. (chapter 53)

If Kim Dan becomes the one who drives, steadies, and accompanies him, the structure quietly changes. The old “hyungs” are not displaced through conflict, but through irrelevance. Care succeeds where management failed. At the same time, the gesture expresses trust. To let Kim Dan drive is to entrust him with direction, safety, and shared movement. The man who has long carried the weight of control would finally allow someone else to take the wheel. That change matters deeply for Jaekyung as well. It means he no longer has to bear every burden alone. He can rest in the passenger seat, just like Kim Dan does. (chapter 95) He can be guided instead of always guiding, supported instead of always performing. The positions become reversible: each can carry the other when needed.

In that sense, the car symbolizes more than freedom. It symbolizes partnership. (chapter 97) They are no longer fixed in rigid roles of protector and protected. They gain the ability to switch places, share responsibility, and move forward together.

This completes one of the story’s deepest reversals. The man once treated as burden or servant becomes the person closest to the champion’s future.

Kim Dan once gave Jaekyung a small keychain (chapter 81): modest (not too visible), personal, and sincere. The price for his hard work. (chapter 97) If Jaekyung now gives him a car, their gestures beautifully answer one another. Kim Dan once offered the symbolic key to his world; Jaekyung responds by offering the means to navigate a shared one.

One gift says: stay with me.
The other says: let’s move forward together.

And now, you comprehend why I made the following prediction: They would stay together, but leave the place too!

Conclusion: The Dragon’s Pearl

What emerges from these details is a quiet but radical truth: home in Jinx is no longer a penthouse, a contract, or a symbol of status. It is a person. (chapter 97)

Jaekyung’s deepest transformation is not that he has become softer in some simplistic sense, but that his strength is being redirected. The force once used to dominate, intimidate, and defend his own pride is gradually turned outward in service of another’s well-being. (chapter 97) That is why the image of the dragon and the pearl feels so fitting. In many traditions, the dragon guards treasure—but the highest treasure is not gold. It is wisdom, devotion, and the recognition of what truly matters.

Kim Dan, likewise, is no longer merely the exhausted and scared man in need of rescue. He becomes the emotional center around which Jaekyung reorganizes his life. He is his moon shining in the darkness. (chapter 97) Their bond moves beyond the false alternatives of burden and savior, victim and protector, debtor and benefactor. They begin to inhabit a rarer form of intimacy: mutual sanctuary.

In a world shaped by spectators, institutions, scandals, and past wounds, safety cannot be guaranteed by wealth alone. It must be created through trust, constancy, and the willingness to change for another person. If Jaekyung’s gifts truly point in that direction, then the greatest present is neither roses, nor rings, nor a car.

It is the life he is learning to build beside him. (chapter 97)

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Jinx: Drama Queen 👸 Han Dan and The Joker 🤡😈-part 2

When Protection changes Hands

In the first part, I focused on the Joker’s method: not brute force, but construction. One visible diversion captures attention (chapter 96), while another movement unfolds elsewhere. (chapter 97) The interview, the damaged poster (chapter 96), the hallway encounter, the former director’s sudden presence — none of these incidents need to be isolated events. They can be read as layers of the same design, arranged to poison the climate around Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan through mistrust, guilt, and confusion.

Yet while returning to the final scene once again, I realized that another question may now matter even more than the scheme itself: the question of protection.

Until now, protection in Jinx often appeared in the form of rescue. (chapter 79) Danger emerged first, and only then did someone intervene. Joo Jaekyung repeatedly occupied that role. (chapter 17) He was the one who could step in, overpower threats, and remove Kim Dan from immediate harm. Kim Dan, by contrast, was usually placed on the other side of that equation: the one exposed, cornered, or in need of help. But rescue and protection are not the same thing.

The Gym’s Intervention: A Case Study in Failed Protection

A precise materialization of this concept can be seen in the scene where Joo Jaekyung, blinded by rage, is physically restrained by Park Namwook and other gym fighters (chapter 96). On the surface, this action resembles a form of protection: they are stopping him from committing a violent act that would derail his career, effectively “saving” him from himself (chapter 96). Yet, this is rescue, not protection. Their intervention is purely physical, reactive, and localized. Crucially, as they physically struggle, Park Namwook and the others remain mentally and verbally passive. (chapter 96) They do not challenge the source of the rage or offer a solution. They only seek to manage the immediate visible symptom. While the fist is stopped, the underlying “toxic climate” that allows these provocations to take root is left completely intact. This scene proves that without speech, strategy, and mutual agency, physical restraint—even when well-intentioned—is just temporary damage control. This is exactly the kind of passive, limited intervention that the new paradigm must overcome.

Rescue is immediate and visible. (chapter 72) It answers a crisis once it has already begun. Protection reaches further. (chapter 72) It concerns safety before the blow lands, the ability to recognize manipulation (chapter 49), to prevent harm from taking root, and to create a space where trust can survive pressure.

That distinction becomes difficult to ignore in the current arc. The hallway scene, the compromised penthouse (chapter 97), the article on the cellphone (chapter 91), and Kim Dan’s recent actions (chapter 97) all suggest that the old division may no longer be stable. The familiar roles of protector and protected are beginning to shift.

If that is true, then the real tension of the chapter may not be limited to whether Kim Dan will stay or leave. It may concern something deeper: who can protect whom now, and what protection truly means when fists, money, and walls are no longer enough.

The First Protection: Kim Dan Must Protect Himself

There is another layer that cannot be omitted. Before Kim Dan can protect Joo Jaekyung, he may first need to protect himself. That matters because the hallway is not a neutral space for him. (chapter 97) This atmosphere of entrapment is a haunting echo of the story’s beginning. One of the most defining early images of Kim Dan shows him descending a narrow, outdoor staircase, accompanied by the thought: (chapter 1). In that moment, the world was a predatory space where every threshold was a threat.

By returning to a similar threshold now—the dark hallway—the narrative forces Kim Dan to confront that original wound. The question is no longer just ‘is he safe?’ but rather, has he found a way to carry safety within himself so that the world no longer feels like that desolate staircase? If the man waiting there is the former director, Kim Dan would not simply see an unwelcome visitor. He would see the return of an earlier danger. (chapter 90) The memory is important. The director did not lure him with kindness alone. He used his position (chapter 1), status, and Kim Dan’s financial desperation to force compliance. Kim Dan needed the job, needed the salary, needed stability. (chapter 90) The imbalance of power was already doing the violence before any physical act began. What appeared outwardly as professional authority became a means of control. The setting itself carries symbolic weight: enclosed space, unequal power, obscurity, silence. (chapter 90) A place where Kim Dan’s options were reduced and his voice cornered. The hallway now echoes that structure. It is dark. It is private. It is detached from witnesses. (chapter 97) Once again, the same man appears in a threshold space, waiting. Seen this way, Kim Dan’s shock is not weakness. It is recognition. (chapter 90) This contrasts to his reaction at the restaurant. His fear was not only about the present moment. (chapter 90) It was the body remembering before language could fully explain why. (chapter 90) Trauma often recognizes danger faster than conscious thought. If so, the first battle of the chapter is not just one of emotional endurance, but of practical application. Like mentioned above, the look on Kim Dan’s face in the hallway is not one of paralyzing fear, but of profound shock (Chapter 97). It is the shock of recognition, yes, but it is also the moment where his training meets reality.

Jinx-lovers will recall the pivotal training session in Chapter 88, where Joo Jaekyung pinned him to the mat and challenged him: (chapter 88). In that moment, the champion wasn’t just showing dominance; he was imparting a philosophy of resistance. He taught Dan that ‘technique beats size’ (chapter 88) and that even a smaller person can take down a ‘bigger guy’ (Chapter 88).

The hallway encounter with the former director is Kim Dan’s first ‘unscripted match.’ The question is no longer whether he is a ‘frightened victim,’ but whether he can now apply the champion’s lessons, when the stakes are no longer a training mat, but his own physical and emotional safety. Can he use the ‘technique’ of self-assertion and restraint he learned in the gym to dismantle the ‘size’ of the director’s predatory influence? Only by proving he can protect himself using the tools Jaekyung gave him can the stage be set for mutual protection.”

The Joker Card and the Cellphone

One image deserves to be reconsidered before anything else. Earlier in the story, Joo Jaekyung was shown holding a Joker card. (chapter 27) The object symbolized instability, provocation, loss and a game whose rules could suddenly change. It represented a force that unsettled even the champion. Now another object occupies his hand: (chapter 91) the cellphone containing the article about the disgraced former director. (chapter 91) The visual echo matters. The card belonged to a world of tricks, chance, and psychological disturbance. The cellphone belongs to a world of information, memory, and proof. If the earlier Joker card stood for loss and frustration, this new “card” may stand for its opposite: exposure and “victory”. That possibility becomes especially important in the hallway. (chapter 97) So the moment Joo Jaekyung recognizes the intruder as the former director, then Joo Jaekyung is no longer facing an unknown threat. He is confronting a man whose public downfall has already been documented. In other words, the hallway does not only contain danger. It also contains evidence. It stands for trespassing and lack of credibility. This would mark a major turning point for the champion. In the past, he often relied on force, money, private networks, or silence after the fact. Hence he never reported himself the crimes to the authorities (chapter 18) because, for Jaekyung, the ‘system’ was never a source of safety. This mistrust is rooted in a childhood where his abuse was an open secret that remained unaddressed (chapter 72). While the director of the boxing studio knew of his suffering, the police were never involved. There is a bitter irony in the fact that while his father was a violent thug (chapter 72), on paper he remained a ‘good citizen’ who never faced legal repercussions. Jaekyung learned that authorities protect the appearance of order rather than the victims of violence. This skepticism manifested again at the docks (chapter 69), where he chose to ‘save’ Kim Dan through private force rather than wait for legal intervention. Yet those methods repeatedly failed to create real safety. Problems were hidden, postponed, or redirected, or relegated (chapter 52) but not resolved. The cellphone introduces another path (chapter 91): report the crime immediately, involve the authorities, and refuse to let the event be swallowed by the same closed systems as before. If so, the real weapon in his hand is not violence, but the possibility of lawful action.

When the Queen Protects the Champion

If Joo Jaekyung’s protection may now take the form of evidence and public accountability, Kim Dan’s protection works differently. His strength lies in perception. One detail remains highly significant: according to me, Kim Dan never watched Baek Junmin’s interview in full. (chapter 96) He only read the headlines. On the surface, this might appear dismissive or indifferent. (chapter 96) Yet it can also be understood as an expression of Jeong. Kim Dan’s attention was not captured by the Joker’s performance. His concern went directly to Joo Jaekyung and how such exposure might wound him. He absorbed the central facts — poverty, orphanhood, hardship — but did not grant full authority to the humiliating spectacle built around them. (chapter 96)That distinction matters because Baek Junmin likely assumes that public narrative equals truth. If the audience hears something loudly enough, then it becomes reality. But Kim Dan now stands in a different position. He has already met Hwang Byungchul. He has already heard another version of the champion’s past, something the Joker is not expecting. He knows about the father’s abuse, the violence of the home, and the suffering hidden behind Joo Jaekyung’s coldness. (chapter 72) This means that if the hallway encounter is designed to reveal a “hidden truth” — like for example that Joo Jaekyung is only a thug, a violent man who attacks doctors (chapter 1) and patients (chapter 52) ) someone unworthy of trust— the strategy may fail at its most important point. The intended listener is no longer ignorant. Kim Dan can now protect the champion by refusing reduction. He can challenge selective storytelling. Jaekyung is frequently depicted as an avid reader (chapter 97), a sign of a deeply disciplined and self-educated mind. This intellectual depth is his most overlooked form of protection. It means he isn’t just a ‘frightened kid’ or a ‘reactive thug’; he is someone who understands the power of information.Besides, he is a huge reader. He can insist that pain has context, that trauma cannot be erased, and that one act of rage does not explain an entire person. In earlier chapters, Joo Jaekyung protected through action (buying clothes, teaching him how to swim). Here, Kim Dan may protect through interpretation and words.

And this gives the title Drama Queen Dan a deeper irony. What once sounded playful or dismissive can now be read as the name of someone who understands that drama is not merely chaos, but the struggle over meaning itself. A “queen” in this sense does not protect through brute force, but through perception, timing, and the ability to read the hidden script beneath appearances. Kim Dan’s strength lies precisely there. He can recognize when pain is being turned into narrative, when provocation is being staged as truth, and when the man beside him is being reduced to a role he does not deserve. If Joo Jaekyung guards through physical power, then Kim Dan may guard through interpretation—protecting the champion not by striking an enemy, but by refusing to let false stories rule the stage.

Speech Over Force

This possibility reveals a deeper reversal in the story. For a long time, force appeared decisive while speech remained secondary. Those with power acted. (chapter 90) Those without power endured. Silence was survival, and violence seemed to be the language that changed outcomes.

But the hallway may invert that pattern for another reason as well: both Jokers (chapter 96) behind the present tension rely on the same weapon — the past. (chapter 90)

That may be the clearest link between Baek Junmin and the former director. Neither truly confronts the present. Instead, each tries to reactivate an earlier version of the people before them. Baek Junmin depends on old wounds, old shame (chapter 96), and old reactions, as though Joo Jaekyung were still trapped inside the same vulnerabilities and Kim Dan still occupied the same desperate, submissive position. (chapter 90)The former director operates similarly, but with a more intimate cruelty. He does not speak to Kim Dan as a person in front of him. He speaks about Kim Dan to Joo Jaekyung, reducing him once again to an object of transaction, greed, and sexual humiliation.

That distinction matters. The insult is aimed at Kim Dan, yet delivered through the champion. (chapter 90) Kim Dan is called money-hungry, fake, a slut, someone whose affection can be bought. Their apparent happiness is framed as performance, their bond as a financial arrangement, intimacy as deception. In one move, the former director attempts to degrade Kim Dan and poison Joo Jaekyung’s trust at the same time.

This is why his rhetoric belongs to the logic of the past. He still imagines Kim Dan through the old hierarchy: poor, vulnerable, purchasable, voiceless. He assumes economic need must still define him. He assumes shame will still silence him. He assumes that if enough dirt is thrown, the old imbalance will return by itself.

Baek Junmin’s logic is similar. He acts as though Joo Jaekyung can still be provoked into self-destruction (chapter 96) and as though Kim Dan can still be reached through doubt, guilt, or public image. Both antagonists depend on immobility. Once weak, always weak. Once poor, always dependent. Once violent, always reducible to violence.

Yet the present is no longer identical to the past. Kim Dan is no longer the employee trapped inside institutional dependence. He is no longer alone, voiceless, or forced to endure humiliation in exchange for survival. (chapter 97) Hence he plans to cook the athlete’s favorite dishes. (chapter 97) Joo Jaekyung is no longer merely a reactive fighter ruled by rage. He is now capable to reflect on his own behavior. (chapter 97) Their relationship itself has altered the conditions on which those older scripts depended.

That is why force becomes less reliable here. In darkness, appearances are unstable. Shadows distort faces, gestures, and intention. A punch may become proof. A reaction may complete someone else’s script. If Joo Jaekyung strikes first, the aggressor can pose as victim. If Kim Dan retreats in silence, the old narrative appears confirmed.

Words, however, can interrupt that mechanism. A refusal can expose coercion. A clear statement can stop confusion. Naming a lie can weaken it. Calling the police can shift the frame from private manipulation to public accountability. Speech does not erase the past, but it prevents the past from dictating the meaning of the present.

The staircase deepens this reading. Earlier, I described the hallway as a stage, and a stage always implies an audience. If so, who is meant to witness the scene? Perhaps Joo Jaekyung (chapter 97), expected to arrive at the right moment and see only the surface of what is happening. Perhaps hidden accomplices waiting nearby. Perhaps no single person, but the imagined spectator inside each victim — the internalized fear that says humiliation is inevitable and resistance useless.

The architecture matters. The elevator is the visible and ordinary route, (chapter 97) the official path of movement. But once it closes, that route disappears. What remains is the staircase: the emergency passage, yet also the more secret and ambiguous one. In Jinx, stairways (chapter 50) seem to be linked to conspiracy, crime (chapter 50), or offstage maneuvering (chapter 96). The hallway therefore feels less like a neutral corridor than a set arranged for entrapment, where ordinary exits vanish and only compromised paths remain.

That is why the real struggle of the scene may not be between strength and weakness, but between two temporal logics. (chapter 97) One insists that people never change and can always be returned to their former place. The other proves that they have changed already.

Joo Jaekyung may need to discover that strength includes relying on the police. Kim Dan may need to discover that care includes speaking aloud. And both may need to recognize that protection no longer lies in repeating old reactions, but in refusing the script entirely.

The real victory of the hallway may therefore not belong to the stronger fist, but to the clearer voice.

The Book and the Question of Time

The Gift as Emotional Infrastructure

At first glance, the book may look like a simple gift. (chapter 97) But it carries a far deeper meaning. It is not merely a birthday present. It is an expression of love, gratitude, and attentive recognition. That distinction matters because the story has already shown another gift: the keychain. (chapter 97) The keychain came together with a birthday card, yet the champion only truly saw the object. He never had the chance to read the written message attached to it. He only discovered its existence much later. (chapter 81) As a result, the gesture remained incomplete and vulnerable to misunderstanding. (chapter 45) The material gift was visible, but the feeling behind it stayed hidden. The book changes that structure. (chapter 97) Unlike the earlier present, it unites both functions at once. It is a physical object, but it also communicates what words alone might struggle to express. Even before it is opened, its cover already speaks.

Linguistic Shadows: Love, Stay, and Rest

Its title can be read in several layers. (chapter 87) Oui, c’est l’amour means in French Yes, this is love. The phrase functions almost like an answer to all the confusion that came before: the uncertainty in the dining room (chapter 93), the champion asking what he was feeling, the hesitation around whether kindness was guilt (chapter 93), pity, or something else. (chapter 93) The title responds clearly where the characters still struggle to do so themselves. Yes—what exists here is love. Another visible word, reste, signifies stay or remain in French. Yet because the final letter appears hidden or incomplete, the word can also be seen through English eyes as rest. (chapter 97) That double reading is powerful. It joins emotional fidelity with emotional relief. Stay with me. Remain beside me. Rest now. Sleep in peace. All of these meanings answer Joo Jaekyung’s deepest needs more precisely than an expensive object ever could.

The Portable Home: Love as a Protective Sanctuary

All of these meanings answer Joo Jaekyung’s deepest needs more precisely than an expensive object ever could. He needs someone who remains. (chapter 97) This linguistic double-meaning transforms the book from a mere object into the blueprint for a Home. For Joo Jaekyung, home has historically been a site of trauma and violence—a place where he was exposed rather than shielded. This longing for a safe domestic space is rooted in a childhood vow. In a poignant flashback (chapter 72), a young Jaekyung stands in a snow-covered phone booth, promising: ‘One day I’ll make a lot of money… and stop him. So can you come back home?’ For the young champion, ‘Home’ was a conditional destination—a reward that could only be reclaimed once he had enough wealth to physically ‘stop’ the source of violence. He equated protection with financial power and the physical ability to gatekeep. Yet, as an adult, even with the wealth and the power to stop anyone, he remained ‘homeless’ in spirit. By offering him the book and a space to ‘stay,’ Kim Dan is updating this childhood vow. He is proving that a ‘Home’ is not something Jaekyung has to buy or defend alone through force; it is a sanctuary that is built through mutual presence and emotional safety. Kim Dan is offering a new kind of protection: the creation of a domestic sanctuary. If the ring is a place of performance and the hallway a place of entrapment, the book represents a ‘portable home.’ (chapter 97) It signals that protection is no longer about walls or wealth, but about being truly ‘seen’ and ‘housed’ in another person’s care. In this sense, love becomes the ultimate protective layer, providing the internal peace necessary for the champion to face the external storm. He needs rest from insomnia and endless pressure. He needs affection detached from performance. He needs permission to exist outside the ring.

What does he need most on the eve of a fight? Not more hype, not more strategy, not more pressure—but a peaceful night and the possibility of sleep.

This is why the hidden or incomplete letter matters as much as the printed word. Something unfinished becomes full only through interpretation, just as the relationship itself has been moving from partial gestures toward clearer recognition. The cover says more than it first appears to say, just as Kim Dan’s care has always meant more than it openly declared. In other words, by receiving such a book, Joo Jaekyung’s insomnia can finally vanish.

Temporal Sabotage: Choosing Care Over Spectacle

Timing therefore becomes decisive. The Joker’s method depends on buying time (chapter 93), delaying genuine encounters, and keeping everything trapped inside the schedule of the match. Everything must wait until after the fight: truth, tenderness, resolution, emotional clarity. Human feeling is subordinated to spectacle.

The book does the opposite. It accelerates emotional truth. If given before the match (chapter 97), it says now what the system insists should only come later. It offers comfort before performance, care before victory, and peace before violence.

In that sense, the gift is not a distraction from the fight. It may be the very thing the champion needs most in order to face it.

The title therefore transforms the book into more than a purchase. It becomes a message Kim Dan may not yet be ready to say aloud. Through this single object, he expresses affection, constancy, and concern for the champion’s suffering. (chapter 97) In that sense, the gift also embodies Jeong: a form of attachment built not through grand declarations, but through accumulated care, remembered details, silent loyalty, and the desire to ease another person’s burdens. Kim Dan does not simply give an object. He gives the emotional attention he has been carrying for Joo Jaekyung all along.

Kim Dan did not buy the book out of obligation or because a date on the calendar demanded it. He bought it because, while moving through his own day, his attention still turned toward Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 97) Care continued in absence. The relationship was active even when they were apart. This places the gift in sharp contrast with the keychain episode. Back then, Kim Dan selected something through external logic. He entered the dressing room (chapter 42), crossing into the champion’s private space (chapter 42), and chose according to appearance and assumed usefulness. The gesture was sincere, but still uncertain. It responded to what Joo Jaekyung seemed to need. (chapter 42) The book is different because it responds to who he is. (chapter 97) Kim Dan remembers that the champion had been reading this author before. He notices the new release. He immediately connects it to Joo Jaekyung’s insomnia and inner unrest. The choice therefore emerges from observation, memory, and understanding rather than surface impression. This means the gift is modest in price but immense in emotional value. It is inexpensive materially, yet rich in evidence. Evidence that Kim Dan listens. Evidence that he watches carefully. Evidence that the champion exists in his mind beyond moments of direct contact. And that is precisely why it may become the best gift Joo Jaekyung has ever received. And he could even cry out of “happiness”. Not because of luxury. Not because of status. Not because it flatters his public identity. But because it answers a wound deeper than material lack: the fear of being unseen except for utility, strength, or performance. The fear of never being loved. Furthermore, the champion’s interest in this author also indicates his transformation (chapter 97), as the book seems to focus on emotions and relationships. It shows that despite the appearances, the athlete’s also learning and expanding his horizon.

So if crisis changes the order (the encounter with the director in the hallways), then the champion could discover or receive the gift beforehand, then the logic transforms entirely. The book would no longer reward success. It would precede it. Joo Jaekyung would receive something valuable not because he won, but because he already matters before the outcome is decided. That reversal is crucial. The wider system values him through belts, money, spectacle, and usefulness. The book values him as a person in advance of all results. This is why the gift stands against the Joker’s method. Manipulation delays truth, creates misunderstanding, and keeps feeling trapped behind timing, fear, and competition. The book does the opposite. It brings hidden care into the open. It accelerates emotional truth. It interrupts the schedule imposed by the match. And perhaps most beautifully, it gives Joo Jaekyung something rarest of all: not admiration, not demand, not pressure—but a sign that someone has truly learned how to love him.

The Damaged Poster, the Interview and the Wrong Audience

The ruined poster outside the gym should not be read in isolation. (chapter 96) It gains fuller meaning when placed beside the interview that preceded it. Together, they resemble two versions of the same attack: one verbal (chapter 96), one visual. One addressed through media spectacle, the other through physical vandalism. Both attempt to shape how Joo Jaekyung is seen.

At first glance, the interview appears directed toward the obvious audiences: the public, fans, gym members (chapter 96), sponsors, and the broader world watching the scandal unfold. The damaged poster seems to continue that same logic by materializing contempt in public space. The champion’s image is defaced where others can see it. Reputation is targeted through humiliation.

But there may be a more intimate audience hidden inside both gestures. One might think, it is to provoke the champion in order to have him disqualified. (chapter 96) However, there exists another possible interpretation. Readers may remember the earlier café scene, where Kim Dan met Choi Gilseok and photographs of that encounter were later sent to Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 48) That episode already suggested the presence of an unseen observer—someone in the shadows who understood that images can wound relationships more efficiently than fists can. If those photographs were indeed part of Baek Junmin’s broader method, then the interview and the poster follow the same principle: public content designed for private damage.

Seen this way, the real target is not only mass opinion. It is the person whose opinion matters most. Kim Dan. Don’t forget that back then, the physical therapist refused to accept the offer from the director of the rival gym: money, a place to stay, a treatment for his grandmother. But such a decision meant that the main lead was rejecting to work for Baek Junmin.

By this point, The Shotgun likely knows that Kim Dan has returned to Joo Jaekyung’s side. (chapter 93) He knows the physical therapist is no passing employee, but someone emotionally significant. That changes everything. If Kim Dan cannot be removed physically, he may be pressured psychologically.

The message then becomes sharper.

You chose a loser. (chapter 96)
You chose a weak man.
You chose a lost puppy (chapter 96), someone shameful, poor, abandoned, ridiculous.
You attached yourself to the wrong person.

The cruelty of the interview lies precisely here. It does not merely insult the champion’s past. It tries to make attachment to him feel embarrassing. (chapter 96) It reframes loyalty as foolishness. It attempts to poison admiration itself.

And this is where an important reversal emerges.

What is Kim Dan to Joo Jaekyung in reality? Not simply an employee, debtor, or dependent figure. He has become something closer to a true fan in the deepest sense of the word: someone who sees beyond branding, beyond headlines, beyond victories and losses. He is a true champion. (chapter 97) Someone who remains emotionally invested in the person rather than the image.

That kind of recognition is dangerous to Baek Junmin’s strategy because it cannot be controlled through spectacle alone. A casual fan (chapter 52) may turn away when public opinion shifts. A sponsor may withdraw when scandal appears. A crowd may cheer one day and mock the next. (chapter 36) But Kim Dan’s bond is no longer built on those unstable foundations. He believes in him.

He knows the child behind the champion. (chapter 94) For Baek Junmin, lost puppy oozes resent and mockery, but for the physical therapist, the same expression evokes care and protective instincts. (Chapter 29) He knows the wounds behind the arrogance. He knows the habits, the loneliness (chapter 97), the insomnia, the roughness that conceals care. He has seen the human being hidden beneath the public mask.

Once that level of knowledge exists, posters lose some of their power. (chapter 96) Headlines lose authority. Insults become transparent in their intention. This does not mean the attacks are harmless. Public humiliation can still wound, and symbolic destruction still creates pressure. But the scheme may fail where it matters most: in the private bond it seeks to fracture.

The wrong audience may have been chosen—or rather, the chosen audience may no longer respond in the old way.

There is another irony worth noting. Kim Dan never directly witnessed either of the two symbolic attacks. He did not see the damaged poster, and he did not fully watch the interview. The messages designed to shape his perception never reached him in the intended form.

This raises an important question about Baek Junmin’s own perspective. What exactly was he reacting to when he decided to escalate? (chapter 93) He may have seen the champion’s emotional reaction after the victory in Paris (chapter 87), where Joo Jaekyung visibly searched for Kim Dan in the crowd. Or he may have encountered videos (chapter 90) circulating online of the disturbance at the restaurant. (chapter 90) In either case, the external image would have looked simple: Joo Jaekyung had been provoked once again. The champion still appeared volatile, reactive, and unchanged.

And that perception matters because it fits the larger objective already discussed: to make Kim Dan leave the champion’s side and to have finally Joo Jaekyung disqualified for good. If Joo Jaekyung can be framed as unstable, violent, humiliating, or impossible to trust, then separation may occur without force. Kim Dan would withdraw on his own. The bond would break itself under pressure.

The restaurant scene especially could be misread in exactly that way. From an outsider’s perspective, Joo Jaekyung moved toward violence, while Kim Dan arrived only afterward to stop him. (chapter 90) It could seem as though the physical therapist was merely restraining, interrupting, or obstructing the champion. A hindrance rather than an ally. (chapter 90)

But that reading misses the hidden truth of the scene. (chapter 90) No outsider could know that the tension began because Kim Dan had left the room in emotional distress. No camera would capture the private wound beneath the public reaction. What looked like friction between the former director and the celebrity was in reality the consequence of care, misunderstanding, and emotional stakes invisible to spectators.

This highlights the fundamental flaw in Baek Junmin’s strategy. Junmin operates entirely within the realm of the Spectacle. Hence he is in reality the Drama Queen Han. His weapons are visual and immediate: TV interviews (Chapter 96), headlines (chapter 95), and shows designed for public consumption. To Junmin, truth is something manufactured for the camera; it is a ‘show’ of superiority and victimhood. This is why his method relies on surfaces—he assumes that if he can change the ‘image’ of Joo Jaekyung in Kim Dan’s eyes, the bond will break. (chapter 96)

However, Joo Jaekyung has quietly transitioned from being a ‘subject of the spectacle’ to a ‘man of the word.’ While Junmin is busy giving interviews, Jaekyung is increasingly depicted in private, intellectual moments. (chapter 97) We learn through Kim Dan’s observations that Jaekyung’s room is full of books and that he relies on reading to quiet his mind (chapter 97).

This shift is symbolic: Images are imposed, but words are interpreted. By becoming a reader, Jaekyung is no longer just a body to be filmed or a monster to be headlined; he is a person seeking depth. (chapter 97) When he reads the article about the Director’s sexual harassment (chapter 91), he is using the ‘word’ as a tool for justice, contrasting Junmin’s use of the ‘word’ for slander. Kim Dan, as a reader himself, recognizes this. He chooses the depth of the ‘book’—and the man who reads it—over the superficiality of the ‘video’ Junmin tries to sell him. In this arc, the bond remains unbroken because it is written in a language of depth that Baek Junmin’s cameras simply cannot capture.

Exit Scene: Stay and Leave

This returns us to the chapter’s apparent dilemma: stay or leave. (chapter 97) On the surface, the choice seems simple. Stay and remain inside danger. Leave and survive. But such a choice belongs to the Joker’s logic because it assumes safety is still tied to place: the penthouse, the gym, the old structures around them.

What if that assumption is already false? The penthouse has been compromised. Wealth did not secure it. The gym no longer guarantees protection or care. (chapter 96) Titles cannot create peace. (chapter 95) Walls cannot protect trust.

If so, then leaving a place may no longer mean losing safety. And staying may no longer mean remaining physically where one stands.

There is another detail that deepens this possibility. In an earlier reading of chapter 96, I described the relationship between the two protagonists through the idea of tactile dissonance. Their bodies no longer moved in harmony. (chapter 96) Distance, interruption, and broken rhythm shaped their contact. On the physical level, they seemed out of sync.

Yet chapter 97 reveals another reality beneath that surface: they are now mentally and emotionally aligned. (chapter 97) This alignment appears through a series of quiet but striking parallels. (chapter 97) Both independently buy the same cake. (chapter 97) Both choose gifts centered not on themselves, but on what the other would enjoy. (chapter 97) Each thinks in terms of the other’s happiness before speaking to the other directly. Care has become mutual instinct rather than negotiated obligation.

Even the visual composition reinforces this movement. (chapter 97) The author places them in mirrored and balanced panels, separated in space yet linked in intention. They stand apart physically, but the framing suggests an inner synchrony stronger than distance. What chapter 96 presented as bodily discord, chapter 97 answers with emotional consonance.

That contrast matters. Physical harmony can be disrupted by circumstance, misunderstanding, or outside interference. Mental and emotional harmony is harder to break, once it has truly formed. It means that even while separated by walls, schedules, or danger, they are already moving toward the same conclusion. (chapter 97) Stay together. And that conclusion may not be reached individually. They are no longer two isolated people reacting alone. They are becoming two people capable of choosing together. That’s what the couple rings symbolize here. (chapter 97) This is why the final question of the chapter may be less “Will Kim Dan stay?” or “Will he leave?” than whether they will make a shared decision at last. The mirrored gifts, the synchronized thoughts, the parallel panels — all suggest they are approaching a moment of joint agency. They are moving toward a ‘third path’ where they stay together by leaving the trap.

This transition is foreshadowed by the symbolic cards in their early history. If the former director represents the Joker card—the unpredictable threat to their peace (Chapter 27)—then the two ‘3’ cards Kim Dan held symbolize a deeper, private destination.

In Chapter 33, Jaekyung takes Dan to a secluded, ‘unknown’ location (chapter 33) where ‘no one would come’ (Chapter 33). The presence of the actor entering the club in slippers and no jacket despite the winter cold suggests a desperate, hurried escape from a world that had become a ‘trap.’ (chapter 33) Even then, Jaekyung’s motivation was clear: he followed Kim Dan because he could not bear for him to leave. That secluded house could be the physical ‘home’ Jaekyung had built while waiting for a partner worthy of sharing it.

Therefore, ‘leaving’ the current hallway or the compromised penthouse does not mean losing safety (chapter 97); it means relocating their sanctuary to a place where they are finally ‘alone’ in the way they both desired. They aren’t just fleeing a villain; they are choosing to occupy the ‘3’ cards—the private space they first glimpsed in Chapter 33. The mirrored gifts and synchronized thoughts suggest that for the first time, they aren’t being forced into a location; they are making a shared decision to ‘stay’ in each other’s presence while ‘leaving’ the narratives imposed upon them by others.”

If that happens, then the true harmony of the chapter will not be tactile at all. It will be volitional: two people finally choosing the same path at the same time.

Conclusion: Mutual Protection

The deeper movement of the story may therefore be this: rescue is no longer enough. Rescue removes someone from danger after the damage has begun. Protection asks how danger is recognized earlier (chapter 88), resisted differently, and prevented from defining the future. Joo Jaekyung may protect Kim Dan not through another violent intervention, but through truth made public, lawful action, and the refusal to let harm disappear in silence contrary to the past. Kim Dan may protect Joo Jaekyung not through physical force, but through knowledge (chapter 47), revelation (chapter 48), and the rejection of false narratives designed to reduce him (chapter 96). Each now carries what the other lacks. That is why the hallway matters. (chapter 97) It was staged as a place of fear, separation, and confusion. Yet it may become the very place where the old hierarchy collapses. Protector and protected are no longer fixed identities. If they overcome what is coming, it may be because they finally learn to protect each other. Ultimately, this shift reveals the story’s most vital truth: that safety is not a geographic location, and ‘home’ is not a piece of real estate. At the beginning of his journey, Kim Dan wandered through the city convinced there was ‘nowhere left in this world where I can feel safe’ (chapter 1). He looked for safety in walls, in locked doors, and in financial stability, only to find them all fragile. But as the protection changes hands in the hallway, we see the emergence of a different kind of fortress. If they can withstand the Joker’s design, it will be because they have realized that they are no longer each other’s burden or rescue project (chapter 97) — they are each other’s sanctuary. In a world of damaged posters and compromised penthouses, the only place left to feel safe is not a place at all, but a person.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Drama Queen 👸 Han Dan and The Joker 🤡😈-part 1

The latest chapter ends with an image that feels too deliberate to dismiss. A dark hallway. (chapter 97) An unexpected visitor. For readers, this is no coincidence. We already know enough to recognize a move set in motion from elsewhere. (chapter 93) The former director did not appear there by chance. What remains uncertain is not whether this is a scheme, but how the latter was arranged and what it is meant to achieve.

The real uncertainty belongs to Kim Dan. He steps into the corridor visibly shocked (chapter 97), confronted by a man who should not be there. His first thought is easy to imagine: Why is he here? Yet from that single question many others unfold. Who gave him the address? (chapter 97) How did he get inside? Why tonight? What role is he meant to play? And who is this encounter truly meant for? Since then, speculation has been running wild. Some predict a kidnapping. Others expect assault, self-defense, blackmail, public scandal, or another painful but brief departure. Every reader seems to be writing a different next episode and everything seems possible.

And yet the most interesting question may not be which shock event comes next, but what this final scene is already telling us about the direction of the story. In Jinx, closing moments rarely function as decoration. (chapter 97) They often contain clues — small visual decisions, strange timing, unusual framing, details that seem minor until later chapters reveal their weight. A final panel does not always announce the future directly, but it can offer glimpses of the forces already in motion.

That is why this essay is less about prediction than interpretation. The final beat of chapter 97 functions less as a simple cliffhanger than as a map of the unrest to come. (chapter 97) When this dark hallway encounter is set beside earlier thresholds, repeated patterns, and the chapter’s charged atmosphere, the outline of the coming conflict begins to emerge. The question is not only what may happen next, but why it happens now. This meeting takes place at the precise moment, when emotional pressure and narrative conditions have finally converged, making an earlier reckoning impossible.

One lesson from previous schemes in the story should also be remembered. Manipulation rarely arrives through a single act. When something suspicious occurred before (chapter 35), it was not one wrongdoing but two (chapter 36) or three (chapter 36) layered together: one visible distraction, another hidden move (chapter 37), and often a consequence (chapter 40) that only became clear afterward. In other words, the first event is rarely the whole trick. It is only the surface. If that pattern still applies now, then the interview may be only the loudest surface event, (chapter 96) while the real movement of the scheme occurs elsewhere — perhaps in the damage already done, or in the encounter still waiting in the dark.

This is where the title Queen Han Dan and the Joker enters the stage. It may sound playful at first, yet it points toward two very different forms of power now colliding. The Joker from Badman evokes chaos, disruption, and the pleasure of tearing order apart — qualities that fit Baek Junmin’s methods throughout the story (chapter 96). He does not merely attack people; he unsettles structures, humiliates rivals, and turns instability into advantage.

Yet the word joker carries another meaning as well: the unexpected card (chapter 27) that can suddenly change the game. By sending the former director into the hallway (chapter 97), Baek Junmin may believe he is playing such a card — one final move capable of breaking the fragile balance between the protagonists. But cards are dangerous things. Once played, they no longer belong to the hand that used them. They enter the table, where anyone can read them differently.

What is meant as a weapon may become a clue. What is sent to divide may instead reveal how much was hidden beneath the surface all along. And that is where the second half of the title quietly waits. If the Joker represents the move, Kim Dan becomes the board itself—the space where hidden strategies collide, and where even the most vulnerable piece can become a Queen when the game reaches its endgame.

The Joker’s Stage

Let us begin with the hallway itself. Many readers focus on what the former director might say or do, but before any words are spoken, the environment is already telling a story. The scene does not unfold like an accidental encounter. It unfolds like an arranged entrance.

The man is not standing directly in front of the elevator doors (chapter 97), where one would naturally wait if the goal were immediate contact. Instead, he has placed himself farther down the corridor. This matters because distance creates delay. Kim Dan must first step out, walk forward, and commit himself to the space before fully realizing that someone is there. By the time recognition becomes possible, the elevator doors have already closed behind him. (chapter 97) The easiest path backward has vanished. The resident is inside his own home, yet the geometry of the scene briefly turns him into the trapped figure.

Even more striking is the man’s posture. He is turned away from the elevator. (chapter 97) One might argue that he simply heard the lift arrive and then turned around — yet that is precisely what does not happen. He does not react immediately to the sound of the doors opening and the light. (chapter 97) He does not turn at once when footsteps begin. (chapter 97) The movement comes later (chapter 97), only after Kim Dan has already advanced and the elevator has closed. This delayed turn transforms a normal greeting into something theatrical. It resembles the timed reveal of an actor who waits for the right cue before facing the audience. Recognition itself is staged.

Darkness intensifies that impression. (chapter 97) There is no sign of a building-wide blackout. (chapter 97) The elevator functions normally. Yet the hallway itself remains unusually dim. This suggests not an ordinary malfunction, but lighting that has been selectively tampered with (chapter 97): the machinery still works, while the very space of encounter has been left in shadow. The contrast becomes sharper when we recall the earlier elevator and hallway scene from chapter 31 (chapter 31), which many readers have already associated because of the roses. Jinx-Lovers were moved that Joo Jaekyung had not forgotten that Kim Dan was fond of flowers. (chapter 97) Yet they overlooked another detail: that same threshold was fully lit, (chapter 31) and a lamp stood on the right side of the frame. In the present scene, that source of light has vanished. (chapter 97) Warmth and visibility once accompanied that passage. Now they have been replaced by coldness and obscurity. The shadows conceal identity, soften the traces of old bruises, and make the figure harder to recognize at first glance. (chapter 97) But they also perform symbolic work. Darkness signals secrecy, hidden intention, and the possibility that something is being arranged outside the viewer’s full awareness.

That does not necessarily mean everyone in the building is maliciously betraying Joo Jaekyung. The point is subtler than conspiracy. A guard may have let someone in as a favor. Staff may have assumed the visitor belonged there. Someone may simply have failed to verify who entered. In many systems, damage does not begin with grand treason. It begins with carelessness, routine shortcuts, or the small convenience of not checking facts. The same logic may be at work here. Once people stop checking what is true, appearances begin to govern reality. Kim Dan no longer appears at the gym (chapter 96), meals are handled by someone else (chapter 96), old routines seem restored (chapter 97) From the outside, the easiest conclusion is that the “hamster” has left. Yet that conclusion may be entirely false. He did not disappear. He only disappeared from view. And this observation leads to a deeper question. Who was the former director truly there to meet? Formally speaking, he has come to the penthouse of Joo Jaekyung, its official resident and owner. On paper, the visit concerns the champion. Yet formal appearances can be as misleading as visual ones. A registered address does not necessarily reveal the real destination of a scheme. Just as people may mistake absence for departure, they may also mistake the legal resident for the intended target. What appears to be a visit to one man may, in reality, have been arranged for another.

Yet the strongest clue may arrive after the reveal. (chapter 97) The former director is not startled, nor does he show visible signs of panic. He does not step back, apologize, retreat, or behave like a man caught trespassing. He remains composed. That calmness matters. If Joo Jaekyung were the true target, Kim Dan’s arrival should complicate the plan. Instead, the intruder stays exactly where he is, as though the person now standing before him is the one he came to meet.

(chapter 97) Kim Dan’s reaction is equally revealing. He freezes, but he does not panic, which becomes perceptible, once you compare his reaction at the restaurant. (chapter 90) The expression in the hallway is shock rather than terror. (chapter 97) This is not yet the fear of immediate violence. It is the cognitive shock of seeing someone impossible in a place where he should not exist. The emotional blow comes from meaning, not force. In that sense, the first weapon of the scene is psychological.

This changes how we read the likely target. The encounter may ultimately affect Joo Jaekyung, but its first aim appears to be Kim Dan. He is the one isolated, confronted, and forced into a moment of uncertainty. That matters because chapter 97 repeatedly frames his position through the question of movement: (chapter 97) whether he will go or remain. While Kim Dan crosses the street lost in thought, the pedestrian signal turns red (chapter 97), visually interrupting departure itself. By contrast, Joo Jaekyung’s desire to ask him not to leave (chapter 97) is paired with forward motion and a green light. (chapter 97) The chapter therefore stages two opposite directions at once: one character preparing to walk away, the other trying to keep him near. In that sense, the hallway confrontation strikes at the story’s central tension: stay or leave. (chapter 97) It appears designed to turn Kim Dan away at the very threshold where his deeper desire is already moving in the opposite direction (chapter 97) — not toward departure, but toward remaining at Joo Jaekyung’s side.

There is another reason this matters. To grasp the full significance of the scene, we must remember the beginning of the story. In episode 1, Joo Jaekyung summoned Kim Dan (chapter 1) to the penthouse and sent him the address while having sex with someone else. Kim Dan arrived under false assumptions, believing he had been called for treatment. In episode 2, not only the hallway was lit (chapter 02), but also the door stood open, and deception functioned through entry: he was drawn into a private space without understanding what awaited him inside. (chapter 2) The present encounter reverses that structure almost exactly. Now the door remains closed and the director is also standing at a certain distance from it. (chapter 97) The intruder does not seek to enter the penthouse, but to stop Kim Dan outside it. Additionally, this contrast strongly suggests that the former director is trespassing rather than arriving by invitation. Deception no longer serves to bring him inward, but to keep him from returning. (chapter 97) What once began with forced access may now continue through engineered exclusion.

The hallway carries another layer as well. (chapter 40) Earlier in the story, a different corridor became the place where Kim Dan’s heart first moved toward Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 40) There, the champion stood in light, framed by cameras and public attention, dazzling through image and presence. (chapter 40) That threshold marked attraction, recognition, and emotional movement toward him. The present hallway appears as its inversion. Darkness replaces light. (chapter 97) Intrusion replaces admiration. Instead of drawing Kim Dan closer, the scene may be designed to turn him away.

The corridor may carry yet another memory in the champion’s story. On the day before the match (chapter 49), Joo Jaekyung also encountered Baek Junmin in a hallway while Kim Dan watched from behind. To everyone else, the scene appeared harmless, even cordial: two fighters exchanging a handshake in public view. (chapter 49) Yet beneath that surface, something very different was taking place. The Joker used proximity and secrecy to whisper words that dragged the champion back toward a buried past (chapter 49) — weakness, humiliation, the memory of being a vulnerable child. The visible gesture was friendly; the hidden action was psychological assault. (chapter 49) That earlier corridor teaches us how these spaces function in Jinx: not merely as passages, but as places where unseen truths move beneath staged appearances. If so, the present hallway may repeat the structure in altered form. Joo Jaekyung now stands nearby but outside the frame, while Kim Dan occupies the position once held by the champion. What was previously aimed at one man’s repressed wounds may now be redirected toward another’s.

And yet darkness does not eliminate the possibility of light. It merely changes its source. In the earlier corridor, radiance came through spectacle. Here, if anything is to shine, it may have to shine through words: truth spoken aloud, motives exposed, guilt refused, emotional clarity finally named. That possibility matters because it points beyond Joo Jaekyung’s earlier response at the restaurant, where force answered insult. (chapter 90) This new threshold may demand another kind of strength altogether.

For that reason, the hallway should be understood as more than a corridor. It becomes a stage, a threshold, a place of transition, and certainly a test. The lighting, the distance, the delayed reveal, the closed elevator, the calm intruder, and the frozen witness all make the encounter feel less like reality unfolding naturally and more like a scene being performed. Before anyone speaks, the setting itself tells us that this night has been scripted to look like chance. Beneath the silence, another question is already waiting: stay, or leave?

The Joker’s Mask

The former director’s face matters as much as his position. (chapter 97) Mingwa draws him in a strangely diminished way. His bruises have almost vanished, yet not entirely. His glasses are opaque, hiding the eyes. Most striking of all, his mouth seems absent.

This is not how a fully present person is framed. It is how a function is framed. Without visible eyes, we cannot read sincerity, shame, fear, remorse, or hesitation. Without a readable mouth, speech itself becomes suspect. He does not appear as a man arriving to express something authentic. He appears as a messenger carrying lines that may not truly belong to him. Someone else may be speaking through him before he even opens his mouth.

The fading bruises deepen this effect. The traces of earlier violence remain, but only faintly. Darkness covers what is left of them. Old damage is neither fully shown nor fully erased. It is managed. The image suggests someone who carries the past into the present, yet only in the form most useful for the current performance.

The shadows may conceal even more than injury. (chapter 97) The man appears to be wearing the same clothes as before, linking this encounter to his earlier humiliation and social decline. (chapter 90) If so, the lack of light performs another function: it softens the visible signs of downfall. (chapter 97) The corridor does not simply hide wounds. It hides status. Poverty, disgrace, and failure are pushed into the background so that another narrative can stand in the foreground. By concealing how diminished he truly is, the scene allows Kim Dan to momentarily forget that this is a defeated enemy. In shadow, he can return as something more imposing: not a fallen man, but a ghost from the past. (chapter 90)

That contrast becomes sharper when we remember how he was drawn earlier in the story. Then, the director was all excess: licking lips (chapter 90), sweating greed, vulgar speech (chapter 90), predatory fantasy, shameless mockery (chapter 90), and a grin (chapter 90) that exposed appetite without restraint. He was visually loud, almost grotesquely transparent. Readers did not need to guess what kind of man stood before them. His face announced it.

Now the opposite occurs. (chapter 90) The eyes are hidden. The mouth recedes. The body grows still. The vulgar man seems to vanish into silence. But this should not be mistaken for redemption. Nothing in the visual language suggests genuine growth or moral awakening. What we are shown is not transformation, but suppression. He is not rewritten; he is dimmed.

And because he is low-key, language moves to the center. If the face cannot be trusted, if motives cannot be read, if the body itself has been visually reduced, then words can only become the true instrument of the next encounter. The danger is no longer what he can do, but what he has come to say. That is why he feels less like a person arriving with his own truth than a carrier of prepared lines — accusations, selective facts, emotional triggers, or a version of the past designed to wound on command. The real blow may not be physical at all. It may arrive through sentences.

The image also evokes an unexpected cultural echo. The facelessness recalls the famous scene in The Matrix where Neo suddenly discovers he has no mouth.

There too, the horror lies not in physical violence alone, but in the revelation that reality itself has been controlled by a larger system. Speech is removed because truth has been confiscated. The association is striking here. The former director appears less like a free subject than a man absorbed into someone else’s script. Yet the parallel may go further. In The Matrix, Neo eventually becomes the one who breaks the illusion. If this hallway is built on false appearances, then the real question is not whether a mask has arrived, but who will refuse the reality it tries to impose.

If the director is a mask — no eyes, no mouth, no visible agency — Kim Dan is becoming the opposite. (chapter 97) Even in shock, his expressions remain vivid and legible. His silence is full of inner questions. He thinks, reacts, judges, and feels in ways the other figure no longer seems able to display. The scene therefore stages more than an encounter between two characters. It stages a collision between a hollow vessel and a developing soul.

This is why a sincere apology feels unlikely as the true purpose of the scene. (chapter 97) If repentance were central, the image would need visibility: a readable face, clear bruises, accessible emotion, remorse we could recognize. As you can see, the scene in the hallway contrasts so much with the one in the Fairy wheel with the firework (chapter 84), where both main leads were trapped “together” and sound played a huge importance. Instead, the final scene in episode 97 withholds precisely those things. The darkness does not stage confession. It stages concealment. (chapter 97) The man himself becomes harder to read so that attention shifts toward whatever story he has been sent to deliver.

That is why the director feels less like the author of the scene than one of its props. He may move and speak, yet the visual language reduces him to an instrument: a body placed in the hallway so that someone else’s strategy can speak through him. He is not the Joker. He is the mask the Joker chooses to wear. If the Director is a prop (the Mask) and the hallway is a stage, then the only way for Kim Dan to “win” is to refuse the script.

The Conditions of Entry

We have already established the most important surface illusion: from the outside, it could appear that Kim Dan had left the penthouse. He no longer appeared at the gym. No one seemed to mention him to Joo Jaekyung. The champion himself was increasingly framed in isolation (chapter 97), absorbed by training and the imminent match. Publicly, Kim Dan had vanished. Privately, he had not moved at all.

What makes this significant is that Kim Dan himself may not have realized how easily absence can be misread. To him, remaining inside the apartment for several days may have meant reflection, hesitation, emotional conflict, or simply staying out of sight. (chapter 97) To outsiders, however, invisibility can quickly harden into narrative. If a person is no longer seen, people begin to explain that disappearance for themselves. And the easiest explanation is often the wrong one.

We have already seen this with Joo Jaekyung. After the match, Kim Dan was no longer beside him (chapter 52), and the champion interpreted that separation through what little he could observe. Later, at the hospital, he heard that Kim Dan had quit. (chapter 53) But quitting the job did not automatically mean leaving altogether. In his mind, Kim Dan had stepped out of the professional role, not necessarily out of his personal orbit. The evidence before him therefore remained partial: distance, silence, and formal resignation, but no clear answer about the bond between them. Hence he imagined that the main lead was still living in the penthouse. (chapter 53) Yet what he “knew” was never the full truth. It was a narrative assembled from scattered pieces while the emotional reality remained elsewhere.

There is another reason to take this seriously. Earlier in the story, Kim Dan was already being watched. (chapter 46) Secret photographs were taken of him without his knowledge. According to me, Baek Junmin was the one behind the camera. The hamster’s movements were monitored. His connection to Joo Jaekyung was observed from afar. That matters because it suggests the schemers did not suddenly become interested in him now. They had already understood that the physical therapist was not a minor side figure, but someone emotionally tied to the champion. If one wanted to wound Joo Jaekyung indirectly, Kim Dan had long been the obvious path.

At the same time, those operating from the shadows would have every reason to conceal their own involvement. (chapter 93) If Baek Junmin and Choi Gilseok are orchestrating events, they cannot appear to be doing so. A clean scheme often works best when responsibility seems to originate elsewhere. The most effective leak is not the one traced to its author, but the one attributed to an innocent intermediary.

This is where Park Namwook becomes central. Whether knowingly or not, he may be the most useful source of mistaken information in the entire system. He lives close enough to the champion’s routines to notice changes, yet not close enough to grasp their private meaning. He sees absence (chapter 66), altered schedules, replaced meals, and silence. From those fragments, a conclusion becomes tempting: Kim Dan is gone. Joo Jaekyung is alone again. And finally, don’t forget how Doc Dan was introduced to the champion for the first time (chapter 1): he had been hired by Park Namwook, for the previous physical therapist had suddenly quit. (chapter 1)

If that assumption took hold, it could open the perfect pretext. The former director would not need to arrive as an intruder, but as a practical solution. (chapter 1) A replacement. A therapist. Someone sent because the champion supposedly lacks proper care before an important fight, and, unlike others, is not asking too much money. (chapter 54) Observe how the manager reacted, when Joo Jaekyung selected the one with a lot of credentials. Park Namwook jolted. The language of professionalism becomes cover for personal sabotage. Entry is granted not through force, but through usefulness.

And this possibility gains weight when we remember the beginning of the story. Kim Dan first entered Joo Jaekyung’s orbit through need, employment, and convenience. (chapter 2) Professional necessity became the doorway through which a far more intimate bond later emerged. If so, the present scheme may mirror that origin in corrupted form. What once began through work and gradually became attachment is now imitated as strategy. A “helper” is sent not to heal, but to divide.

Even Park Namwook’s earlier words cast a shadow here. He claimed they had brought Joo Jaekyung the best in the industry (chapter 5), yet Kim Dan’s own life tells another story: job loss (chapter 1), exclusion, desperation, and a system willing to discard him while rewarding others. The language of merit has never been neutral in Jinx. It often hides power, convenience, and who gets chosen or erased.

There is also a darker irony beneath the practical excuse. Sending the former director under the pretense of treatment would place bodily care (chapter 97) beside an old superstition already tied to the story: sex before a match, the so-called jinx. In that framework, the intruder becomes more than a substitute therapist. He becomes the bridge through which blame can later travel. Professional contact, private scandal, and preexisting fear could all be rearranged into one accusation.

Such a scene would not only endanger Kim Dan. It would immediately raise another chain of suspicions: who knew where they lived, who allowed access, who understood the timing, and who knew enough about the champion’s private beliefs to exploit them. Anyone linked to that chain could appear implicated, whether guilty or not. Once again, appearances risk becoming accepted as truth before the latter has even had the chance to appear.

At the same time, Kim Dan’s role itself could be distorted. The physical therapist who offers care may be recast as something else entirely — a source of temptation, scandal, or transactional intimacy. In that sense, the scheme would not merely attack people. It would attack identities.

That is why the true question is not simply how the man entered the building. He may have entered much earlier — the moment appearances replaced truth, assumptions replaced knowledge, and a system once again mistook Kim Dan’s invisibility for his absence.

Queen Han Dan Learns to Speak

Before going further, I should pause for a moment and explain the title. Why Han Dan? Why a queen? Why borrow concepts that, until recently, were unfamiliar to me as well? I only began thinking in these terms after watching this video that introduced two emotional ideas often associated with Korean drama narratives: Jeong and Han.

It is almost ironic that Korean dramas led me toward manhwas — and then helped me understand them differently.

Once I encountered those notions, the recent evolution of Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung began to appear in a new light.

Jeong can be described as a deep bond formed slowly through shared everyday life. It grows through meals, routines, repeated gestures, quiet care, silent loyalty, and the feeling that these are my people. It is not limited to romance. Jeong often appears in the background, through presence more than declaration, through consistency more than spectacle. It is affection sedimented over time.

Han, by contrast, is compressed sorrow mixed with resentment that never fully disappears. It is the emotional weight left by abandonment, humiliation, injustice, debt, grief, or wounds that remain unresolved. Han is pain carried forward in time. It may remain silent for years, then suddenly speak through anger, distance, bitterness, or refusal.

In the earlier chapters, Kim Dan seemed to embody Jeong more clearly. (chapter 56) He stayed beside his grandmother. He worked despite exhaustion. He treated Joo Jaekyung despite fear and humiliation. He cooked (chapter 22), cleaned, worried, forgave, and endured. Much of what he gave happened almost invisibly. And that is precisely why Jeong is so often underestimated. It does not announce itself dramatically. It appears in support that is constant yet barely noticed until it is missing. Kim Dan’s passivity and silence were therefore not emptiness, but one form of devotion. I admit this was not immediately obvious to me. At times, Kim Dan’s attitude even frustrated me, because I was shaped by a different cultural environment — one in which care is often expressed more directly, emotions are verbalized more openly, and disagreement is more readily shown. Imagine that he did not talk to his roommate for 8 days! (chapter 97) In his mind, he was being considerate. He was giving him space, (chapter 97) supporting him quietly. In such a framework, silence can easily be interpreted as weakness, passivity, or a lack of personality. Precisely for that reason, the concept of Jeong became so illuminating. It allowed me to recognize that affection does not always announce itself through dramatic words or visible intensity. Sometimes it is carried through constancy, restraint, everyday gestures, and the quiet decision to remain.

Joo Jaekyung, on the other hand, was marked by Han. (chapter 72) He carried paternal violence (chapter 72), maternal abandonment, poverty, humiliation, insomnia, and the pressure of surviving through strength alone. His anger, possessiveness, and emotional volatility (chapter 91) were the visible forms of pain that had never healed. Even his need to control others often looked less (chapter 45) like confidence than fear translated into aggression.

Yet the story has changed. Kim Dan was the first to express animosity openly in season 2. He criticized Joo Jaekyung. He pushed him away. He refused his offers. He told him plainly that this was how he had always been treated. (chapter 64) Silent suffering became spoken judgment. Han entered his voice.

His collapse and departure only deepened that shift. He no longer swallows everything in silence. He no longer acts as a servant of Park Namwook, he keeps distance from him. (chapter 95) He no longer feels endlessly obliged. And when he sees the former director, his second reaction is not meekness but disgust. (chapter 91) That matters. Resentment is no longer buried beneath obedience. It has become part of his emotional language. But this change is not limited to anger alone. It also deepens Kim Dan’s ability to reflect. Earlier, he often positioned himself only as the one who had to endure, obey, or silently adapt. (chapter 46) Now he begins to examine situations from more than one side. He can recognize not only how he was hurt (chapter 97), but how his own actions may have wounded others as well. When he remembers packing in haste and preparing to leave, he no longer sees himself simply as justified and Joo Jaekyung as wrong. He understands that sudden departure, silence, and emotional withdrawal could wound the other person too.

That shift matters because it opens the door to reinterpretation. Once experience is no longer divided into victim and offender, Kim Dan can finally perceive gestures he once dismissed. (chapter 97) A command to eat more, once read as control (chapter 79), can be understood as concern. (chapter 97) Practical attention can reveal tenderness. What had seemed oppressive begins to show another meaning. This delayed recognition matters because Jeong is not always perceived in the moment it is given. For Joo Jaekyung, its value becomes visible through distance, uncertainty, and the fear of loss. For Kim Dan, recognition emerges differently: through gratitude, self-reflection, and the gradual realization that gestures once dismissed or misunderstood had been forms of care all along.

It also explains why Kim Dan rarely expects care for himself. For so long, he embodied the side of Jeong that gives, supports, and remains present for others. (chapter 96) He knew how to look after people, but not how to imagine being looked after in return. Receiving affection is often harder than offering it.

The same transformation can be seen in Joo Jaekyung. As Han encounters Jeong, strength begins to change its meaning. He starts to notice another world beyond force, pride, and survival: a world of mutual attention , small gestures (chapter 80), and emotional responsibility. (chapter 65) In different ways, both men are learning that relationships are not built through victory over the other, but through a new way of seeing one another.

Meanwhile, Joo Jaekyung has begun to move toward Jeong. One key moment came when he blamed Baek Junmin (chapter 54) rather than Kim Dan. He distinguished the real source of harm instead of attacking the nearest vulnerable person. Since then, he has worried about Kim Dan’s meals, noticed his body, bought flowers and cake, remembered small preferences, and even more than ever wants him to stay after the match. Care has begun to replace reflexive aggression.

This is where the title becomes meaningful. Han Dan is not mockery. It names Kim Dan’s transformation into someone who can finally carry and express Han instead of burying it beneath everyone else’s needs. It may also mean, for the first time, that his resentment will be directed outward — not against himself, nor only against Joo Jaekyung, but toward those who truly abused their power, such as the hospital director. The playful word queen acknowledges another change: he is no longer standing at the edge of the drama like a pawn moved by stronger hands. He has become central to the game itself.

In chess, the queen is the most versatile and often the most decisive piece. She is also the piece players fight hardest to protect. That symbolism matters here. Kim Dan may still appear vulnerable to those who underestimate him, but he now occupies the emotional center of the story. To remove him is no longer to remove a side character. It is to destabilize the entire board.

And there is one more reason the title matters now. If the current chapter turns on the question of whether he will stay or leave, then Kim Dan is no longer merely choosing for himself. His movement now affects the structure around him. That is what queens do in stories and in games alike: they transform space through the position they occupy.

There is also a more playful yet surprisingly revealing possibility hidden in the scene. Kim Dan does not return empty-handed (chapter 97), but carries a birthday cake covered in cream — an object already charged with recognition, celebration, affection, and the wish to create a shared moment. Just as importantly, playfulness is no longer absent from Kim Dan’s inner world. The man who once moved through life almost exclusively through duty, anxiety, and endurance is now capable of imagining teasing intimacy, shared fun, and lightness with Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 97) That shift matters enormously. It means joy has entered a consciousness long governed by burden.

In the exaggerated emotional grammar of many Korean dramas, conflict is often expressed through symbolic gestures such as the famous kimchi slap, a drink thrown in someone’s face or poured on someone’s head (chapter 37), or another act of public humiliation in which ordinary objects suddenly become dramatic instruments. Read through that lens, the cake in Kim Dan’s hands contains its own ironic potential: it could become not merely dessert, but a comic weapon of refusal, an insult that answers intrusion with ridicule.

Such a gesture would be funny on the surface, yet deeply meaningful underneath. The current arc is framed by seriousness, gravity, contracts, injuries, and psychological pressure before an important match; a messy burst of cream would instantly shatter that oppressive atmosphere and expose how fragile the staged tension really is. It would also reverse Kim Dan’s usual position in the story. For so long, he has been the one acted upon, blamed, cornered, or used by stronger figures. If he were the one creating the scene, even for a moment, he would step out of passivity and become the active force. More than that, the cake suggests a new relational role. (chapter 97) To bring someone a birthday cake is to acknowledge their existence, mark their growth, and care for them. In that sense, Kim Dan is quietly establishing himself as a hyung (chapter 97) — not the domineering version represented by Baek Junmin (chapter 96), who claimed authority through superiority, manipulation, and the posture of the one who “knows better,” but a different kind of hyung whose authority comes through tenderness, emotional understanding (chapter 95), and the ability to create warmth. If the self-proclaimed men of power arrive with schemes (chapter 93), threats, and humiliation, Kim Dan arrives with celebration, and perhaps with fun as well, a different kind of enjoyment and laughter than the Joker’s. (chapter 87) With this panel it is clear that Baek Junmin will never have the last laugh. Anyway, the impact of such a reversal would not be limited to the intruder alone. Instead of answering tension with more anger, Joo Jaekyung himself could be drawn into laughter. That possibility is relevant, because laughter would do what violence cannot: it would break the script from within. Remember how powerless he felt after the exposure and humiliation. (chapter 96) No one was there to cheer him up, they all stood silently and passively. (chapter 9) And if that very object of care were turned against the intruder, the symbolism would become sharper still: false authority would be confronted by a truer one, and the entire machinery of intimidation would collapse into absurdity. What appears playful therefore leads back to the deeper logic of the title itself, because every new gesture Kim Dan makes now carries structural weight within the story. And there is one more reason the title matters now. If the current chapter turns on the question of whether he will stay or leave, then Kim Dan is no longer merely choosing for himself. His movement now affects the structure around him. That is what queens do in stories and in games alike: they transform space through the position they occupy.

The Joker’s M.O.

If the hallway is the stage and the former director the mask, then Baek Junmin’s true weapon is not brute force, but construction. He does not merely strike; he arranges circumstances in which others mistrust one another and accept a false story as truth. The earlier image of him studying the calendar already suggested a man interested less in impulse than in timing, pressure, and sequence. (chapter 93) A manufactured narrative is far more dangerous than a visible enemy because it recruits its targets into its own logic, compelling them to generate the suspicion, conflict, and emotional damage themselves. The Joker does not need to control every move if he can persuade others to perform the script for him. (chapter 96)

We have seen this layered pattern before. Prior to their first match, the public meeting between Kim Dan and Choi Gilseok functioned as a visible distraction (chapter 48), as they met in front of the building where the gym Team Black is. Besides, the encounter was easily photographed and readily interpreted as betrayal. (chapter 48) Yet behind that surface stood the hidden move: the altered spray (chapter 49), seemingly tied to revenge, (chapter 48), but more likely prepared in advance to cause damage under pressure. In that reading, the point was never only retaliation. The point was that Kim Dan could later be made to carry the blame for everything surrounding the chaos. One event captured attention, another produced harm, and the true consequence emerged only afterward. What appeared spontaneous was structurally engineered. (chapter 51) But the irony is that neither the champion nor his manager called the police for an investigation right away.

The same architecture now returns. (chapter 96) The interview serves as the public strike — humiliation and provocation aimed at a wider audience. It drags old wounds into the open and fixes attention on spectacle. The ruined poster becomes the next layer: visible violation, immediate outrage, the sense that hostility has entered Joo Jaekyung’s own space. The atmosphere changes before any direct confrontation even begins.

Only after those outer layers comes the darker move: (chapter 97) the hallway encounter. Hidden from public view, detached from cameras, and staged in shadow, it targets something more valuable than image — trust, emotional balance, and the fragile question of whether Kim Dan will stay or leave. Public scandal can be repaired. A shaken bond is harder to restore.

Seen this way, the incidents are not random noise but coordinated pressure applied on different levels. First reputation. Then emotion. Then relationship. First the crowd. Then the self. Then the private space between two people. That is why the Joker is dangerous. He does not merely create problems. He sequences them. He understands that after enough pressure, people begin linking separate blows into one story, even when the links are false. And once that happens, blame can be redirected toward the nearest vulnerable person.

And that is where Kim Dan becomes central. The most efficient scapegoat is rarely the strongest rival. (chapter 96) It is the figure others still believe to be vulnerable: someone economically fragile (chapter 48), emotionally tied to the target, marked by past shame and abandonment wounds (he is also an “orphan”), and assumed to carry burdens in silence. From the outside, Kim Dan may still appear to fit that role. The schemers likely imagine a man who is isolated, unsupported, and easy to overwhelm — someone with no real backing, no language of resistance, and no choice but to absorb whatever is placed on him.

That assumption, however, may already be outdated. Earlier in the story, guilt and pressure might have worked more easily. Kim Dan often endured, withdrew, or blamed himself before questioning the motives of others. But he is no longer standing in the same place. He has begun to judge situations differently. He is now ready to talk (chapter 97) and become more proactive, hence he bought a cake, a book and has planned to cook for the champion. This means that he is now capable to recognize manipulation, and to speak where he once remained silent. The very person chosen as the easiest target may no longer be available in the form they remember.

Against the old Kim Dan, an accusation only needed to feel believable long enough to wound. Against the present Kim Dan, it may need to survive scrutiny, contradiction, and reply. And that response may be more dangerous than the accusation itself. For many of the burdens that could be placed on Kim Dan lead back to the former director’s own actions. If Kim Dan lost work (chapter 1), struggled to be hired elsewhere, fell into desperation, or became vulnerable to exploitation, (chapter 3) those conditions did not emerge from nowhere. They followed the abuse and professional ruin inflicted earlier. The blacklisting was and is the reason why he is not looking for a job in Seoul (chapter 56) In that sense, an attempt to blame Kim Dan for everything risks exposing the original cause instead. The man chosen as scapegoat may now be able to point back at the hand that first pushed him toward the edge. The setting makes that possibility even sharper. The hallway is dark, where faces are obscured and appearances become uncertain. But in darkness, a voice can be heard clearly. (chapter 97)

That is why the exact charge (the topic for the guilt trip) can remain flexible. Financial losses, damaged sponsors (chapter 54), injuries (chapter 95), overtraining, disqualification (chapter 96) leading to the loss of the championship belt — any of these can be reframed as the price of keeping Kim Dan close. Incidents tied to the hospital or health center can be folded into the same narrative. The content changes according to circumstance, but the structure remains the same: different burdens, gathered under one convenient name. He is guilty to have ruined the champion’s life.

Yet the hallway introduces another layer as well: the method of the former director himself. Long before this chapter, his preferred weapon was already visible. He repeatedly transformed abuse into accusation and his own misconduct into Kim Dan’s supposed guilt. (chapter 6) (chapter 90) (chapter 90) The wording changes, but the structure remains constant: responsibility is reversed until the victim feels like the cause.

If such rhetoric returns now, it would not merely repeat the past. (chapter 91) It would reactivate Kim Dan’s deepest vulnerability — the hidden belief that he damages the people around him. That is why separation matters so much. If Kim Dan can be pushed away from Joo Jaekyung first, he becomes easier to confront, easier to shame, easier to burden with every old and new misfortune. At the same time, the former director of the hospital can be blamed, if his presence was detected there. Alone, he can be told that he caused the champion’s losses, scandals, exhaustion, or decline. Beside Joo Jaekyung, those accusations meet resistance. Away from him, they may sink inward.

The true violence of the Joker is therefore narrative violence. He does not invent reality; he edits it. Misunderstandings become destiny. Coincidences become proof. Pain becomes accusation.

This is how a person is turned into a jinx. Not through magic, fate, or any real curse, but through repetition. Enough setbacks are placed beside his name, enough unrelated wounds are retold as his doing, enough guilt is made to feel natural. Eventually, others stop seeing separate causes and begin seeing only him. If pushed far enough, Kim Dan is no longer seen as healer, partner, or future companion. He becomes the explanation for misfortune itself. He becomes the jinx. To transform the emotional center of the story into a curse is to attack the structure forming around him — to recast the Queen as poison. The royal image carries another implication as well. (chapter 97) A queen is not only a powerful piece on the board; she also evokes a form of recognized union. In that sense, turning Kim Dan into a jinx would do more than isolate him personally. It would poison the very idea of partnership beside Joo Jaekyung. The chosen companion, the one meant to remain, is recast as a threat. What should signify attachment, continuity, and perhaps even a future resembling marriage is rewritten as danger. The attack therefore falls not only on a person, but on the bond’s legitimacy itself. (chapter 97)

Yet this retelling carries a second insult that is easier to miss. (chapter 95) It reduces Kim Dan to a curse while also erasing Joo Jaekyung’s agency. The champion is treated not as a man shaped by discipline, endurance, and strength, but as someone passively ruled by outside influence. His achievements, sacrifices, and proven resilience disappear behind the convenience of blame. The scapegoat story diminishes them both.

Ultimately, this method targets their oldest wounds. For Joo Jaekyung, the pressure point is abandonment: the fear that whatever he values will be taken or corrupted. For Kim Dan, it is the belief that he burdens the people he love. Hence he got abandoned. One voice in a dark hallway could therefore reopen two childhood wounds at the same time. If both can be pushed back into those inner prisons, they may damage the bond themselves without the schemer needing to break it directly.

That is why the hallway matters. (chapter 97) It is the newest trigger in a longer chain, designed to make pain interpret everything that follows. Yet the Joker’s power depends entirely on whether the targets accept their assigned roles. The moment Kim Dan rejects inherited guilt, or Joo Jaekyung questions the frame imposed on him, the script begins to fail.

And here the argument returns to the beginning. The dark hallway was never only a threat. It was also a question. Not simply who entered, but who will define what that entrance means.

The first incident is only the surface. What waits beyond it is still open. The two men may stay together (chapter 97), but even that would not be the end of the story. To stay can mean many things: to choose each other openly, to confront the systems around them, to speak truths long avoided, or to leave old roles behind while standing side by side. The real next move may not belong to the Joker at all. But if the script depends on their silence, what happens when the scapegoat finally finds his voice? And if the “Jinx” is proven to be a lie, what remains of the man who built his life around that fear?

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Giant Of Paper 🗞️ and Laughter 🫢- part 2

After publishing the last essay, I had another realization. The problem is that with episode 97 being released today, I do not have the time—or the energy—to create a new illustration. And yet, the idea that emerged feels inseparable from my analysis of chapter 96 and its conclusion. It is not a new direction, but a continuation. A prolongation of The Giant of Paper and Laughter.

In the final part, I wrote:

At first glance, this moment appears to concern Kim Dan alone. (chapter 96) His hesitation, his position, his choice. But this would be too limited. Because episode 96 does not present a single decision. It constructs a field of decisions.

And within this field, Kim Dan is not the only one who must choose. His position becomes visible precisely because another figure, at the same moment, reveals the consequences of having chosen differently.

This is where Baek Junmin re-enters the analysis. His interview is not simply an attack, nor merely a rewriting of the past. It is the manifestation of a trajectory—a chain of alignments that began long before the present and that now reaches its visible form. What he says about Joo Jaekyung—about wrong choices (chapter 96), wrong people, wrong environments—does not only describe the other. It reflects himself. And with this reflection comes something else. Because choices do not only structure positions—they produce affects. What cannot be corrected becomes regret. What cannot be acknowledged becomes resentment. In this sense, the question that concludes the previous essay—what does it mean to choose?—cannot be answered by looking at Kim Dan alone.

It must be read against its opposite. Not the right decision in formation, but the wrong decision repeated.

Repetition without revision

The interview does not merely recount the past; it anchors itself in the present through the choices that continue to define Baek Junmin’s reality. (chapter 96) What begins as a critique of Joo Jaekyung (chapter 96) gradually reveals itself as a confession: a pattern of alignment from which the speaker cannot escape.

He insists—almost obsessively—that Jaekyung chose the wrong path: the wrong gym, the wrong environment, the wrong guidance (Chapter 96). Yet, the moment we shift our gaze from his words to his actions, a different coherence emerges. Baek Junmin is not correcting the champion’s mistakes; he is reproducing them. But this reproduction is not limited to structure. It extends into the relation he claims to describe. What he presents as guidance reveals itself as something else entirely. (chapter 96) He does not protect the past; he exposes it. He does not preserve proximity; he weaponizes it. The one who speaks as a former “hyung,” as someone who once stood close, reveals himself through the very act of speaking (chapter 96): not as a guide, but as the wrong companion.

Because to recount the past in this way is not neutral. It is to betray it. The intimacy he invokes becomes the condition of its distortion. What should remain within the bounds of shared experience is extracted, simplified, and made public. In doing so, he does not simply diminish Joo Jaekyung—he violates the relation that once connected them.

And yet, within this violation, another layer becomes visible. The betrayal he enacts is not only directed outward; it is already inscribed in the narrative he constructs. (chapter 96) In recounting their shared past, he attributes to Joo Jaekyung a form of abandonment without ever naming it as such. The figure that emerges is that of someone who turned away, who stopped looking back, who severed a bond that had once been taken for granted. This is never stated directly. It is implied, dispersed across fragments, but it remains perceptible. What appears as accusation begins to resemble projection—not as a declared grievance, but as something his discourse cannot fully conceal.

At the same time, he introduces a second distortion, more subtle but equally decisive. Success is no longer presented as the result of choice, effort, or trajectory, but reduced to chance. What had been built becomes “luck.” (chapter 96) In this shift, agency is erased. The champion’s path is no longer something he forged, but something that merely happened to him. This reduction is not incidental. It allows Baek Junmin to neutralize what he cannot replicate. If success is luck, then failure requires no explanation. If choice is denied, then responsibility can be displaced.

The authority he summons (chapter 93) to legitimize this narrative—a doctor presented as a voice of institutional truth—is fundamentally fractured. This is no neutral expert, but a fallen figure stripped of professional standing. The choice is not incidental; it reveals a structural flaw. Junmin does not distinguish between genuine authority and the mere veneer of it. And observe how he came to this choice: (chapter 93) He heard Heo Manwook call him by his former title and took it at face-value. For him, legitimacy is secondary to utility; if a figure serves his narrative, their instability is disregarded. In attempting to conceal his manipulation, he exposes it: his world is built upon figures who reside in the same gray zone he claims to have transcended.

As long as these figures remain unstable, (chapter 93) responsibility can be displaced. But the moment they act, that displacement collapses, and the weight of the compromised authority returns to the one who selected it. He speaks of “wrong choices” while trapped in a cycle of making them.

This repetition is not a new phenomenon; its roots reach back to the “hyung” he invokes. (chapter 96) This figure is not a neutral reference of proximity, but the terminal point at which Junmin’s trajectory was fixed. And Choi Gilseok resembles the hyung from his “youth”. He made a fortune on the tie, something that left the champion in paper “traumatized”. Unlike Joo Jaekyung—whose development remained anchored within the disciplined, visible structures of professional sport despite his volatility—Baek Junmin was initiated into a different system entirely. The mentor he followed did not lead him toward discipline, but into the underground (chapter 73); not toward a gym aimed at progression, but into a space governed by risk and illegality.

This distinction is decisive. Baek Junmin was not forged as an athlete, but as a combatant within a system designed for exploitation rather than recognition. Hence he became a thug. His skills were never oriented toward a title or a visible legacy; they were mobilized within a circuit that remains deliberately obscured. (chapter 74) To conclude, he did not fall outside the system; he was never inside it to begin with.

This explains why his status as “champion” remains fundamentally unstable. (chapter 96) He can occupy the position, but he cannot embody it. The void—the lack of a public image, the absence of the KOFC belt, the failure of his stage name to resonate—finds its explanation here. What he has acquired institutionally, he does not possess symbolically.

This void fuels the intensity of his rhetoric. Joo Jaekyung represents the one element Junmin cannot integrate: a trajectory that, despite its fractures, leads toward visibility and continuity. Jaekyung’s past cannot be reduced to weakness because it contains a structure that allowed for transformation. Faced with this, Junmin’s only strategy is inversion. Strength is recoded as arrogance (chapter 96); discipline as obsession; continuity as a series of humiliations.

He must rewrite the past because he cannot match it. Yet, this strategy produces the opposite of its intended effect. The more Junmin insists on a hierarchy in which he “knew better and was better” (chapter 96) the more he reveals his complete dependence on that very structure. Despite his title, Junmin remains the ‘lost puppy’ (chapter 96) of the narrative—a man who never outgrew the need for a ‘hyung’ to validate his existence. He seeks a vertical order not to lead, but to belong; he is a stray barking at the gates of a professional world that will never truly claim him. His identity requires a vertical order; without an opponent to place beneath him, nothing of Junmin remains.

Ultimately, the interview becomes unintentionally revelatory. It does not expose the champion; it exposes the speaker. The man who claims to be the superior guide reveals the limits of that claim through his own path. He embodies the “wrong choice”—not as a moral failing, but as a structural condition.

He did not choose his path; it was determined the moment he followed a mentor into exploitation. In the present, he does not deviate from that origin; he reproduces it, surrounding himself with figures that mirror his own instability. This is why his victory remains hollow. He has won the position, but not the meaning. He speaks, but cannot stabilize his narrative. He appears, but is never truly seen. In seeking to prove that Joo Jaekyung chose wrongly, he proves only that he is still choosing wrong himself.

The False Brotherhood and Its Collapse

The architecture of the past does not remain confined to memory; it persists in the present, manifesting in forms that are less visible and more socially acceptable, yet no less decisive.

On one side stands the specter of the underground “hyung,” (chapter 74) the figure who initiated Baek Junmin into a system of exploitation masked as guidance. On the other, Baek Junmin himself attempts to reproduce this exact position. (chapter 96) He presents himself as the one who “had it better ” and was better —the guide who observed, managed, and ultimately surpassed. What emerges is not an isolated trajectory, but a cycle: a form of brotherhood that offers protection while fundamentally structuring dependence, hierarchy, and control.

Joo Jaekyung has already detached himself from this cycle. What remains unresolved, however, is not his position, but Kim Dan’s perception.

The Institutional Guise of Care

In the present, the structure of the “hyung” reappears in a different guise: Park Namwook. (chapter 5) Unlike the underground mentor, his authority is institutional and his position legitimate. For Kim Dan, this distinction is decisive. (chapter 7) He perceives in the manager a form of empathy (chapter 36), a concern for the athlete’s well-being—a figure capable of managing what he himself cannot. Kim Dan’s trust does not emerge in a vacuum; it is built through a series of interactions that appear, at first glance, to confirm this perception (chapter 7). Park Namwook speaks the language of care, addresses him with familiarity, and repeatedly positions himself as someone who values both the fighter and the medical staff. If there was tension between them, he would side with him and not Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 37) Even when he intervenes critically (chapter 50) —questioning his decisions or demanding explanations—these moments are framed, in Kim Dan’s perception, as being in the champion’s best interest rather than as acts of control.

This interpretation is reinforced by Kim Dan’s own professional framework. As a physical therapist, he is accustomed to working within systems of authority where trust in doctors, managers, and institutional structures is not only expected but necessary. (chapter 27) He assumes coherence where there is only alignment of interests. What appears as consistency in Park Namwook’s behavior is therefore not examined as strategy, but accepted as sincerity.

As a result, isolated gestures—compliments (chapter 43), reassurances, even moments of apparent protection and respect (chapter 53) —acquire disproportionate weight. They become evidence of character rather than elements of a broader pattern. The contradiction between care and control does not disappear; it is simply reinterpreted. And it is precisely this reinterpretation that allows Kim Dan to maintain his belief in the manager’s integrity.

This belief produces a critical displacement. Trust becomes delegation; responsibility is transferred. When Joo Jaekyung is injured, Kim Dan does not follow. (chapter 95) He remains outside, convinced that the manager will provide what is needed—not only physically, but emotionally. The transparent door does not function as a barrier, but as an illusion of access. He sees, but he does not intervene. But more importantly, he is turning his back to the door, a sign of trust in the coach and manager.

What he fails to perceive is that this care is conditional. (chapter 36) It is directed toward the fighter, not the man. The gestures that appear protective reveal themselves, upon closer inspection, as instrumental. They aim at performance, recovery, and return—not at recognition. The same figure who speaks of concern is also the one who disciplines, who corrects, and who reduces the athlete to a function when he deviates. The language of care coexists with the mechanics of control.

Within this logic, another mechanism becomes perceptible: the gradual transformation of causality into coincidence. When tensions accumulate—injury, disqualification (chapter 95), conflict—these events are not articulated as consequences of decisions or structures, but as misfortune. What appears is a discourse of “bad luck,” (chapter 1) in which responsibility dissolves into circumstance.

Such a framing is not neutral. By presenting the sequence of incidents as accidental, it allows the figure who manages them to remain untouched. At the same time, it opens the possibility of displacement. If events are no longer the result of identifiable actions, they can be attached to a presence—to the one who arrived before their occurrence.

In this configuration, Kim Dan becomes vulnerable to a reinterpretation of his own role. His arrival can be recoded not as support, but as disruption; not as care, but as a source of imbalance. What he perceived as trust risks being inverted into suspicion.

This contradiction becomes fully visible in the moment where Park Namwook himself attempts to explain the incident. Faced with material damage, his first reflex is to neutralize causality: the event is described as if it had occurred on its own, as if timing, rather than action, were responsible. (chapter 96) The breakdown “chooses” its moment; no agent is named.

And yet, this neutralization cannot be sustained. The very next step—filing a police report—reintroduces what the discourse had attempted to erase: the necessity of responsibility. A report presupposes an act, an author, and a sequence that can be traced. In this brief oscillation, the limits of the managerial narrative become visible. What could previously be contained within the language of coincidence now demands articulation in terms of cause. The system that functioned through displacement is forced, however briefly, to acknowledge the existence of an origin.

It is precisely at this point that avoidance becomes impossible, though he is trying to hide behind the “we”, probably the institution MFC.

The Dissonance of Misrecognition

The dissonance between Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung does not emerge from absence, but from misrecognition. Kim Dan does not abandon the champion; he entrusts him to the wrong figure. In doing so, he reproduces the very structure that had once shaped Baek Junmin. Thus it is no coincidence that in the interview, Hwang Byungchul is described as a bad coach. (chapter 96) The reality is that Park Namwook is indeed a bad coach and even manager. (chapter 31) Here, if the athlete had followed this recommendation, he would have injured himself badly. What appears as protection recreates distance; what is named as guidance results in isolation.

This repetition reveals a deeper continuity. The same logic that governed the underground now reappears within the institution. What changes is not the structure, but its appearance.

This distance is further reinforced by the way Kim Dan encounters the external threat. (chapter 96) By remaining at the level of headlines, he experiences the situation as a public disturbance to be managed rather than as a personal violation to be understood. If he had watched the interview, he would have noticed the lies in the narration. So the narrative reaches him already filtered and stabilized, removed from its affective core. In this sense, his reliance on headlines mirrors his reliance on Park Namwook: both provide a form of safety that depends on distance, and both prevent direct engagement.

The Collapse of Mediation

The collapse begins when this distance can no longer be maintained. Baek Junmin’s intervention forces a shift by dissolving the boundary that had sustained Kim Dan’s position. By targeting not only Joo Jaekyung, but also the physical therapist (through the former hospital director) (chapter 93), the discourse eliminates the possibility of neutrality. What had remained external becomes immediate. Kim Dan is no longer in a position to interpret from afar; he is implicated. The Shotgun needs a doctor to discredit a physical therapist in the end. And it is clear that Park Namwook has the tendency to avoid trouble and implication. Hence he protects institutions, in particular MFC.

At this point, delegation becomes untenable. The belief that another could assume responsibility reveals its limits. What is exposed is not only the failure of the manager’s care, but the consequence of having trusted it. Under this new light, I realized why Mingwa included this incident at the hospice. (chapter 59) He had indeed made a mistake here, but the director of the hospice had defended him. He was not fired after this incident. Hence I come to the following deduction: Kim Dan is about to be confronted not simply with an external threat, but with the realization of his own misrecognition.He trusted the wrong hyung, just like Joo Jaekyung did. (chapter 95) Until now, he has no idea about the champion’s losses (chapter 54) and the consequences of his “departure” to the seaside. The incident at the health center, the slap at the hospital (chapter 52) and the champion’s drinking (chapter 54)

Conclusion: Presence as Choice

The conflict that follows is not incidental; it is necessary. It marks the moment where presence can no longer be replaced by function. In this rupture, the structure of the false brotherhood becomes fully visible. Whether in its underground form or its institutional version, it operates according to the same logic: authority without recognition, proximity without understanding, guidance without responsibility.

The “hyung” is no longer the one who commands or stands above through proximity to power. (chapter 96) It becomes something else entirely: the one who remains, who sees, and who does not turn away.

This position is not given; it is produced through conflict. The argument that emerges is therefore not a deviation from the relation—it is its condition. It forces Kim Dan to confront not only the system, but his own place within it. Only then can he occupy a position previously unavailable to him: not as a subordinate or a function, but as the one who chooses to stand beside—even when no role requires it.

Within this shift, the structure of hierarchy itself begins to invert. The one who once stood below becomes the one who sees, who understands, and who remains. If the term “hyung” is to acquire meaning beyond formality, it can no longer designate authority, but recognition. And such recognition cannot be assumed. (chapter 96) It requires something both have avoided until now: to meet each other’s gaze.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Giant Of Paper 🗞️ and Laughter 🫢- part 1

The Champion: A Giant?

Who is the giant? The answer seems self-evident—at least at first. (chapter 1) A towering figure, a champion, a name that carries weight across arenas and screens. Someone whose image is large enough to be printed, displayed, and recognized at a glance. And yet, that same image can be torn.

A poster is damaged. (chapter 96) Its surface scratched, its authority weakened. What was meant to represent strength suddenly appears fragile, almost replaceable. Around it, nothing changes immediately. The world continues, the match approaches, the voices keep speaking. (chapter 96) But something has shifted. The image no longer holds in the same way.

At nearly the same moment, another kind of intervention takes place. (chapter 96) Not physical, but verbal. A voice begins to recount a past—selectively, confidently, as if it had always been clear. (chapter 96) Details are rearranged, others omitted. What emerges is not a lie, nor entirely the truth, but something in between: a version that is easy to follow, easy to accept, and difficult to challenge. And with it, the figure at the center begins to change.

This is not a confrontation. It is a process. What appears to be under attack is a person. But what is actually being altered is something less tangible and far more unstable: the way that person is seen. An image, once fixed, becomes negotiable. A narrative, once assumed, becomes uncertain. And suddenly, the question of strength is no longer tied to the body, but to something else entirely. (chapter 96)

So we must ask again. If the giant can be reduced to paper, then perhaps the giant was never there to begin with. (chapter 96) Or perhaps it was never where Jinx-lovers were looking. Because if the Emperor is not the Giant, then the real one has yet to be named.

To approach this question, it is not enough to follow the fight itself. One must look elsewhere: at images that are destroyed as easily as they are produced, at voices that reshape the past in real time, and at the sequence of events that gradually transforms perception without ever appearing as a direct attack. Only by tracing these shifts—between what is shown, what is said, and what begins to disappear—can we begin to understand where power truly resides.

The Making of the Giant of Paper

Before it is destroyed, the image must first be made.

But this construction does not begin in the present. It has already taken place—earlier, more discreetly, and under different conditions. At that time, the narrative surrounding Baek Junmin followed a familiar pattern. (chapter 47) He was introduced as the “underdog,” the one rising unexpectedly, the figure whose ascent could be celebrated. The framing was simple, effective, and, to some extent, transparent. It invited attention, but it also raised suspicion.

There were signs. Voices questioned the legitimacy of the narrative (chapter 47) (chapter 47), suggesting that what appeared as spontaneous recognition might in fact be influenced, if not orchestrated. The idea that media coverage could be shaped (chapter 47) —financially or strategically—was not dismissed. It circulated, hesitantly, at the margins. Yet this suspicion remained limited in scope. It did not extend to the system itself. The integrity of the organization, and more specifically of the MFC, was not openly challenged. Instead, doubt was redirected toward the figure of the rising fighter. The question was not whether the structure produced the narrative, but whether Baek Junmin had benefited from it.

This distinction is crucial. By locating the potential manipulation at the level of the individual rather than the institution, the system remained intact, unquestioned, and therefore protected. What was perceived as irregularity did not lead to structural critique, but to localized suspicion. This also explicates why the main lead couldn’t find any information about Baek Junmin. (chapter 47) The system was not yet fully opaque. It could still be glimpsed—but only indirectly, through inconsistencies that were sensed rather than fully articulated.

The present situation is markedly different. As the match approaches, the same mechanisms reappear—but without resistance. The headlines no longer build an underdog (chapter 95); they reorganize an already established hierarchy. Joo Jaekyung is no longer presented as the stable center of the narrative. Instead, uncertainty surrounds him. One headline, in particular, reveals the logic at work with striking clarity:

“Joo Jaekyung’s sudden disqualification… is Baek Junmin at risk?”

At first glance, the headline appears contradictory. A disqualification, by definition, should settle a situation. It should close the case, eliminate ambiguity, and stabilize the hierarchy. And yet, here, it produces the opposite effect. This is not a simple inconsistency. It is a deliberate construction that operates on two temporal levels simultaneously.

On the one hand, the headline refers backward. By invoking a “sudden disqualification,” it reinterprets the past. What had previously been presented as a suspension — temporary (90 days), reversible, even later framed as recovery (chapter 57) — is now recoded as something definitive. (chapter 96) The shift is subtle but decisive. A suspension belongs to the logic of administration; a disqualification belongs to the logic of judgment. The suspension was grounded in medical authority. (chapter 52) It was issued by MFC doctors, as the incident took place there. It implies a temporary exclusion, a controlled interruption that does not fundamentally challenge legitimacy. The athlete remains inside—recognized, ranked, and, in principle, recoverable. Hence he was ranked as third in August. (chapter 69) A disqualification operates differently. (chapter 96) It does not merely suspend participation; it redefines status. It exceeds medical judgment and enters the domain of institutional authority. It relocates the athlete outside the system, not only temporarily but symbolically. What is questioned is no longer his presence, but his legitimacy. The issue is no longer whether he can compete, but whether he should have been recognized as a competitor at all.

This distinction is decisive. It points toward the involvement of the institutional hierarchy—figures such as the MFC CEO and those who operate alongside him. Hence his “invitation” for a match in Paris was never revealed to the public. (chapter 69) The panel from chapter 47 (chapter 47), makes this structure perceptible. The presence of executive figures, the proximity between management and select fighters, and the emphasis on “star quality” reveal a structure in which recognition is not solely determined by performance.

In this light, the shift in terminology acquires a broader significance. It does not simply reinterpret an event; it exposes the conditions under which decisions are made. The hierarchy of the organization is not neutral. It intervenes, adjusts, and, when necessary, redefines outcomes in order to preserve its own coherence.

By allowing the media to replace “suspension” with “disqualification,” the MFC does not intensify the punishment—it repositions the athlete. What had been a procedural measure becomes a moral and structural judgment. The shift authorizes a different interpretation of past events.

(chapter 95) In this sense, the change of terminology performs a protective function. If the situation remains a suspension, it can be contested. It leaves open the possibility of return, of reinstatement, and, crucially, of legal challenge. The athlete remains within the framework and can therefore claim rights—question prior decisions, contest irregularities, and potentially demand compensation.

A disqualification closes that space. By framing the exclusion as definitive and justified, it neutralizes the possibility of reclamation. It stabilizes the loss of the title by presenting it not as a consequence of circumstance, but as the logical outcome of misconduct. The narrative anticipates contestation and preempts it. It transforms a potentially disputable situation into one that appears settled.

This is where the broader context becomes relevant. The sequence of events—the unresolved tie (chapter 51), the irregularities surrounding the match, the incident with the switched spray—contains elements that could be reexamined. Joo Jaekyung’s public challenge in Paris reactivates these tensions. It signals not only resistance, but the possibility of escalation. By refusing to accept the existing narrative, he reopens questions that the system had already moved to close.

From this perspective, the headline does not simply report—it anticipates. (chapter 95) It prepares the ground for a conflict that has not yet fully emerged. By framing the situation as a disqualification and by presenting the athlete as a destabilizing figure, it redirects attention away from the structural irregularities and toward individual behavior. At the same time, it reassures those who depend on the system’s stability—sponsors, partners, and institutional actors—that the situation is under control.

The transformation of language thus serves a double function: it delegitimizes the athlete while protecting the structure. Moreover, if something were to happen again—another incident, another “sudden” event, it would not appear as an isolated occurrence, but as confirmation of an already established pattern. The result is a double bind. The past justifies suspicion, while the future is prepared to confirm it.

Within this structure, Baek Junmin occupies an equally unstable position. The question of risk does not truly endanger him; it legitimizes him indirectly. By presenting him as someone who could lose what he has gained, the headline acknowledges his status without fully affirming it. He is recognized, but conditionally. His position depends less on his own victory than on the continued framing of his opponent as problematic.

What appears, then, is not uncertainty in a general sense, but a controlled instability. The narrative does not aim to clarify the situation. It aims to maintain a tension in which one figure is constantly redefined as a potential threat, while the other is never entirely secured as a legitimate successor.

Even in apparent advantage, he is not affirmed. What is striking is that, even after his so-called victory, he continues to be referred to as the “underdog” (chapter 52), notably among the members of King of MMA. This persistence is not merely rhetorical; it reflects a deeper uncertainty regarding the legitimacy of his rise. Within the fighters’ own environment, the outcome of the match is not experienced as a clear victory. Baek Junmin himself acknowledges that he was “this close to winning,” (chapter 51) revealing that the tie has not been integrated as a legitimate conclusion. It persists instead as a wound: a result experienced not as confirmation, but as deprivation. In this sense, his current aggression does not only seek promotion; it seeks retrospective compensation.

The betting dynamics further reinforce this ambiguity. (chapter 52) While it is suggested that significant sums were placed on Baek Junmin, this perception proves misleading. The apparent support masks a more calculated position, in which the outcome itself—rather than the fighter—is the object of investment. The smile that accompanies the announcement of the tie reveals that the result was not a disruption, but a realization of expectation. (chapter 51) So he had not bet on the Shotgun’s victory.

This distinction is crucial. What appears as confidence in Baek Junmin is, in fact, confidence in the structure that produces the outcome. The fighter becomes the visible beneficiary of a system whose logic exceeds him, while the absence of a decisive victory prevents his recognition from stabilizing. He is supported, but not validated. The problem is not that he lost. The problem is that he never clearly won against Joo Jaekyung and that this unresolved result seems to have fixed him in a position of grievance.

In this light, the persistence of the “underdog” label is no longer paradoxical. It reflects the gap between institutional designation and experiential acknowledgment. This gap becomes even clearer when one recalls that Baek Junmin never earned the KOFC belt in the way Joo Jaekyung did. (chapter 75) The latter’s rise was marked by a visible title, publicly attached to his name and career trajectory. Baek Junmin, by contrast, occupies the position of champion without passing through the same symbolic sequence of recognition. All this time, he was working in the shadow, in the illegal underground fighting. What he inherits institutionally, he does not fully possess symbolically. He may occupy the position of champion, but the conditions of his ascent prevent that position from being fully recognized as legitimate. The label that once signified ascent is never replaced by one that would confirm his dominance. At the same time, his stage name The Shotgun (chapter 49) fails to establish itself. Neither his peers nor the media adopt it. Instead, he is consistently referred to by his real name: Baek Junmin. (chapter 95) This absence is not insignificant. In the world of competitive sports, a title or nickname is not merely decorative; it is a marker of recognition, a sign that an identity has been collectively validated. To name a fighter is to fix his position within the symbolic order of the sport. By refusing—or failing—to adopt his stage name, the media and his environment deny him that stabilization.

This absence of recognition is not limited to language; it extends to the level of the image. A champion, within the logic of modern sports media, is not only defined by a title but by the visual confirmation of that title. (chapter 52) Victory must be seen, fixed, and circulated in order to become real. In this respect, Baek Junmin’s position reveals a fundamental volability. His so-called victory does not produce a defining image. The match that secured his title was neither clearly decisive nor widely broadcast, leaving no shared visual reference through which his dominance could be established.

As a result, the media does not construct him as a figure. It names him, but does not show him. (chapter 95) It becomes more visible, if you contrast this show with the one about the celebrity in episode 52: (chapter 54) Instead, it continues to rely on the image of Joo Jaekyung. Even in defeat, the latter remains visually central: his body, his injuries, his presence provide the material through which the narrative is articulated. (chapter 95) The fallen champion supplies the image that the reigning one lacks. This imbalance has significant consequences.

Without a stable visual identity, Baek Junmin’s title remains abstract, insufficiently anchored in public perception. His victory does not become an event that can be collectively remembered, but a result that must be asserted repeatedly. In this sense, he occupies the position of champion without acquiring the symbolic legitimacy that would normally accompany it. He wins the position—but not the identity. He does not fight to win—he fights to be seen. And now, you comprehend why he did the interview on the day, the champion’s image got ruined. (chapter 96) The MFC may have declared him champion, yet this recognition remains institutional; it does not translate into collective acknowledgment among the masses. Hence he is never seen signing autographs. (chapter 93) He always appears sitting in the office separated from the other members. Hence, visibility must be manufactured for him to be recognized as a champion.

In doing so, it also redefines the role of Joo Jaekyung. Disqualified, he should disappear. Instead, he persists as a destabilizing presence—no longer a contender, but still a threat. His exclusion does not neutralize him; it transforms him into a figure whose very absence continues to structure the narrative. and the headlines with the sudden disqualification becomes a focal point. (chapter 96) Doubt replaces confidence. The questions posed are no longer about the rise of one fighter, but about the possible fall of another.

What is striking is not the content itself, but the absence of reaction. Where earlier moments revealed suspicion, the current ones are met with silence. Neither the fighters nor the surrounding figures openly challenge the narrative. (chapter 96) The possibility of manipulation, once acknowledged, is no longer articulated. It is as if the system no longer needs to hide. Its operations have become sufficiently integrated to function without being named.

It is within this context that the poster must be understood. (chapter 96) Its destruction does not initiate the process—it materializes it. What had been unfolding across media and digital spaces now appears in physical form. The gesture, however minimal, suggests a continuity between what is said and what is done. The narrative does not remain abstract; it produces effects.

And yet, this effect raises a deeper question about agency. At first glance, the figure associated with this transformation seems clear. Baek Junmin dominates the narrative space. His name circulates, his rise is emphasized, his position reinforced. It would be tempting, therefore, to identify him as the Giant—the one who displaces, replaces, and ultimately stands at the center of this reconfiguration.

But this identification does not hold. Because Baek Junmin does not control the narrative; he moves within it. He benefits from it, embodies it, and perhaps even believes in it—but he does not produce it. The coherence of the operation exceeds him. It extends across media outlets, digital platforms, and institutional structures that coordinate visibility, attention, and interpretation.

What emerges, then, is a different configuration of power. The Giant is not the figure that appears, but the structure that allows it to appear in a certain way. It is not located in the individual, but in the network that sustains and amplifies him. (chapter 95) Behind the visible face lies a set of interests that do not present themselves directly—economic, strategic, and, at times, illicit. The circulation of narratives is not neutral; it is tied to flows of capital, influence, and control that operate beyond the surface of the story.

In this sense, Baek Junmin is not the Giant, but its surface. (chapter 96) This becomes visible when one considers the asymmetry of representation between the two fighters. At Team Black, Joo Jaekyung’s presence is materially affirmed through the large poster displayed at the entrance. His image is fixed, visible, and collectively recognized. It establishes him not only as a champion, but as a figure whose status is publicly validated. (chapter 1) No such affirmation exists at the rival gym, King of MMA. That’s why Baek Junmin remains a champion on paper—validated by the system, but not embodied within it.

At the same time, this absence points beyond the individual. The figure that appears in the foreground conceals a more complex network of influence. Behind Baek Junmin stands not only the local structure of the gym (chapter 96), but also broader institutional connections (chapter 96), including corporate interests that extend beyond the immediate context of the sport. (chapter 48)

The image, then, is not missing by accident. Its absence reflects a displacement: what is not consolidated at the level of the individual is sustained elsewhere, within a network that organizes visibility without fully exposing itself. He gives it form, visibility, and direction—but the force that sustains it remains elsewhere, less visible, and therefore more difficult to confront.

The ruined poster (chapter 96), then, does more than signal the fragility of an image. It reveals the presence of a system capable of extending its influence from representation to action, from discourse to intervention—without ever fully exposing itself.

And yet, this configuration produces an unexpected reversal. The figure that appears largest—the one whose name circulates, whose presence dominates the narrative—is not the one that holds power. (chapter 96) Conversely, what truly determines the outcome remains largely unseen, operating through structures that do not present themselves directly. The opposition, then, is not between two equally visible figures, but between what can be perceived and what cannot, between a presence that can be attacked and a force that cannot be easily located. Under such conditions, the struggle cannot take the form it seems to promise.

And yet, this progression leads back to the initial question. Who is the Giant? If we must finally name the Giant, we find it is not a person, but an entity: Goliath. Yet, in this modern arena, the script of the ancient myth has been inverted. Unlike the biblical Goliath—a singular, towering physical presence—this Goliath is invisible and decentralized. It is a vast network of corporate interests, manipulated media headlines, and systemic corruption. The traditional ‘Giant’ is an easy target because of its scale, but the MFC remains untouchable precisely because it hides behind its ‘paper’ constructions. (chapter 11) It is a shadow that cannot be struck with a stone. However, this configuration reveals a fundamental weakness: the Giant is not just made of paper; it is rotting from within. If the foundation of the MFC is nourished by money laundering (chapter 48) and sustained by “paper companies,” then its strength is an illusion maintained by silence and complicity. In this light, the damaged poster in Chapter 96 (chapter 96) acts as a physical mirror for this hidden corruption. Just as the poster’s surface is scratched and its authority weakened, the system itself is rotting. The perpetrators here are not just sports managers; they are criminals operating under the guise of legitimacy—white-collar offenders hiding behind tax evasion and financial fraud.

This corruption signifies that the Giant’s power is entirely transactional. It exists only as long as the ‘papers’—the ledgers, the contracts, and the bribe receipts—remain hidden. The “paper” that grants the Giant its size is the same material that ensures its fragility. It implies that the removal of a single, strategic sheet—not a physical blow, but a structural one—could bring the entire edifice to collapse. In this light, the stone that brings down Goliath is not found in the ring, but in the hands of the law. A single police report (chapter 18), a testimony, a leak of financial records, or a documented truth becomes the only weapon capable of tearing through the Giant of Paper. To destroy the narrative, one does not fight the image; one strikes the ledger.

To conclude, the threat does not come from within the arena, but from outside it. Not from physical confrontation, but from the transformation of hidden records into acknowledged facts. The Giant of Paper does not collapse under force. It collapses when what sustains it can no longer remain concealed.

The Laughter That Rewrites a Life

So if Goliath is a “Giant of Paper” (Money and Shell Companies), then this interview is the “Ink.” The money laundering creates the Giant’s body, but Junmin’s laughter and rewritten history provide the Giant’s “skin”, the part the public sees. What unfolds in the interview is not a spontaneous outburst, nor the crude provocation of a rival seeking attention. It is something far more controlled. The tone oscillates between mockery and composure (chapter 96), between laughter and measured statements (chapter 96), as if two registers were deliberately intertwined. On the surface, Baek Junmin performs the role expected of him: the confident fighter, amused, dismissive, superior. The smirk, the laughter, the casual insults (chapter 96) — these elements construct an image of dominance that appears almost effortless. (chapter 96) And yet, beneath this performance, another layer becomes visible. The vocabulary shifts. The insults become structured. (chapter 96) The accusation of an “inferiority complex” does not belong to the same register as the crude remarks that surround it. It introduces a clinical tone, one that suggests interpretation rather than reaction. This is not the language of impulse. It is the language of framing.

This shift is not accidental. It indicates preparation. Baek Junmin does not speak as an isolated fighter improvising under pressure. His discourse bears the marks of prior construction, as if it had been shaped, filtered, and calibrated before being delivered. (chapter 96) This physical evasion—the refusal to meet the gaze of the lens—suggests a speaker who is not recounting a memory, but reciting a script. The ‘clinical’ term is a foreign object in his mouth, a tool handed to him by the ‘Giant’ behind the scenes. The alternation between vulgar insults and quasi-medical terminology creates a carefully controlled ambiguity: what is said can wound, but cannot be easily prosecuted. The insults remain indirect, the claims remain interpretative, and the responsibility is constantly displaced.

In this sense, the interview operates within a legally protected gray zone. It is not pure defamation, because it avoids explicit false statements that could be challenged in court. (chapter 96) Instead, it relies on suggestion, selective truth, and reframed memory. The figure speaking appears spontaneous, but the structure of his speech reveals constraint. Someone, somewhere, has ensured that the line is never fully crossed: lawyers, doctors… (chapter 96) Crucially, the author employs a recurring visual metaphor to mark the boundary between Baek Junmin’s calculation (chapter 96) and his true self. Whenever he is forced into restraint—when he must deliver the scripted, empathetic lie—his eyes are firmly shut (Chapter 96). As he claims his heart was ‘broken’ by the disqualification, he physically blinds himself to the truth of his own joy, locking his real expression behind his eyelids to maintain the professional mask. The public sees only his calculated composition.

This contrasts sharply with his open-eyed laughter elsewhere (Chapter 96). In this moment, the mask slips completely. His eyes are wide, his face is true to itself, and his smile let transpire pure disdain. Here, he reveals to the audience that he is no real friend. His words about Jaekyung’s ‘growth’ become an act of deep condensation. The closed eyes represent the restraint required to lie, but the open, mocking face is the true reflection of his contempt. However, the script lets transpire that he is the one suffering from a huge inferiority complex. (chapter 96)

This is where the role of the surrounding structure becomes visible. The discourse does not only protect the speaker; it protects those behind him. The gym, its backers, and the wider network that sustains him remain shielded. What is exposed is the target; what remains invisible is the mechanism that enables the attack.

The laughter, then, is not simply mockery. (chapter 96) It is part of the strategy. It softens the accusation, disguises intent, and transforms aggression into performance. It allows the speaker to say what must be said—while appearing not to say it at all.

This duality is essential. It allows the discourse to operate in a gray zone where it can neither be dismissed as pure aggression nor fully challenged as a verifiable claim. By alternating between vulgarity and pseudo-analysis, the speaker protects himself. The laughter and smile disarm, the terminology legitimizes. What emerges is a narrative that can circulate freely without exposing itself to direct contestation. It resembles testimony, yet avoids accountability. In this sense, the interview does not simply attack; it reorganizes.

The past becomes its primary terrain.

Rather than confronting Joo Jaekyung in the present, the discourse moves backward (chapter 96), selecting fragments of childhood and reassembling them into a coherent but partial story. Absence is introduced where complexity once existed. (chapter 96) The mother disappears, reduced to a simple fact—“he had no mom”—as if this absence were self-explanatory, requiring no further inquiry. The father is not mentioned at all. With this omission, an entire dimension of the champion’s history is removed, along with the implications it carries. What remains is a simplified figure, detached from lineage, stripped of context, and therefore easier to redefine. This absence becomes all the more striking, when one recalls that Baek Junmin only began interacting with the main lead after the death of his father, himself a former boxer. (chapter 74) The omission cannot therefore be reduced to coincidence. It suggests either a lack of knowledge regarding this dimension of the past, or a deliberate decision to leave it unaddressed. In both cases, the effect is the same: a crucial element of the champion’s formation is excluded from the narrative, preventing any recognition of continuity, inheritance, or transmission.

The moment his existence becomes publicly acknowledged, the narrative constructed by Baek Junmin begins to collapse. What was presented as a story of weakness and isolation is recontextualized through lineage and inherited proximity to the world of fighting. Even if the father did not train him—and indeed opposed boxing—his presence reintroduces continuity where the interview imposed rupture. At the same time, at no moment, the Shotgun brought up the physical abuse from Joo Jaewoong, so Baek Junmin’s hypocrisy gets exposed (“It breaks my heart…”). Besides, this revelation risks extending beyond the individual case. It reopens the question of the structural links between combat sports and illicit networks (chapter 73), a connection that the narrative had carefully displaced. What appears as a personal account thus becomes unstable, exposing not only its own inconsistencies, but the broader system it sought to conceal.

But let’s return our attention to the Champion in Paper. The latter inserts himself into that past. (chapter 96) He becomes the one who “looked out for him,” the one who was followed, the one who observed, judged, and ultimately surpassed. The relationship is rewritten as hierarchical and unilateral. He was the hyung who knew everything better, and Joo Jaekyung was just stubborn. (chapter 96) What might have been coexistence becomes dependence. What might have been proximity becomes subordination. In doing so, Baek Junmin does not merely diminish the other; he constructs himself as the necessary reference point through which that past can be understood.

And yet, this reconstruction is unstable.

Because it encounters a form of resistance that does not depend on counter-speech, but on the persistence of verifiable traces. (chapter 71) The photograph of the young fighter with his coach introduces a contradiction that the interview cannot fully absorb. It does not merely suggest discipline or continuity; it attests to a process that precedes and exceeds the narrative imposed upon it. The trajectory it reveals is not incidental, nor dependent on a single relationship, but anchored in duration, training, and transmission.

This contradiction is reinforced by another element. On the night of his father’s death, Joo Jaekyung had already won his first boxing tournament (chapter 73). This detail is decisive. It establishes that his development was already underway, and that his formation cannot be reduced to the simplified account presented in the interview. It also repositions Hwang Byungchul. Far from being the negligible or ineffective figure implied indirectly by the discourse, he appears as part of a structure that enabled this early progression.

What emerges, then, is not simply an alternative narrative, but the presence of a witness. A successful coach and gym owner (chapter 71) , the tournament, the documented progression—these elements introduce points of verification that resist the logic of selective reconstruction. The past is not entirely available for reinterpretation; parts of it remain anchored in events, relations, and figures that can contradict the imposed version. On the other hand, the Champion in Paper has only his recollection as evidence which is based on the narration of others.

This is precisely what Baek Junmin fails to account for. His discourse is structured by comparison and hierarchy, focused on the figure of the main lead as an isolated reference point. In doing so, it overlooks the broader network of relations within which that figure was formed. The result is a narrative that appears coherent, but rests on an incomplete—and therefore unstable—foundation.

This is precisely what the interview seeks to neutralize. By reducing the past to a series of humiliating details—isolation, poverty, neglect, weakness—it transforms development into deficiency. The years of training disappear behind anecdote. Dedication is replaced by ridicule. The champion is no longer someone who became strong, but someone who was once weak. The temporal movement is inverted. Growth no longer leads forward despite his claim, (chapter 96); it is used to anchor the subject in a diminished origin that can be continuously recalled and reactivated.

In this sense, the strategy aligns with the earlier shift from suspension to disqualification. It is not enough to destabilize the present; the past must also be rewritten. Only then can the figure be fully redefined. And yet, this operation produces an unintended effect.

By insisting on hierarchy, by constantly positioning himself above, Baek Junmin reveals the very limitation that structures his discourse. He can only define himself in relation to another. He only knows one world: social darwinism, while Mingwa via Shin Okja and the landlord are promoting “mutual aid”. His identity depends on comparison (chapter 96), on opposition, on the maintenance of a vertical order in which he occupies the superior position. This is why the notion of “inferiority complex” becomes central. It is projected outward, attributed to the other (chapter 96), but it simultaneously exposes the logic that governs his own position. Without that hierarchy, his discourse loses its foundation.

This dependency explains why his recognition remains incomplete. Despite the visibility granted by the interview, despite the circulation of his name and statements, he does not acquire a stable identity as champion. He is present everywhere, yet never fully constituted. The system amplifies his voice, but does not anchor his image. He speaks, but does not replace. The absence noted earlier persists. His figure remains suspended, contingent on the very narrative he helps to produce.

This is where the notion of a Pyrrhic victory becomes relevant. (chapter 96)

The attempt to destroy the opponent’s image does not result in consolidation, but in exposure. By bringing the past into public discourse, by mobilizing language that exceeds his own register, by aligning himself so visibly with a broader narrative apparatus, Baek Junmin reveals the conditions that sustain him. The interview does not conceal the system; it makes it perceptible. The coordination between discourse, timing, and prior events—such as the vandalized poster (chapter 96) —suggests an operation that extends beyond the individual. What was meant to appear as personal testimony begins to resemble a structured intervention.

Even the proximity to cyberbullying operates within this ambiguity. (chapter 95) The content humiliates, distorts, and circulates widely, yet it remains carefully calibrated. It avoids direct falsification, relies on selective truth, and frames interpretation as opinion. This positioning allows it to evade legal accountability while maximizing its effect. The attack is real, but its form protects it from being easily named as such.

In the end, the interview does not establish Baek Junmin as the Giant.

It confirms his role within the system that produces the Giant. He acts, speaks, and provokes, but the coherence of the operation does not originate with him. It passes through him. And in doing so, it exposes both his intention and his limitation. He seeks recognition through destruction, but what he ultimately reveals is the structure that makes such destruction possible.

The Echo of Laughter: When Others Begin to See

The interview does not end with the one who speaks. (chapter 96) What is said circulates, settles, and reaches those who were never meant to be its primary audience. Its impact is not measured by its accuracy, but by the way it interferes with existing perceptions. It does not simply construct a narrative; it tests how that narrative will be received, absorbed, or resisted. In this sense, its true effect becomes visible only when it encounters those who carry fragments of the past it attempts to rewrite.

The Bad Coach and his Dump Gym

For Hwang Byungchul, this encounter produces a rupture. Until this moment, his position had been defined by distance and partial understanding. He had witnessed certain events, sensed irregularities, and yet never fully questioned the structure within which they occurred. His interpretation of the past remained localized, focused on individual decisions (chapter 74) rather than systemic conditions. Thus he accepted that his body as a fighter got so damaged. (chapter 71) And he did not have a physical therapist back then either. The interview disrupts this equilibrium. By erasing his role (chapter 96) —by reducing the champion’s formation to failure, neglect, or insignificance—it forces a confrontation the coach had previously avoided.

Baek Junmin’s words disturb that stability in another aspect: the champion’s mother. For Hwang Byungchul, her absence had long been integrated into a tragic but coherent explanation. She had left (chapter 72), yes, but she had reasons. The father was violent, the household unstable, and escape could therefore be understood as a form of necessity. In this interpretation, the mother’s departure remained painful, but intelligible. What he failed to ask, however, was the decisive question: if she left to save herself, why did she leave the child behind? Why was the boy not taken with her? For him, absence did not mean abandonment. He still had a positive vision of the mother: caring and selfless. (chapter 74) The interview brutalizes this unresolved contradiction by collapsing it into a simpler formula: (chapter 96) That statement is false in one sense, since Hwang Byungchul knew she existed, but it also exposes the existential truth he had failed to confront. The child may have had a mother in biography, yet he was lived and treated as if he had none. What Hwang Byungchul had accepted as abandonment with reasons now reappears as a far more troubling failure of protection.

The same pattern returns in his understanding of bullying. Hwang Byungchul had once witnessed mockery (chapter 72) and humiliation directed at the young fighter. But he interpreted it as an isolated incident, something that could be resolved by intervention, discipline, or the simple restoration of order. (chapter 72) In doing so, he mistook a visible moment for the whole of the problem. He overlooked the impact on the little boy’s soul. What Baek Junmin reveals—despite his malicious intentions—is that (chapter 96) this mockery was not occasional. It was structural. It became a gossip. The insults about smell, weakness, dependency, and social inferiority do not describe a single event; they evoke an entire environment in which the child was continuously reduced, laughed at, and pushed to the margins. The director of the gym had believed that stopping one episode meant ending the problem. The interview forces a more painful recognition: he had not grasped that ridicule was not an interruption in the boy’s life, but one of its formative conditions.

This is why I believe that the interview must have affected him so deeply. Sure, he might have felt insulted by such comments, (chapter 96) Yet, Baek Junmin’s statement compels the former coach to revisit the foundations of his own understanding. He had totally misjudged the mother, his image of her was influenced by his own projection and experience. Thus he had not grasped the champion’s suffering: the longing for his mother and her betrayal. The bullying he had witnessed, he had not truly measured. The ruthlessness he later attributed to the champion(chapter 71), as if it were an exceptional trait now begins to look like the product of a much longer history of humiliation, abandonment, and misrecognition.

In this sense, Baek Junmin’s version does not become powerful because it is true. (chapter 96) It becomes dangerous because it exploits gaps that were already there. Hwang Byungchul is not destabilized by a complete fabrication, but by a narrative that twists fragments of reality he himself had once simplified. The interview therefore produces a delayed crisis of interpretation. It reveals that what he took for explanation had often been only a way of stopping inquiry too soon.

What is at stake for him is not merely recognition, but responsibility. The narrative he hears does not simply contradict his experience; it exposes its limits. What he once perceived as isolated incidents now appears as part of a larger configuration he failed to grasp. The figure he believed he understood is re-presented in a way that both distorts and reveals. In this tension, a new possibility emerges: not the recovery of a stable truth, but the realization that his previous certainty was incomplete.

This delayed recognition extends even further. Until now, Hwang Byungchul had been confronted with a fact he could not fully explain: Joo Jaekyung never contacted him. (chapter 71) Not once. Despite the years of training, despite the shared history, despite the role he himself believed to have played (chapter 74), the champion had cut all contact without explanation. This absence had remained unresolved, almost suspended—something to be accepted, but not truly understood. Hence he became resentful.

The interview alters that. By reconstructing a childhood marked not by isolated hardship (chapter 96) but by continuous ridicule, it introduces a new interpretative frame. The gym, which Hwang Byungchul had perceived as a place of discipline and formation, reappears under a different light. It was also a space where the young fighter had been exposed, diminished, and observed by others without protection. But furthermore, the mockery existed outside that environment and Hwang Byungchul had no idea about it.

This realization produces a shift that is both subtle and decisive. The silence of Joo Jaekyung no longer appears as distance, indifference, or ingratitude. It becomes legible as avoidance. Not of the coach as an individual, but of everything he represents: a place, a period, a configuration of relationships in which humiliation and growth were inseparably intertwined.

In this sense, the absence of contact is no longer a mystery. It is a continuation. What the interview does, then, is not simply distort the past. It forces Hwang Byungchul to recognize his own shortcomings. The bond he believed to exist was real—but it was not the only one. Alongside discipline and effort, there had always been something else: exposure, vulnerability, and the gaze of others.

The Grandmother’s Hero

If the interview unsettles Hwang Byungchul by forcing him to reinterpret the past, its effect on Shin Okja can only follow a darker, more intimate path. It does not invite analytical distance; it collapses distance altogether.

The words about the absent mother resonate with a haunting familiarity. For Shin Okja, (chapter 96) is not a piece of news; it is a recognizable configuration of suffering. (chapter 65) The simplified narrative offered by Baek Junmin aligns too easily with her own history of hardship. But this immediacy has a cost. By recognizing the pain, she risks accepting the distorted framework through which it is presented.

The Collapse of the “Best Effort” Myth

This recognition forces a reassessment of her own narrative. For years, Shin Okja’s internal conviction was built on a single idea: she had done her best to raise Kim Dan (chapter 65), even if it was never enough. Her role was defined by sacrifice, by the necessity to protect and sustain the “child” she still perceives in him—someone to be fed, guided, and contained rather than allowed to stand fully on his own.

Baek Junmin’s account destabilizes this framework. (chapter 96) By presenting a version of Joo Jaekyung who grew up without stable protection—without consistent care—the interview challenges the assumption that such protection is the decisive condition for survival. If the celebrity was once weak, isolated, and exposed, yet became the strong and composed figure she now sees, then his development cannot be fully explained through the model she has relied on. One could say that to Shin Okja, the black wolf is a “Giant of Flesh and Bone”—someone whose strength is real—which makes her realize that her grandson, and her own history, have been built on “Paper.” (the pictures of Kim Dan’s childhood).

At the same time, this confrontation extends beyond Joo Jaekyung and returns to Shin Okja’s own past. For years, she had described Kim Dan as an orphan—a term that appears factual, but in reality simplifies a far more complex history. The photographs contradict this reduction. (chapter 94) They attest to the existence of parents, of a prior life, of relationships that were not entirely erased but quietly set aside.

In this sense, Shin Okja did not simply care for Kim Dan; she also reshaped the narrative of his childhood. By presenting him as an orphan, she created a version of the past that was more coherent, more manageable, and easier to endure. In other words, she rewrote the past out of guilt and “protection”. The ambiguity surrounding his parents—their absence, their responsibility, their place in his life—was not explored, but neutralized.

This alteration, however, is not without contradiction. While Shin Okja presents Kim Dan’s past as one of absence, the present remains marked by a persistent trace: debts. Unlike Joo Jaekyung, who endured poverty but was not bound by it, Kim Dan’s life is structured by an obligation he cannot escape. (chapter 7)

This aspect is notably absent from her own account. When she speaks of the past on the beach, she evokes hardship, sacrifice, and endurance, yet she avoids addressing the existence of this burden. (chapter 65) The debt is not mentioned; it is simply endured. In doing so, its cause is displaced, if not entirely obscured.

But debt is never neutral. It implies a prior history, a chain of decisions and responsibilities that cannot be reduced to absence. In this sense, it contradicts the narrative of orphanhood she has constructed. It suggests that the past was not erased, but transformed into a silent obligation carried into the present.

The interview reactivates this contradiction. (chapter 96) By reducing Joo Jaekyung’s childhood to a simplified narrative of poverty and abandonment, it mirrors the very mechanism through which Shin Okja has spoken about Kim Dan. Yet the presence of debt prevents such simplification from holding entirely. It anchors the past in the present, making it impossible to maintain a version of events in which nothing preceded her care.

Baek Junmin’s interview reactivates this suppressed dimension. By reducing Joo Jaekyung to a child “without a mother,” it reproduces the very mechanism Shin Okja herself had employed. The parallel is difficult to ignore. What appears as manipulation in one case reflects a similar simplification in the other.

Taking Strength for Granted

This realization forces Shin Okja to confront a dimension of Kim Dan’s past she had long underestimated. When he was hurt, her response had always been immediate and absolute: to reassure him, to remain by his side, to insist that her presence was enough. (chapter 57) It was not only a gesture of comfort; it was a conviction. It implied that the absence of others could be compensated by her own care.

But this belief now reveals its limits. Kim Dan’s suffering was not confined to the private sphere. It extended into the social space, where absence became stigma (chapter 57), and where being “different” invited mockery and exclusion. What Shin Okja had perceived as a problem of loneliness was also a problem of exposure and humiliation.

In this sense, her care did not eliminate the wound; it coexisted with it. She protected him from being alone, but not from being seen by others in a way that diminished him. The interview reactivates this overlooked dimension. By describing Joo Jaekyung as a child who was mocked and reduced, it forces her to recognize that Kim Dan may have endured something similar—even while she believed she had protected him. (chapter 57) And exactly like the director of the gym, what she imagined as a single incident, was not. It followed the main lead constantly.

This realization reveals the limits of her perspective. Shin Okja had taken Joo Jaekyung’s strength as something self-evident. (chapter 21) She perceived him as a finished figure—healthy, solid, and self-sufficient—without questioning the conditions that made such stability possible. Even when she turned toward him with warmth (chapter 94), her perception remained structured by Kim Dan. She acknowledged his place beside her grandson, but not the history that had formed him. She had never asked him any question in the end.

A dissonance emerges. If a child can grow up and become strong without the form of protection she considers essential, then the meaning of her own care becomes uncertain. (chapter 65) The question shifts: not whether she cared, but how that care has shaped the one who received it.

The contrast takes on the form of a mirror. Kim Dan continues to struggle with basic acts such as eating (chapter 94), withdrawing under pressure rather than sustaining himself. While Jaekyung’s strength appears to have been forged under conditions of absence, Kim Dan’s fragility seems to persist within the structure of her presence.

In this sense, the interview does not only reshape her perception of Joo Jaekyung. It fractures the image she had constructed of her own life. For years, she had organized her story around sacrifice. She had done her best, endured hardship, and carried responsibility for Kim Dan. This narrative gave coherence to her actions. But the existence of another child—equally abandoned, yet differently formed—introduces a contradiction she can no longer ignore.

It displays her own shortcomings as well.

Not as a lack of care, but as a limit in perception. She acted, protected, and endured, but without fully questioning the effects of her own form of care. In doing so, she may have replaced one form of absence with another form of dependency.

The Hesitation of the Heart

Shin Okja does not reject the narrative, but she can no longer fully accept her own. The interview generates a space of hesitation—a subtle but decisive shift in which the image she had constructed begins to destabilize. For the first time, the narrative does not pass through her unchanged.

The interview sought to fix Joo Jaekyung’s meaning as a failure. Instead, it unsettles the foundation of Shin Okja’s identity as a caregiver. By exposing the champion’s past vulnerability, Baek Junmin unintentionally reveals the limits of her own understanding. The laughter that accompanies the discourse continues to circulate (chapter 96), but for Shin Okja, it no longer confirms anything. It becomes a source of volability.

And within that uncertainty lies a consequence that has yet to unfold. The past she had simplified can no longer remain closed. What was once presented as settled now demands to be reconsidered. The interview does not simply alter her perception of Joo Jaekyung—it compels her to reopen the question she had avoided: the story of Kim Dan’s parents, and the truth she chose not to tell.

The Hamster, The Stone and The Giant

If the earlier parts exposed how the image is constructed, manipulated, and weaponized, the final movement begins where all structures fail: in the body. Kim Dan’s injured hand is not a minor detail. (chapter 96) It marks the collapse of his function. Up to this point, his position remained stable precisely because it was limited. He could stay at Joo Jaekyung’s side (chapter 96) without confronting what that presence truly meant, because he occupied a role. He was the physical therapist. His gestures, his proximity, his care—all of it could be justified, contained, and, above all, depersonalized.

The injury disrupts this equilibrium. Without his hand, he can no longer act. He can no longer treat, no longer intervene, no longer define himself through usefulness. The role disappears, and with it, the distance it maintained. What remains is no longer a function, but a presence. No longer a professional relation, but a personal one. At this point, concealment becomes impossible. Because what had remained unspoken now demands articulation. If he is no longer “needed” as a therapist, then why does he remain? And if he chooses to remain, on what grounds?

For the first time, Kim Dan cannot rely on necessity. He must decide.

The Two Triangles: A Structure That Must Be Chosen

When you look at my illustration, you will realize that I added a star on the physical therapist’s shirt. The addition of the star on the therapist’s uniform is more than a “badge of office”; it is a geometric prophecy. It represents the intertwining of two disparate lives—the red triangle of Jaekyung’s force and the blue triangle of Dan’s empathy. When these two triangles overlap, they create a structure (The Star) that is far more stable than the ‘Paper Giant’ of the MFC. This star is naturally a reference to the star of David. But at the same time, I wanted to avoid any reference to religion as such. The star of David is created by 2 triangles intertwined together. And the moment you accept that each main lead represents one triangle, you realize that both can become the star of David, once they become a team and a couple.

Until now, the connection between Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan existed, but it remained indirect. It was sustained through intermediaries, through roles, through asymmetries that prevented true alignment. Joo Jaekyung’s red triangle was defined by force, hierarchy, and isolation. Kim Dan’s by care, dependency, and containment. The two structures intersected, but they did not yet stabilize into a shared configuration.

The injured hand alters this balance. (chapter 96)

It removes Kim Dan from the passive stability of his role and forces movement. He can no longer remain the one who adapts, who follows, who responds. He must now step into the point of intersection—the space where both triangles meet. And this space is not given. It must be chosen.

At this stage, Shin Okja’s position becomes decisive. (chapter 94) Throughout the narrative, she functioned as a center of gravity, bringing both structures into contact without resolving them. She connected, but she also maintained separation—protecting, guiding, and, at times, limiting.

Now, this role shifts.

By confronting her own shortcomings—by recognizing both the limits of her protection and the reality she had obscured—she no longer holds Kim Dan in place. Instead, she allows for movement. Not through direct intervention, but through the collapse of her previous certainty. She does not create the union. But she makes it possible.

David Against the Giant

Within this configuration, the opposition can now be clearly defined. The Giant is not Joo Jaekyung. It is not really Baek Junmin. It is the structure that produces images, controls narratives, and sustains itself through circulation—media, institutions, capital, operating without a single visible center. It is Goliath.

Not because it is singular, but because it is diffuse, difficult to locate, and nearly impossible to confront directly. Against it stands not a figure of strength, but a transformation of position. Kim Dan does not oppose the Giant through force. He has none. His injured hand marks precisely this limitation. He cannot act within the logic imposed by the system.,

And yet, this limitation redefines the confrontation. Because David does not prevail by matching strength. He prevails by refusing the conditions under which strength is measured. The ‘hamster’—Dan’s symbolic identity—is the stone that brings down Goliath. Not because it strikes a blow, but because it represents a pure relation (family and companionship) that the corporate system cannot monetize or understand. Goliath falls because he cannot compute the value of a love that requires no ‘function.'”This is where Joo Jaekyung becomes decisive. (chapter 88) The “hamster” is not an isolated symbol. It has been shaped in relation to Joo Jaekyung—through proximity, through tension, through a form of attention that is neither hierarchical nor purely functional. If Kim Dan embodies connection, Joo Jaekyung embodies determination and direction. (chapter 94) What emerges between them is not dependency, but a potential alignment. That’s the reason why I believe that contrary to that morning (chapter 96), Kim Dan might decide to follow Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 96) Is it a coincidence that his pajamas are black and white, the two colors of the yin and yang?

Kim Dan’s decision—to remain, to speak, to step forward without the protection of his role—is therefore not an individual gesture. It is the moment where both trajectories intersect. He does not act as a therapist. He does not act as someone who is “needed.” He acts without function. He becomes the hamster, and as such the companion and family. And this changes the terms entirely.

Because the system depends on roles: the fighter, the doctor, the champion, the underdog. These roles can be named, framed, circulated, and manipulated. They can be turned into headlines, into narratives, into images. But what cannot be easily captured is a relation that escapes these definitions.

And now, let me ask you this: what does Joo Jaekyung desire from Kim Dan in the end? To be looked at (chapter 96) and as such to be loved, something his mother never did. (chapter 73) Even with an injured hand, he can do this. As you can see, I am full of hope.

From Laughter to Meaning

At this point, the motif of laughter undergoes a decisive transformation. Until now, laughter functioned as a weapon. (chapter 96) It diminished, exposed, and rewrote. In Baek Junmin’s discourse, it accompanied the reconstruction of the past, turning memory into ridicule and experience into spectacle. What he did not know is that he was acting like Joo Jaewoong. (chapter 73) His words are punctuated by smirks, interruptions, and mockery. The childhood he evokes is not one of growth or development, but of humiliation, hierarchy, and control. (chapter 96)

What is striking, however, is what is absent. (chapter 96) There is no trace of joy, only resent. No trace of play. No trace of shared experience (chapter 96) that would give meaning to the past beyond domination. Everything is reduced to struggle, inferiority, and dependence. Childhood, in his account, is not a space of formation, but a field of comparison.

This absence is not insignificant. It reveals a fundamental limitation. As Aristotle suggests, Pleasure in the job puts perfection in the work. (chapter 88) Without it, action becomes mechanical, external, and ultimately unsustainable. What is done without pleasure cannot reach completion, because it remains detached from the subject who performs it. (chapter 95)

In this light, Baek Junmin’s narrative exposes its own failure. He speaks of training (chapter 96), of hierarchy, of superiority—but never of enjoyment. His relationship to fighting is entirely structured by comparison and domination. It is something to win, to prove, to impose—not something to inhabit. As a result, his position remains fundamentally unstable. He can occupy the role of champion, but he cannot embody it. He performs strength, but does not internalize it. His smile contrasts so much to the champion’s after his first victory. (chapter 73)

This is why his laughter remains empty. (chapter 96) It is directed outward, against the main lead and others, and depends entirely on their diminishment. It cannot sustain itself. It requires a target. In contrast, Kim Dan is associated with a different form of laughter. (chapter 27) The hamster—seemingly insignificant—represents companionship, warmth, and a form of joy that does not depend on hierarchy or recognition.

This laughter is not directed at someone. It is shared. And this distinction is decisive. Because it introduces a form of meaning that cannot be produced or controlled by the system. It cannot be staged, monetized, or weaponized. It exists outside the logic of visibility that governs the Giant. At this stage, the opposition is no longer between two fighters, but between two forms of value:

one that circulates, amplifies, and consumes
and one that connects, sustains, and transforms

The End of the Circle, The Beginning of Another

Episode 96 marks the closure of a cycle. (chapter 96) The athlete voiced his distress, exhaustion and loneliness. The mechanisms that structured the previous movement—manipulation, narrative control, role-based identity—reach their limit. The image is destabilized, the past is rewritten, the system becomes visible.

But this closure does not conclude the movement. It opens a threshold. (chapter 96)

What follows does not extend what came before. It interrupts it. And this new cycle does not begin with a fight. It begins with a decision. The question is no longer external. It cannot be delegated, postponed, or reframed. Should he follow the champion’s words—or respond to what those words conceal? (chapter 96) “I want you to stay!” To obey the word is to remain a servant; to hear the silence behind the word is to become a partner.

Because Joo Jaekyung’s command to leave is not neutral. (chapter 96) It’s the consequence of pain, it belongs to the logic of rupture, of protection through distance, of a structure that resolves tension by separation. To obey would be to repeat the past—to accept absence as the only possible form of resolution. To follow the athlete, however, would be something else entirely. Not obedience to his words, but an understanding of what they conceal. Not submission, but a deliberate alignment: an act of commitment. A decision to remain—not because he is told to, but because he chooses to.

The Giant remains. The structure persists. But for the first time, it is no longer the only force shaping the outcome. Because David has entered the field. Not as a figure of opposition. But as a position that refuses to be absorbed.

PS: My prediction is that the doctor goes to the bathroom, where the athlete is! A new version of this scene, but here, the roles would be switched. (chapter 30) Let’s not forget that the champion’s “jinx” is linked to the smell, something which Baek Junmin revealed earlier. (chapter 96)

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Tactile ✊ Dissonance: When Touch Falls Out of Sync

SMACK

It begins with a gesture that is refused. (chapter 96) A hand reaches out to continue what is not yet finished. Kim Dan tries to stop the champion, to maintain the contact, to complete the treatment. (chapter 96) The response is immediate: Joo Jaekyung pushes the hand away.

This gesture is brief, but not accidental. What is interrupted here is not simply a movement, but a relation. A touch meant to relieve tension does not create connection. It remains limited to the body, without opening any space in which the burden itself might be shared. Between intention and response, between movement and meaning, something falls out of sync. But let me ask you this. When does such a misalignment begin? Is it in the gesture itself, or long before it?

When I first composed the illustration Tactile Dissonance , episode 96 had not yet been released. That’s why the gesture in the picture is not included. Yet I had already sensed the coming rupture. I was not working from an abstract impression alone. Two specific scenes were already guiding my thinking: the one on the beach, where Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung share a quieter, more immediate form of proximity (chapter 95), and the one in the office, where Park Namwook places his hand on the champion’s shoulder and directs him once more toward performance. (chapter 95) Both scenes belonged to episode 95, and together they already announced a growing dissonance.

Two spaces seemed to coexist without fully meeting. One was structured, directive, and oriented toward control and performance. (chapter 95) The other was quieter, grounded in proximity, shared time, and a more fragile sense of presence. (chapter 95) They did not openly clash, but they did not align either.

Seen in this light, chapter 96 does not introduce the disturbance. It makes visible what episode 95 had already begun to prepare. Now that episode 96 has been released, many readers perceive something familiar. They speak of a return, of repetition, of the “old” Joo Jaekyung resurfacing. Why? Because they adopt Kim Dan’s perspective. (chapter 96) From where he stands, the words and gesture appear as rejection, and the scene seems to confirm an old pattern. (chapter 96)

But is it really a return? What appears to be continuity may in fact be something else coming into view. Not a simple regression, but the surfacing of a misalignment that had already begun to emerge between those two earlier scenes. What chapter 96 reveals is not merely anger, but a growing lack of synchrony between different meanings of touch.

This disturbance does not remain confined to a single gesture. Once perceived, it begins to reappear elsewhere (chapter 95): in what is missing, in what is delayed, in what no longer coincides. A presence that is no longer acknowledged. (chapter 95) A response that arrives too late. (chapter 95) A touch that relieves tension, but does not invite the burden to be shared. (chapter 96) A hand placed on a shoulder as if the body itself could once again be used to solve what language, trust, or recognition have failed to address. (chapter 95) Nothing overtly breaks, and yet continuity begins to loosen.

Where, then, does this disturbance become perceptible? In absence? In timing? In the way bodies approach (chapter 95) — or fail to?

To follow this movement, we need to look more closely at what does not immediately impose itself: the gaps between exchanges, the intervals between actions, the subtle shifts that gradually alter how each scene holds together.

Absence Before Intrusion

The disturbance does not begin with noise. It begins with something much more unsettling: silence and absence.

When we examine the first scene in the office from episode 95, Joo Jaekyung is not surrounded. (chapter 95) There is no entourage (chapter 36), no managers, no advisors (chapter 47), no representatives from the entertainment agency (chapter 81). And yet, we know this moment matters: the match is approaching, the stakes are high, the narrative around him is already circulating. He only has 10 days left.

So we have to pause. Where is everyone? (chapter 95) In earlier moments, this kind of preparation was never solitary. There were always voices, intermediaries, people whose role was precisely to frame, manage, and anticipate what was coming. But here, none of them are present. Not even Yosep. And the latter was already absent in the meeting before the match in Paris.

At the gym, he is nowhere to be seen that day. (chapter 95) It becomes even more obvious, if you compare the sparring between the champion and Oh Daehyun (chapter 95) and the one in episode 1, where the other partner got injured. (chapter 1) He rushed to the injured fighter. But in episode 95, he is invisible. No explanation, no transition. His absence is not emphasized—and yet, it echoes. Especially if we recall episode 46, where he was on the verge of being sent out (chapter 46), tasked with gathering information, while Park Namwook positioned himself as the director of Team Black: (chapter 46) This detail is not incidental. It establishes a division of roles that is directly connected to a larger structure: the network linking gyms and the MFC. This network is not hypothetical; it is explicitly confirmed in episode 49 (chapter 49), when Choi Gilseok asks Park Namwook why he was absent from the Seoul managers’ meeting. In other words, coordination between gyms and directors is not occasional—it is organized, expected, and institutionalized.

If we return to episode 95 with this in mind, Yosep’s absence can no longer be read as a simple gap in the scene. It acquires a precise function. If Park Namwook is physically present at the gym (chapter 95), yet we know that meetings and exchanges between directors must still be taking place, then the question becomes unavoidable: who represents Team Black within that network at that moment?

The most coherent answer is that Yosep has now been tasked with that role. Let’s not forget that he is the one who reported the incident with the switched spray to MFC and the police. (chapter 52) His absence in episode 95 is therefore not passive. It indicates that he is operating elsewhere, in contact with the MFC and other gyms, possibly relaying information or participating in discussions that remain off-screen.

And if that is the case, then another implication follows. Yosep’s path cannot remain confined to Team Black. It necessarily extends into the same network of directors introduced in episode 49. Once this structure is established, his absence in episode 95 no longer appears accidental, but functional. He is positioned within a space where exchanges between gyms take place, where information circulates, and where decisions are coordinated beyond the immediate scene.

This has a direct consequence. (chapter 95) If Yosep is operating within that network, then his trajectory is no longer limited to internal interactions. It must, at some point, intersect with other directors—among them Choi Gilseok, whose role as the head of King of MMA places him at the center of that inter-gym structure.

And this is where episode 96 introduces a revealing shift. (chapter 96) Yosep is the one who calls Joo Jaekyung. He is already informed. More importantly, he is the one who presents the video—the interview in which Baek Junmin openly frames the confrontation.

This is not entirely new. Yosep had already acted as an intermediary in episode 52, when he reported the switched spray incident to the MFC and the police. (chapter 52) At that moment, his role was to transmit information upward within the system, in an attempt to clarify the situation and prevent it from being buried.

But in episode 96, this function takes a different form. Yosep no longer operates within a controlled, institutional framework. (chapter 96) Instead, he becomes the relay of a narrative that is already circulating publicly. What he transmits is no longer a report meant to establish truth, but a mediated version of events—one that exposes Joo Jaekyung to an external gaze shaped by others. (chapter 96) And this is precisely why the final panel echoes the earlier scene in the office. (chapter 95) In both cases, Joo Jaekyung is positioned in front of a surface that reflects him—not literally, but symbolically. In episode 95, the television interrupts the voice of strategy and replaces it with an image that speaks without dialogue. In episode 96, that image is no longer neutral. It carries a judgment, a narrative imposed from the outside.

The athlete is no longer simply receiving information. He is being confronted with a version of himself constructed by others. What appears on the screen, and what circulates among the surrounding voices, functions as a distorted reflection—one that does not emerge from within, but is imposed upon him.

This is where the shift becomes perceptible. (chapter 96) The space remains silent in structure (chapter 96), but the silence is now filled with a gaze. Not an exchange, not a dialogue, but an exposure. The crowd does not speak to him; it looks at him. What changes at this point is not only how he is seen, but how this gaze begins to affect him. The image imposed from the outside does not remain external. He is forced to just consume the image. It begins to function as a reflection—one that reduces him to weakness, to a past version of himself framed as inadequate.

This is where the psychological dimension emerges. The discomfort is no longer limited to exposure. It becomes internal. What he faces is not only the judgment of others, but the possibility that this image might coincide with something he already struggles to reject.

The fear, then, is not simply being seen. It is recognizing himself in what is being shown. What appears on the screen does not just distort him—it confronts him with a version of himself he cannot fully distance himself from. It is the moment when the external and internal critic shake hands.

Presence As A Barrier

The absence identified in episode 95 does not result in an empty space. (chapter 95) On the contrary, it reveals a configuration in which presence itself becomes insufficient—and, at times, obstructive.

Yosep’s displacement into the network has already altered the structure of mediation. His absence from the room signals that the circulation of information now takes place elsewhere, beyond the immediate scene. What remains, however, is not a neutral void. Park Namwook is present. (chapter 95) From his position, one might assume that he is watching Joo Jaekyung’s back—that his presence compensates for the absence of others.

But this interpretation depends on taking the scene at face value. And this is precisely where caution is required.

Because the sequence encourages a specific reading: we see the athlete hearing the comment from the moderator (chapter 95) while seated in front of the television (chapter 95), and only afterwards do we hear the manager’s voice (chapter 95) The arrangement leads us to infer that Joo Jaekyung must have switched on the TV himself in order to watch the program.

But is that what the scene actually shows?

A closer reading—one that does not rely on appearance alone—reveals a different configuration. The television is already on before any identifiable action is clearly attributed to him. (chapter 95) Then at the end of the scene, (chapter 95) the author reveals a table full of notes and a pen next to his left hand, while the champion is holding a sheet of paper. This image exposes that Joo Jaekyung was actually engaged in another activity: he was writing notes for his next fight. This implies that he was not oriented toward the act of watching, but toward a process of concentration. So why would he watch a show, when he is developing his game?

This is where Park Namwook’s position becomes crucial. (chapter 95) He is not seated beside the athlete. He does not share the table. He does not enter the space where the notes were being written and where strategy is being worked out. Instead, he stands behind him, physically present yet spatially removed from the process unfolding at the table. The distance matters. If he were truly participating in preparation, he would be positioned next to him, not outside that shared space.

The remote control matters just as much. (chapter 95) The hand with the remote control appears before the manager himself, a sign that the item was not placed on the table. It is in Park Namwook’s hand, not on the table, not by Joo Jaekyung’s notes, and not within the athlete’s immediate workspace. This detail does not prove with certainty that the manager switched the television on. But it does establish something important: control over the device is associated with him, not with the athlete seated at the table.

And there is another clue. In the key panels, Joo Jaekyung is depicted without visible eyes.. (chapter 95) In both panels, his eyes are obscured. (chapter 95) This is not a minor stylistic choice. In other moments (chapter 47), his gaze is sharply defined and functions as a marker of attention (chapter 36), recognition, or confrontation. Here, that anchor disappears. The subject is present, but not visually positioned as the origin of perception.

This is where the distinction between appearance and construction becomes decisive. From the perspective of appearance, he is watching. From the perspective of construction, he is being placed in front of an image, while the scene quietly encourages the audience to attribute that choice to him. (chapter 95)

Park Namwook’s words (chapter 95) sound protective, but they also reinforce the misleading impression that the athlete had chosen to watch in the first place. The instruction redirects attention toward Joo Jaekyung’s reaction and away from the more troubling question: who switched the television on?

That question cannot be dismissed, because the staging keeps it alive. The athlete was actually writing, before the manager arrived. The latter stands apart. The remote is in the manager’s hand. The broadcast is already running. Taken together, these details do not support a simple reading of self-exposure. They point instead toward a scene in which responsibility is subtly displaced.

In that sense, Park Namwook’s presence does not function as genuine protection. It becomes a barrier. He is close enough to shape the environment, yet too far from the table to participate in strategy. He intervenes, but only after the intrusion has already begun. And by framing the moment as if Joo Jaekyung were the one who chose to watch, he helps conceal the very conditions that made the exposure possible.

What appears, then, is not a straightforward scene of concern, but a more troubling configuration: a manager who is present, who holds the means of control, who stands behind the athlete rather than beside him, and whose intervention arrives too late while subtly shifting the burden of agency onto the one already exposed. In other words, it is not protection, but misdirection.

If the intrusion does not originate from Joo Jaekyung, then the question inevitably shifts: who benefits from this configuration—and why does it occur at this moment?

The answer may lie in a gradual shift that has already been unfolding in the background. (chapter 87) (chapter 89)

Park Namwook’s position is no longer what it once was.

Earlier, he functioned as a central figure of coordination—someone who structured preparation, mediated between systems, and directed the athlete’s trajectory within the network. But in episode 95, that role appears altered. He is present, yet no longer seated at the table where strategy is being constructed. The notes belong to Joo Jaekyung alone. The space of planning has become solitary.

This is not a minor detail. It signals a displacement. The manager is no longer actively shaping the game plan. He is no longer the one organizing knowledge, anticipating the opponent, or guiding the process. Instead, he stands aside—close, but not integrated.

Within this context, his interventions take on a different meaning.

His suggestion (chapter 95) appears, at first, as a return to fundamentals—a call to discipline, to physical preparation. But the scene contradicts this interpretation. (chapter 95) He is not training with the champion. He just stands by the side and yells some advice. The statement functions less as an instruction than as a repositioning.

A way to reassert relevance. (chapter 95) When Namwook can no longer contribute to the strategy (the mind), he retreats to the only place he has power: the body. He wants Jaekyung to be a machine again because you can “manage” a machine or tame a “beast”, but you have to “respect” a strategist. The same applies to the television sequence. If control over the device is indeed in his hands, then the intrusion is not random. It becomes part of a configuration in which he remains the one who can still act—even if he no longer defines the strategy itself.

This does not necessarily imply deliberate malice. But it does suggest a form of compensation. As his role within the system weakens, his mode of intervention shifts. He no longer leads the process (chapter 13); he intervenes at its margins. He does not construct the framework; he reacts within it. And in doing so, he creates situations in which his presence becomes necessary again —whether by interrupting, redirecting, or framing what is happening.

Within this context, even the exposure to the broadcast can be read differently. It may function as a trigger, (chapter 95) an attempt to provoke a reaction, to reignite aggression, to restore a version of Joo Jaekyung defined by instinct rather than reflection. This interpretation gains weight when we consider the recent disruption of routine. Because of Kim Dan (chapter 88) and Shin Okja (chapter 94), the champion’s schedule has already shifted: training has been interrupted, attention divided, priorities altered.

From this perspective, the intrusion is not only a breach—it is also an attempt to recalibrate. This is why the contradiction persists. He appears protective, yet the conditions of exposure remain unresolved.
He speaks of training, yet does not occupy the space where training is structured. What emerges is not a stable role, but a transitional one—marked by loss of authority and attempts to compensate for it. And this becomes even more obvious during the conversation in the office.

The Conductors of Dissonance

What emerges across episodes 95 and 96 is not a series of isolated misjudgments, but a structural shift in how mediation operates around the athlete. Both Yosep and Park Namwook remain present as intermediaries, yet their function has fundamentally altered: they no longer regulate the flow of external information (chapter 37) —they allow it to pass through unchecked. (chapter 96)

In high-level competition, this flow is never left unmanaged. Athletes are typically shielded from media exposure in the critical period before a match to prevent distraction conflict. As noted in contemporary sports psychology, unmediated scrutiny triggers cognitive overload and shifts an athlete’s identity from performer to victim. (for more read https://www.drpaulmccarthy.com/post/how-to-master-mental-preparation-in-sport-a-pro-athlete-s-secret-guide) This “blackout” is a fundamental principle of performance; external narratives impose an image from the outside, forcing the athlete to divide attention between performance and representation.

In Joo Jaekyung’s environment, the opposite occurs. (chapter 96) The boundary between preparation and exposure collapses as the interview is introduced directly into his workspace. (chapter 96) The consequences are immediate. Instead of focusing on process —evident in the strategic notes he is writing (chapter 95) —he is drawn into what cannot be controlled: public judgment and the reconstruction of his past as weakness.

This exposure disrupts the vital transition from “life” to “sport,” from the social self to the performing body. He is not allowed to “park” the external world; he is tethered to it. The image on the screen follows him into the space where focus should be consolidated.

From Buffers to Conduits

Management is not only about training the body; it is about structuring the conditions under which performance becomes possible—controlling timing and ensuring that what reaches the athlete can be processed without destabilization. Here, the figures who should operate as buffers instead act as conduits. They do not absorb pressure; they transmit it. This shift becomes even more visible in the episode of the destroyed poster. (chapter 96)

At first glance, the sequence appears straightforward: Park Namwook reacts with surprise (chapter 96), but he can clear grasp the situation: an act of vandalism. Then he questions the identity of the perpetrator (chapter 96), and turns suspicion toward the fighters present. (chapter 96) The scene frames him as someone discovering the vandalism alongside the others.

But the sequence does not hold under closer examination. (chapter 96) Yosep is already inside the gym before the others arrive. He opens the door from the inside. This detail matters. (chapter 96) It establishes that information about the incident could have circulated before Park Namwook’s visible reaction. The coach could have called the owner of Team Black. And yet, no such prior knowledge is acknowledged. Because of the interview, no one questions his previous behavior and whereabouts.

At the same time, the manager’s response contains a contradiction. (chapter 96) He expresses confusion, asks who could have done this—yet moments later, he states that the surveillance system had “chosen now of all times to break down.” This is not a neutral remark. It implies prior awareness of the system’s failure—knowledge that precedes the supposed moment of discovery.

The scene, therefore, operates on two levels.

On the surface, it presents ignorance. Structurally, it suggests awareness. So is it a coincidence that he has a drop of sweat on his face (chapter 96), when he reveals that the CCTV was not working?

This gap mirrors the earlier television sequence. In both cases, the framing directs attention toward immediate reaction—surprise, concern, intervention—while obscuring the conditions that made the situation possible. The question is not only what is seen, but what is withheld. Besides, observe that the fighter’s reply “We just got there” (chapter 96) seems to imply that it was not the case for the manager, which would explain why he knew about the broken CCTV.

Resistance and Distortion

This failure can be understood more precisely if we consider mediation as a system of circulation. Information, pressure, and expectation move continuously through the athlete’s environment. Management functions as a regulator of this flow—maintaining balance and preventing overload.

What we observe instead is the introduction of resistance. Resistance does not stop the flow; it transforms it. The information still reaches Joo Jaekyung—but no longer in a form that can be integrated. It arrives as pressure, as judgment, as an external gaze that destabilizes rather than supports.

Yosep relays the interview. Park Namwook allows—or in the best case fails to prevent—the broadcast. Both don’t report the intrusion of external events into the training space on time. In all these cases, they do not absorb or transform pressure before it reaches the athlete. They transmit it in a form that intensifies its impact. Their interactions stand in opposition to his relationship with Kim Dan which brought sparks in his life.

Energy is not removed from the system—it is converted to heat. (chapter 96) This transformation is not abstract. It is rendered directly in the body of the athlete. His breathing becomes labored, his skin flushed, his eyes reddened—as if the system itself were overheating. The excess cannot circulate; it accumulates.

What could have been directed toward performance becomes agitation. In this sense, the athlete is no longer simply exposed to pressure—he becomes its site of conversion. The system does not regulate energy; it displaces it, forcing the body to absorb what should have been filtered. Their role as managers does not disappear—it degrades. They continue to mediate, but only as points of resistance within the circuit, distorting the very flow they are meant to regulate.

And once this distortion is introduced, its effects are immediate: The athlete is not simply informed—he is destabilized. Even after his outburst at the gym, Joo Jaekyung does not collapse into uncontrolled reaction. When confronted with Kim Dan’s words and actions (chapter 96), he does not raise his voice. (chapter 96) He articulates his thoughts (chapter 96), maintains composure, and—most importantly— (chapter 96) attends to the other’s response before leaving. (chapter 96) This detail matters.

It reveals that the disturbance does not entirely override his capacity for regulation. The system overheats, but he does not fully give in to that state. Instead, he attempts to contain it. That’s why we can not say that the champion is like before. He has changed a lot, even much more than the physical therapist.

The imbalance, therefore, becomes more apparent. The failure does not lie in an absence of control within the athlete, but in the conditions imposed upon him. What should have been regulated externally is forced inward. He is left to process, absorb, and manage pressures that were never filtered.

In this sense, his composure is not evidence of stability—it is evidence of compensation.

The Architecture of Friction

If the first scene in episode 95 is structured by absence and intrusion, the second office scene introduces a different configuration: enclosure.

The glass door is closed. (chapter 95) At first glance, its transparency suggests continuity—the inside and the outside remain visually connected. And yet, the author frames the door in a way that emphasizes secrecy, separation rather than openness. The image functions less as a window than as a boundary.

This becomes clearer when we contrast two perspectives. (chapter 95) From within the office, the gym is reduced to indistinct chatter. Voices are present, but blurred, stripped of clarity and meaning. What was previously intrusive—the gazes, the noise, the surrounding activity—is now filtered, contained, pushed into the background.

But from the outside, the configuration appears entirely different. Through the glass, Joo Jaekyung should be visible. The space is not fully sealed; it remains exposed to observation. The boundary does not operate symmetrically. This asymmetry is crucial.

The office isolates him from participation, but not from visibility. He is removed from interaction, yet remains within sight. The result is not protection, but a controlled form of exposure—one in which the outside is muted for him, while he himself remains visible to the outside, but not accessible. (chapter 95) In this sense, the door does not simply separate two spaces. It reorganizes their relationship.

What disappears is not the presence of others, but the possibility of exchange. And yet, the office introduces a second layer of distortion—one that concerns not only interaction, but the staging of authority. (chapter 95) We are not allowed to see inside the office through the glass door. (chapter 95) The frame isolates the sign: Director’s Office. Function is foregrounded, identity withheld. The question of who truly occupies that role remains suspended.

Inside, the spatial arrangement resolves this ambiguity—without fully clarifying it. (chapter 95) The couch is positioned in front of the desk, not behind it. Park Namwook sits on that couch, facing Joo Jaekyung. He does not occupy the desk itself—the formal seat of authority remains physically unclaimed. And yet, the alignment of the space creates a different effect.

Because the couch is not neutral. It is placed directly within the axis of the desk. Sitting there, Park Namwook is not behind authority, but projected through it. The desk stands behind him like a backdrop, a silent structure that frames his position and lends it weight. This configuration produces a subtle inversion.

He does not sit at the desk— but the desk sits behind him. And that is enough to transform perception. From this position, he speaks as if the authority associated with the desk extended forward into the space he occupies. His words (chapter 95) —evaluations, warnings, directives—are no longer those of a participant within a shared process. (chapter 95) They take on the tone of someone who assesses from above, even though his position does not formally grant him that role.

At the same time, the visual field reinforces this ambiguity. (chapter 95) The diplomas and titles—belonging to the gym, to Team Black, to the fighter’s achievements—are aligned within the same spatial frame. They are not his, and yet they appear within his field of authority.

The result is not explicit appropriation, but positional absorption. He does not claim ownership. He occupies the frame in which ownership is displayed. This is what destabilizes the interaction. Because Joo Jaekyung, seated opposite him, is no longer addressed as a collaborator within preparation. He is positioned as the one being evaluated—measured against standards that are invoked from a place that is only partially legitimate.

Authority, here, does not reside in the desk itself. It emerges from the alignment between space, position, and speech. Under this new light, it becomes comprehensible why Park Namwook was surprised, when the sportsman selected the new physical therapist himself. (chapter 54) He imagined that the celebrity would entrust him the selection. To conclude, Park Namwook’s seat is not random. He represents a hindrance to the fighter’s emancipation, becoming the director of a gym.

Speech, Gaze, and the Burden Shift

Within this enclosed space, the manager’s discourse does not merely fill the silence—it structures it. His speech follows a consistent pattern (chapter 95), one that does not distinguish between statements and questions in the way one might expect. At first glance, he appears to ask. (chapter 95) (chapter 95)

But these questions do not function as openings. They do not create space for an answer, nor do they suspend judgment. On the contrary, they are immediately followed—sometimes within the same sequence—by conclusions that override any possible response:

Besides, when he observes (chapter 95), readers can detect a pattern emerging.

Each question anticipates its own answer. Each one narrows the field of meaning before the athlete can speak. There is no pause, no waiting, no negotiation. The form of dialogue is present, but its function is absent. Hence it turns more into a monologue, where the manager actually reveals his own desires and dreams. He wants to be remembered as the one behind the star’s success.

The sequence is revealing. The question does not lead to understanding; it leads directly to judgment. It serves as a transition, not toward exchange, but toward interpretation. What could have remained open is immediately closed. In this sense, the distinction between question and statement collapses. Both operate within the same structure: they define rather than explore, they impose rather than receive.

The misperception becomes even more striking when we consider the direction of Joo Jaekyung’s gaze. (chapter 95) It is not directed downward, as the phrase “rock bottom” would suggest. It shifts sideways, through the glass door, toward the outside. His attention is not absent, but displaced. He is focused elsewhere: he is observing Kim Dan interacting with the other members. Contrary to the past, he is no longer reacting violently. The jealousy has vanished from his gaze. Park Namwook misrecognizes this movement. He translates lateral orientation into vertical collapse, converting a gaze toward the outside into evidence of inner deficiency. What exceeds his framework is not explored; it is redefined.

This misrecognition is not incidental. It reveals the limits of the system through which he perceives the athlete. The gaze toward the outside signals precisely what had already been established: the disruption of the transition between life and sport. The external world has not been left behind. It persists, intrudes, and continues to shape the athlete’s state. He is not allowed to become a human it; he has to remain in the sport world.

But within Park Namwook’s framework, such a condition cannot be acknowledged. For him, there is no meaningful space outside performance. (chapter 95) There is no transition to negotiate, no boundary to maintain. There is only the fight. What appears, from this perspective, as distraction is therefore reinterpreted as failure. What is, in fact, a tension between two spheres is reduced to a flaw within one.

This reduction structures everything that follows. (chapter 95) If he loses the title, he will be reduced to nothing. What is striking is not only what is said, but what is systematically excluded. The recent intrusion—the broadcast, the circulating narratives, the external gaze—is never acknowledged as a possible cause. Its impact on the athlete’s mental state is not considered. Instead, the problem is located entirely within Joo Jaekyung himself. The disturbance originates outside, yet the responsibility is reassigned inside.

By framing the issue as a matter of “focus” or “headspace,” Park Namwook transforms a complex configuration into an individual deficit. The athlete is no longer someone reacting to pressure; he becomes someone failing to meet a standard.

This logic extends into action. When Joo Jaekyung is struck during training (chapter 95), the same structure reappears. There is no attempt to understand why the mistake occurred, no effort to connect it to distraction, fatigue, or accumulated pressure. Instead, the moment is isolated: “How could you let that punch land?” The error is treated as self-contained, detached from the conditions that might explain it. He shows no sign of empathy in the end.

Speech, here, does not investigate. It attributes. And it is at this point that speech, gaze, and gesture converge.

When Park Namwook places his hand on Joo Jaekyung’s shoulder (chapter 95), the contact appears supportive. It suggests reassurance, proximity, perhaps even solidarity. Yet within this configuration, the gesture performs a different function. It does not distribute the burden; it fixes it. The shoulder—site of weight and endurance—becomes the point at which responsibility is anchored. What has already been established through language is now reinforced through touch: everything depends on the athlete. At the same time, this gesture negates the existence of the shoulder injury and surgery.

The rhetoric intensifies this compression. The match is framed in absolute terms, almost as a matter of life and death. Alternatives disappear. Nuance disappears. What remains is a binary: perform or fail. (chapter 95) Within such a framework, there is no space left for external influence, emotional disturbance, or personal life. These dimensions are not contested; they are excluded in advance.

This narrowing of perception is also visible in the gaze. In one panel, Park Namwook’s eyes are fully rendered—sharp, focused, unequivocal. (chapter 95) This clarity signals a mode of perception that has already appeared elsewhere. When he looks at the main lead and calls him “fresh meat” (chapter 74), the same logic is at work. The individual is not encountered as a subject, but classified as a function, reduced to a body that can be evaluated and positioned.

The same reduction governs his reaction to the vandalized poster (chapter 96). His anger is immediate, but its object is telling. He does not interpret the act as hostility or as a symbolic attack directed at Joo Jaekyung. Instead, he speaks of damage, of responsibility, of compensation. The act is translated into material loss. What matters is not what it signifies, but what it costs. At the same time, he imagines that this is the work of a single person! But the broken CCTV (chapter 96) implies that different people were working together.

Meaning disappears. Across these moments, a coherent framework emerges. The fighter is treated as a body, the title as an objective, the image as an asset. Everything is brought back to function and value. Within such a system, there is no place for what cannot be measured or controlled. This is why no question can remain open, why no answer can be explored. To do so would require acknowledging that something lies beyond performance—that the athlete’s state might be shaped by forces that cannot be immediately quantified.

Speech and gaze align. They produce the same effect: a world in which only performance is visible, and everything that exceeds it is excluded. The consequence is a complete displacement of responsibility. What originates from the outside—the pressure, the exposure, the intrusion—is redefined as coming from within. The athlete becomes both the site and the cause of the problem.

And this has a direct impact on his relationships. If everything is reduced to performance, then anything that does not serve that function becomes secondary, if not obstructive. There is no conceptual space for Kim Dan within this framework. (chapter 95) Between the fighter and the title, no third position can be sustained. The growing distance between them is not arbitrary; it is structured. As the burden becomes internalized, it can no longer be shared. And now, you comprehend why later in front of the huge window, Joo Jaekyung chose to listen to his “hyung”. (chapter 95)

What appears as rejection is, in fact, the effect of a system in which there is no room for anything that cannot be reduced to function. The disturbance becomes perceptible not only in absence or timing, but in the way bodies are no longer allowed to coexist within the same space. That’s why the physical therapist was separated from his mate by the glass door.

And this is why the rupture (chapter 96) that follows does not emerge suddenly. It is already inscribed within this configuration—within a logic that isolates, reduces, and ultimately separates.

Static Presence

If the office reveals a system in which speech imposes and reduces, the scene on the beach appears, at first glance, to offer its opposite. (chapter 95) The spatial configuration changes immediately. There is no barrier, no desk, no imposed hierarchy. (chapter 95) Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan sit side by side, aligned within the same horizontal plane. The asymmetry that structured the office—front versus opposite, speaker versus evaluated—seems to dissolve. The scene suggests proximity, even equality.

And yet, this alignment remains incomplete. Joo Jaekyung makes a promise first. His words introduce a form of commitment that exceeds the logic of performance: (chapter 95) The statement appears unconditional. It gestures toward continuity beyond the fight, beyond the system that had previously defined him. It is not framed as strategy, nor as obligation, but as presence.

But this movement does not return to him. (chapter 95) The promise is unilateral. There is no reciprocal formulation, no mirrored commitment, no re-articulation of the bond from the other side. What is offered outward is not taken up and extended; it remains suspended.

The image makes this asymmetry visible. (chapter 95) In Kim Dan’s gaze, Joo Jaekyung is not reflected. What appears instead is the lighthouse in the distance. At first glance, this suggests a displacement: the athlete’s presence does not fully register within his field of vision.

But this detail carries a second implication, if you compare it to the athlete’s night, where he felt relieved that Kim Dan was alive: (chapter 69) This panel implied that Kim Dan had become his whole world. The comparison exposes that the athlete is still not in the center of his life yet. The lighthouse is not only an external point of orientation. (chapter 95) It also reflects a position that Kim Dan begins to assume. Stable, distant, constant—it does not move toward the other; it remains where it is, offering direction without entering the movement itself.

In this sense, the gaze does not simply turn away from Joo Jaekyung. It aligns with a role. Kim Dan does not step into the relational space opened by the promise. He situates himself beside it, as a fixed point rather than as a participant. What Joo Jaekyung offers is presence—“I’ll always be in your corner.” What Kim Dan adopts is function: to remain steady, to support, to endure.

This is why the promise remains unilateral. It is not rejected. It is not contradicted. But it is not mirrored either. It is received from a distance, translated into a different register. The response (chapter 95) acknowledges the gesture without entering into it. The exchange closes without becoming mutual.

What emerges here is not rejection, but non-reciprocity. And yet, this position is not without expectation. To become a lighthouse is also to be looked at.

Even if he does not fully engage with the promise, Kim Dan places himself in a position of orientation—someone who remains, who supports, who is “there.” This stability carries an implicit hope: that the other will return to it, will recognize it, will rely on it. This position also sheds light on another element that remains present, yet unaddressed: Joo Jaekyung’s insomnia. (chapter 91) It lingers in the background, acknowledged but never truly treated. And yet, it is not incidental. Insomnia signals the inability to withdraw, to interrupt exposure, to let the body enter a different rhythm. In this sense, it mirrors the function of the lighthouse. A lighthouse remains on—it stabilizes, but it does not allow rest. Kim Dan’s care operates in a similar way: constant, attentive, but not rhythmic. It keeps the athlete oriented, but does not create the conditions for him to “switch off.” What appears as support therefore also sustains the very state it fails to resolve.

This metaphor is what makes the following moment so revealing. When Joo Jaekyung leaves the next morning without turning back and replying (chapter 96), without reestablishing that line of orientation, the structure collapses. What had been silently assumed—being seen, being turned toward—is no longer confirmed.

The wound does not emerge from contradiction. It emerges from absence. Kim Dan is not rejected in words. He is not dismissed explicitly. (chapter 96) But the position he has taken—the one of quiet constancy, of supportive presence—is not acknowledged. The lighthouse remains, but no one looks at it. Striking is that before the champion left, the doctor tried to reconnect with him by wishing him good luck.He is modest and hesitant. (chapter 96) At first glance, this appears simple. But it is not neutral. It is a repetition. Kim Dan tries to reactivate a shared ritual—the one established after the night in Paris.(chapter 87) A moment where touch, words, and intention aligned. (chapter 87) A moment where connection was not abstract, but embodied. (chapter 87) But in front of the entrance, something is missing. (chapter 96) The hands do not meet. Under this new light, it becomes comprehensible why the star did not reply to the physical therapist’s words. (chapter 96) He feared to waver. He is now treating the physical therapist as a distraction and a weakness.

The structure of the gesture is reproduced (chapter 96) —the wish, the proximity, the intention—but its core element is absent. There is no joining of hands, no shared contact that would anchor the exchange in the body. The movement remains incomplete. And it was the same on the beach.

There is no joining of hands, no shared contact that would anchor the exchange in the body. The movement remains incomplete.

And this absence is decisive. Because in the earlier scene, the hand was not just a gesture—it was the point of synchronization. It created a circuit: touch, recognition, response. The body confirmed what the words suggested. Here, that circuit does not close. Joo Jaekyung responds—he takes the hand, he squeezes it, he even leans closer, whispering: (chapter 87) But what he asks for reveals the shift. (chapter 87) He does not reciprocate the wish. He redirects it. The gesture is no longer shared—it is instrumentalized. The touch does not establish equality; it becomes a means. What is requested is not mutual presence, but support directed toward a single objective: the fight. (chapter 87) And yet, beneath this request, something else becomes visible. What he asks for is not only strength. It is connection. The whisper, the closeness, the physical proximity—all point toward a need that exceeds performance. But this need is not articulated as such. It remains displaced, translated into the language of the match. “Give me strength” replaces “stay with me.”

This is why the moment remains unresolved. Because what Joo Jaekyung seeks is not what Kim Dan offers—and what Kim Dan attempts to offer is not what Joo Jaekyung is able to receive. The misalignment persists, but it shifts its form. Kim Dan reaches through repetition (chapter 96) —through ritual, through care, through a reconstruction of what once connected them.
Joo Jaekyung reaches through intensity—through touch, through urgency, through a need that he cannot fully name.

But the two movements do not coincide. And this is where the earlier observation becomes fully visible. Kim Dan is not rejected in words. He is not dismissed explicitly. But the position he has taken—the one of quiet constancy, of supportive presence—is no longer acknowledged. This means, that the lighthouse is no longer working.

And yet, this is precisely where the scene opens toward a future resolution. Because the image of joined hands — earlier echoed outside the narrative—suggests a moment that has not yet been reached. A point where gesture, intention, and response will finally align.

Where support is no longer unilateral. Where presence is no longer translated into function. Where touch is no longer redirected, but shared. In other words: a moment where they become a team.

This introduces a different form of misalignment than the one observed in the office.

There, the problem lay in imposed meaning—in a discourse that defined the athlete from the outside. Here, the misalignment takes the form of incomplete presence. The relation is not constrained by speech, but it is not fully inhabited either.

This becomes more visible when we follow Kim Dan’s position across subsequent scenes.

At the gym, he asks, “Are you okay, Mr Joo?” (chapter 95), but the question remains confined to the immediate, physical state. When the athlete is injured, he treats the symptom. He wipes the blood, observes the body, intervenes where necessary. But he does not investigate the cause. The question of why the injury occurred—what led to the lapse—is never pursued.

This orientation continues in the penthouse. (chapter 96) Care is translated into technique. Emotional tension is approached through physical intervention. The body becomes the site where the problem is managed, even when its origin lies elsewhere.

Even when he recognizes the external pressure (chapter 96); this recognition does not lead to inquiry. It remains observational, not relational. He does not question the narrative, nor its effects. He adapts to it. I doubt that he even watched the interview, as the former coach and director Hwang Byungchul got insulted and diminished. (chapter 96)

This is not indifference. It is a limitation. Kim Dan does care. But his care operates within defined boundaries. He approaches Joo Jaekyung as a patient, not as a subject whose experience must be understood in its entirety. He does not impose a framework, as Park Namwook does—but neither does he challenge one.

And this has consequences. If everything is reduced to performance, as in the manager’s framework, there is no space for relationship. But if care remains confined to function, there is no space for shared experience either.

Between the fighter and the title, Park Namwook leaves no room. Between the patient and the body, Kim Dan does not fully enter. In both cases, something remains unaddressed.Joo Jaekyung is neither fully defined nor fully understood. He is managed, he is treated, he is supported—but not met in the space where his experience actually unfolds.

And this is why the misalignment persists. Not because there is no care, but because care itself remains incomplete.

Functional Distance

The misalignment on the beach—where Kim Dan assumes the role of a lighthouse (chapter 95) —finds its physical conclusion in the refused gesture of Chapter 96. When Joo Jaekyung pushes the hand away (chapter 96), he is not merely rejecting a movement; he is rejecting the limitations of the role Kim Dan has chosen to inhabit.

In this moment, the “Lighthouse” stance becomes a psychological shield. For Dan, retreating into his role as a physiotherapist provides a sense of safety and professional boundaries. Hence he watches his loved one from afar the entire time. (chapter 95) But for Jaekyung, this boundary is experienced as abandonment. By attempting to “complete the treatment,” Dan tries to force the interaction back into a patient-doctor dynamic at a moment of profound emotional crisis. (chapter 96) He feels like he is not even recognized as a friend. (chapter 96)

This is the core of the dissonance: Dan offers a functional touch where Jaekyung requires a relational one. By focusing on the muscles, Dan treats the body as a “thing” to be fixed—an object of study rather than a subject of experience. He fixes the symptom (the tension) while avoiding the cause (the humiliation). The “Smack” of the rejection is the realization that as long as Dan is “treating” him, he doesn’t have to “know” him.

Jaekyung does not reject the therapy; he rejects the distance that the therapy maintains. He pushes the hand away because he recognizes that a lighthouse, while constant, is fundamentally inanimate. It can guide him through the storm, but it will never enter the water to help him swim.

The Walk As Deferred Synchrony

If the rest of Joo Jaekyung’s world is structured by management, performance, and functional roles, the hospital room in episode 94 introduces a radically different configuration. (chapter 94) The space is quiet, contained, almost suspended—and within it, a gesture occurs that does not follow the logic established elsewhere.

When Kim Dan’s grandmother reaches out to pat his cheek, the touch does not regulate, correct, or demand. (chapter 94) It is not a gesture of control, nor of care defined by function. It is, instead, a gesture of recognition and affection.

This distinction is decisive. Because when she says, (chapter 94) she does more than offer a blessing. She disrupts the entire structure through which Joo Jaekyung has been perceived. Until this moment, he exists within systems that reduce him: to a body that performs, to a fighter who must win, to a patient who must be stabilized. His value is always defined externally—by outcome, by function, by necessity.

Here, for the first time, he is addressed as a subject and even as a “child”. Not as someone who must achieve, but as someone who can be happy. And more importantly, that happiness is not imagined in isolation. It is articulated as relational, inseparable from Kim Dan’s own. The statement does not position him outside the bond, but within it. It creates a shared horizon—one that neither the manager’s discourse nor the medical framework had allowed to exist.

This moment does not yet produce synchrony. It creates the conditions for it. The grandmother’s touch does not establish a reciprocal exchange, but it opens a space in which such an exchange becomes thinkable. It introduces a possibility that exceeds both control and care: the possibility of being seen without being reduced. And this recognition carries weight.

Because it introduces a new form of burden—not the burden of the title, not the pressure to perform, but the burden of being acknowledged as someone whose life can be shared with another. From this point onward, Joo Jaekyung is no longer only confronted with expectations. He is confronted with a possibility he does not yet know how to inhabit.

What follows immediately after makes this even more explicit. (chapter 94) When the grandmother suggests that “the three of us can go for a walk,” the gesture shifts from recognition to movement. The proposal is not incidental. It translates what has just been opened into a concrete form.

Walking implies more than proximity. (chapter 47) It requires alignment—of direction, of rhythm, of time. It transforms a moment into a duration, a shared presence into a shared trajectory. It is, in its simplest form, the embodiment of synchrony. This observation outlines the contrast to the champion’s promise on the beach. (chapter 95) They did not walk together, they remained seated. That’s why their lack of alignement was not truly perceptible.

And the stroll introduces something new: a structure of togetherness. Not a dyad, but a triad—the three of us. A temporary, fragile configuration that resembles a family. Not defined by roles, but by movement. Not by function, but by coexistence.

But this movement does not occur. Kim Dan refuses—gently, almost imperceptibly. “It’s late… we’ll go next time.” The refusal is not confrontational. It does not reject the connection. But it postpones it. And this postponement is decisive.

Because the synchrony that had just become possible is deferred. The transition from recognition to shared experience is interrupted. The moment remains suspended, unfulfilled. This hesitation reveals something fundamental about Kim Dan’s position.

He receives the grandmother’s words, but does not fully step into what they imply. (chapter 96) He remains within the logic that has defined him: that of care, of responsibility, of quiet support. Like the lighthouse that appears in his gaze, he positions himself as a fixed point—present, reliable, but distant. He does not move. He doesn’t follow his heart. And yet, to walk would require precisely that: to leave that position, to enter into a shared rhythm, to participate rather than to stabilize. Kim Dan cares, but he cares as a fixed point. He watches the ship struggle against the narrative, but he stays on the shore. The grandmother offers a rhythm. Kim Dan offers a delay. And in that gap, the walk remains a ghost, and the touch remains a dissonance.

This is where the misalignment begins to take shape. Because while the grandmother opens a space of relation, neither of them fully occupies it. Joo Jaekyung is confronted with a possibility he cannot yet sustain. Kim Dan is offered a movement he does not yet recognize. The result is not failure, but deferral. And this deferral reverberates through what follows.

But this is precisely where another form of presence emerges—one that operates through absence. During the night in the penthouse, Joo Jaekyung does not think of the grandmother. (chapter 95) Her words are not recalled, her figure is not evoked, her request is not consciously revisited. On the surface, she is absent. And yet, this absence is deceptive.

Because what structures his reflection in that moment is not the memory of her voice, but the transformation it has already produced. The opposition that surfaces—(chapter 95) —is no longer stable. It is immediately unsettled by another voice, another possibility: (chapter 95) And what follows is not an abstract idea. It is an image. Kim Dan appears. (chapter 95) This shift is decisive. The grandmother is not present as a figure, but as a function. She has already altered the internal configuration through which Joo Jaekyung perceives himself. Her gesture has been absorbed, displaced, and translated into a new form of questioning.

In this sense, she is no longer external to him. She has entered his inner world. Not as a memory—but as a structure. (chapter 95) This is why her absence matters. Because it reveals that the disturbance does not require constant visibility to persist. It has already taken root. The question she introduced—of a life beyond performance, of a relation beyond function—continues to operate, even when she is no longer present.

And it operates through Kim Dan. That’s the reason why the champion pushes away the physical therapist. The image that interrupts the logic of victory is not the grandmother—it is him. This substitution is not accidental. It shows that the possibility she opened is now anchored in their relationship.

But this anchoring remains unstable. Because while Kim Dan appears within that internal space, the relation itself has not yet reached synchrony. The image is present, but the connection is not yet fully realized.

This is what intensifies the tension.

The grandmother’s intervention has already reshaped the internal landscape. (chapter 94) It has introduced a new axis—one that opposes performance to relation, victory to something else that remains undefined, but essential. But this axis is not yet resolved. It exists as a fracture. And from this point onward, absence no longer signifies emptiness. It signifies transformation. What is no longer visible has already begun to act.

The recognition cannot be undone—but it cannot yet be realized either. It lingers, as a possibility that remains out of reach. It transforms the meaning of subsequent gestures, without stabilizing them.

What emerges from this configuration is no longer only an internal fracture within Joo Jaekyung, but the outline of an external conflict that has yet to fully surface. Because the three logics that now surround him cannot coexist indefinitely. On one side, Park Namwook—and beyond him, the structure of the MFC—continues to operate within a closed system of performance. Within this framework, there is no space for anything that does not directly serve the fight. (chapter 96) Thus the physical therapist is not included in the meeting. Distraction must be eliminated, influence must be controlled, and relationships are tolerated only insofar as they remain functional. The body must remain available, and the mind aligned.

On the other side, Kim Dan represents something that this system cannot fully integrate. Not because he opposes it openly, but because his presence introduces a different logic—one that is not reducible to performance. (chapter 95) Even in its incomplete form, his care interrupts the continuity of the system. It creates pauses, displacements, moments where the athlete is no longer entirely absorbed into the role assigned to him.

Up to this point, this tension has remained diffuse. It has manifested as misalignment, as silence, as failed gestures. But the conditions are now in place for it to become explicit. Because what the system requires—and what Kim Dan begins to represent—are no longer compatible. For Park Namwook, there can be nothing between the fighter and the title. For Kim Dan, there is something else—though he has not yet fully claimed it. This is why the dissonance intensifies around touch, around presence, around time. These are precisely the points at which the two logics intersect.

And this is where the conflict will inevitably emerge. Not as a simple opposition between individuals, but as a confrontation between two ways of relating to Joo Jaekyung: one that reduces him to a function, and one that—however imperfectly—begins to recognize him as a subject. What has so far remained unspoken is therefore not absent. It is gathering.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Unseen 🖼️ Game of Life 🛝

In my previous essay, I ended with the observation that the photograph with the dogs (chapter 94) was not simply a charming childhood image. It already contained the traces of loss, even if Joo Jaekyung did not recognize it as such. What appeared to him as innocence and warmth concealed a reality that remained invisible to him. This is where I want to begin.

If we look more closely at these images, we realize that they do not merely show fragments of Kim Dan’s childhood. (chapter 94) They are traces of a life already shaped by forces that remain unseen. What appears as warmth and innocence is, in fact, embedded in a process of dispossession that has already begun.

In Jinx, there is one game that immediately comes to mind: Monopoly. (chapter 27) Each time it is played, it reveals a rigid structure. One player accumulates, the other is gradually dispossessed. There is no space for coexistence or shared success. Loss is not accidental. It is built into the rules.

And what makes this dynamic even more revealing is the way each of them reacted to that loss. One responds with anger, denouncing “highway robbery,” refusing to accept defeat. The other remains seated and resigned: (chapter 80) These reactions were not incidental. They already suggest two fundamentally different ways of inhabiting the game. One resists and attempts to escape. The other endures and adapts.This distinction becomes crucial in episode 94.

If we keep this in mind, we can sense the same logic in episode 94 again. It is already suggested by the way Kim Dan compliments the champion and views himself. When he admits, (chapter 94), he positions himself outside the logic of confrontation. He recognizes his lack of determination in the conventional sense. And yet, this does not place him outside the game. On the contrary, it reveals another mode of participation. His strength lies not in resistance, but in endurance, patience, and continuity.

This is where the structure becomes more complex. Because the same logic persists — only in a different form. This time, the game no longer takes place on a board. Instead of properties and rent, we are given photographs of a childhood (chapter 94). At first glance, they seem harmless. There is no visible competition, no immediate conflict, no explicit rules. What we see are moments of play: a child with a dog, a child offering a daisy, a child moving freely within his environment. These gestures suggest connection, spontaneity, and joy. They belong to a childhood experienced as something open and shared.

And yet, this is precisely what makes the scene deceptive. (chapter 94) Because if Monopoly makes loss visible, these images conceal it. What appears as play is already embedded in time, transformation, and conditions that remain outside the frame. The child is not competing, but he is not outside the system either. The game has not disappeared. It has become less visible.

This is why the photographs cannot be read as simple memories. (chapter 94) They do not present a complete story. They offer fragments. Some are clear, others overlap, and one remains partially hidden. This fragmentation is not accidental. It requires reconstruction. We have to put them together, like pieces of a puzzle. And this raises a simple question.

And this immediately raises a question. How many pictures are actually shown in this scene? Most readers would answer: four. (chapter 94) And yet, this answer is incomplete. One image remains partially concealed, almost erased by another. (chapter 94) It is easy to overlook, and that is precisely why it matters. Because once we begin to count more carefully, we also begin to see more precisely.

The images are not arranged randomly. They suggest a sequence. If we pay attention to clothing, landscape, and atmosphere, a pattern begins to emerge: spring, summer, autumn, winter. Childhood is not presented as a fixed and single moment, but as a cycle unfolding over time. This is where The Unseen Game of Life becomes visible.

The game is no longer limited to possession or victory. It unfolds through time, through what is shown and what is hidden, through what is remembered and what is ignored. It shapes not only outcomes, but experiences. It determines what kind of childhood is lived — and what remains invisible, even when it is right in front of us.

And this is where Joo Jaekyung’s position becomes revealing. He understands perfectly how to play Monopoly — not only within the game (chapter 80), but also in reality, as he owns several properties. But he does not immediately understand what these photographs represent. What he sees are pleasant memories. (chapter 94) And when he takes pictures of these pictures, his gesture exposes the limit of his perception. He preserves what is visible, not what it signifies. The stylistic shift reinforces this moment. Rendered as a chibi, the “Emperor” is momentarily stripped of his predatory gaze. His perspective is simplified, almost purified. He no longer sees Kim Dan as a function or a role, but as a cute and sensitive child. And yet, this remains incomplete. He captures the image, but not the structure behind it. He perceives the warmth, but not the cost that made it possible. He sees the surface of a life, but not the forces that shaped it.

This is why the game remains unseen.

Reconstructing a Childhood

If the photographs in episode 94 function like pieces of a puzzle, then the first step is not to interpret them immediately, but to examine them carefully. What do they show, and in what order should they be read? A closer look reveals that these are not static portraits, but carefully selected glimpses of Kim Dan’s childhood, each marked by a distinct posture, season, and emotional tone.

A closer look reveals that these are not static portraits, but carefully selected glimpses of Kim Dan’s childhood, each marked by a distinct posture, season, and emotional tone. (chapter 94) At first glance, these images appear simple. They are structured around play, companionship, and small gestures of joy: a child holding a puppy, offering a daisy, moving freely through his environment. In this sense, they seem to confirm what we might expect from childhood. Life appears light, open, and shared.

It is precisely this impression that makes Kim Dan’s confession on the beach so revealing. When he tells Joo Jaekyung that he has been working diligently since childhood (chapter 94), he constructs a clear contrast between them. The champion appears as someone shaped by effort from an early age, while he implicitly presents himself as someone who did not follow the same path. The statement suggests that determination belongs to one, and not to the other. This formulation echoes the logic we have already seen in Monopoly (chapter 80) In that game, positions are unequal from the very beginning. One player accumulates, the other is gradually dispossessed. What matters is not only the outcome, but the way each player responds to it. One resists, protests, and refuses defeat. The other accepts the loss and remains seated. Over time, this difference becomes internalized. The rules of the game are no longer questioned. They are absorbed.

This is precisely what happens in Kim Dan’s confession. He does not simply describe a difference. He accepts it as natural. He interprets Joo Jaekyung’s strength as something inherent, while reducing his own past to a lack. In doing so, he unknowingly adopts the logic of the game itself: one rises, the other yields.

And yet, this is where the photographs introduce a rupture. Because the child they show is not yet playing by these rules. One detail emerges with striking consistency: Kim Dan is always at the center of the image. (chapter 94) The photographs are not landscapes, nor are they focused on objects or environments. They are structured around him. He is the one being held, the one running, the one interacting, the one offering the flower. The gaze that frames these images is directed toward him. This has concrete implications. The child we see is not neglected. He is well dressed. His clothes are clean, varied, and appropriate to the seasons. He is also well fed. As his grandmother later remarks, he had a “hearty appetite as a kid” (chapter 94). These are not insignificant details. They indicate that, at this stage, his basic needs were met. He was cared for.

This stands in sharp contrast to his present situation. When Joo Jaekyung observes Kim Dan’s living conditions, he notices the absence of clothing (chapter 80). The wardrobe is nearly empty. The implication is immediate: Kim Dan does not spend money on himself. This observation is confirmed by his own behavior. He uses his savings for others. He pays for his grandmother’s needs (chapter 41) and later spends a significant amount on a gift for Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 42). This repetition is not incidental. It reveals a pattern: Kim Dan directs resources outward, not inward. He prioritizes others over himself. Even his relationship to food reflects this shift. As an adult, he skips meals when he is stressed, despite having once eaten well.

The contrast is therefore unmistakable. In the photographs, Kim Dan is the center of care. In the present, he has become the one who provides it. This inversion is crucial for understanding the structure of his life. The child who was once supported, fed, and dressed by others now assumes that role himself. Care has not disappeared. It has been reversed. This is what Kim Dan’s confession fails to recognize. (chapter 94) His statement on the beach creates the illusion that Joo Jaekyung alone was shaped by discipline and hardship, while he himself remained outside that logic. But the photographs reveal a different truth. They do not show a child who lacked strength. They show a child who had not yet been forced to transform strength into sacrifice. He was not yet responsible. He was not yet the one who gave. He was the one who received.

That is why these images matter so much. They do not simply preserve moments of happiness. They document a time before the rules of the game fully took hold of him. They reveal that Kim Dan’s later endurance did not emerge from a lack of determination, but from the reversal of a position he once occupied. What he now mistakes for weakness is, in fact, the trace of a childhood that was interrupted.

And yet, this is only one part of the story. If we read these images more carefully, a different structure begins to emerge.

The bodily positions already tell us something important. In one image, Kim Dan is held in his grandmother’s arms. (chapter 94) His body is supported, carried, entirely dependent. In another, he is sitting on a step while holding a puppy close to his chest. (chapter 94) In the field, he stands on his own two feet and extends a daisy toward the person behind the camera. (chapter 94) In the almost hidden image, only one foot is visible, lifted off the ground: this is enough to conclude that he is running. (chapter 94) And in the photograph mentioned by Joo Jaekyung, he is seated on his grandmother’s lap among hydrangeas. (chapter 94) These positions are not accidental. They show a child who is allowed to inhabit many different states: dependence, stillness, affection, upright autonomy, movement. He is not fixed in one role. He is carried, he holds, he stands, he runs, he rests. Before we even interpret the backgrounds, the body already suggests a childhood marked by freedom.

This impression is reinforced by the objects that accompany him. In the image with the daisy, the flower is not simply part of the setting. It is held out toward the photographer. (chapter 94) The daisy, a simple wildflower, is traditionally associated with innocence, sincerity, and unfiltered joy. Unlike cultivated flowers, it grows freely, without constraint. By offering it, Kim Dan does not only interact with the person behind the camera, he shares something that belongs to his world. The gesture suggests trust, openness, and a spontaneous desire to connect.

A similar dynamic can be observed in the photograph with the puppy and the dog. (chapter 94) Animals, especially young ones, are often used to symbolize vulnerability, affection, and instinctive attachment. The puppy in his arms mirrors the child himself: small, fragile, and in need of care. At the same time, the presence of the adult dog introduces a second layer, that of protection and loyalty. Kim Dan is not alone in this image. He is part of a small relational world built on closeness and mutual dependence.

These elements are not incidental. They reinforce the impression that this is a childhood shaped not only by movement and freedom, but also by affection. The daisy, the puppy, and even the way these moments are framed suggest that the child is seen through a gentle and attentive gaze. They let transpire that he was loved. In other words, they actually prove my theory about his parents: he was raised by loving and caring parents. Hence he is placed in the center of the photography. But there exists another evidence for this interpretation: Joo Jaekyung’s lack of photos suggests he was never “beheld” with that same gentle gaze. If Dan was raised in a “natural cycle” (seasons, animals), Jaekyung was raised in an “industrial cycle” (results, training, utility). (chapter 94) Hence his only picture in his childhood is linked to a tournament and boxing.

This freedom becomes even clearer once the photographs are arranged in seasonal order. (chapter 94) The baby picture most likely belongs to early spring. The adults around him wear light jackets and scarves, which suggests cold but transitional weather rather than deep winter. Since Kim Dan was born on December 26th, this scene can plausibly be placed only a few months later. The woman on the far left wears a floral sleeve beneath a dark cardigan, a detail that subtly reinforces the idea of seasonal transition. Spring, then, is not only the season of beginnings. It is also the season in which Kim Dan first appears within a circle of adults, still dependent, still held, and still emotionally tied to others.

The image with the daisy comes later. (chapter 94) Here Kim Dan is dressed lightly, standing in an open field and offering the flower toward the photographer. The flower itself matters. Daisies belong to late spring or early summer, but they also symbolize simplicity, innocence, and spontaneous joy. Unlike a cultivated bouquet, a daisy is modest and wild. Kim Dan does not merely hold it for himself. He presents it. This gesture suggests trust, openness, and delight in shared attention. It is an image of a child for whom the world is still something to be explored and offered, not defended against.

The hydrangea photograph mentioned by Joo Jaekyung provides the clearest seasonal anchor. Kim Dan is wearing shorts and a short-sleeved T-shirt, and the hydrangeas behind him are in full bloom. (chapter 94) This places the image firmly in summer. Yet what matters here is not only the season, but the atmosphere. In contrast to the daisy picture, where he stands independently and reaches outward, he is now seated on his grandmother’s lap. Summer here does not simply symbolize expansion, but also fullness and protection. It is a moment of warmth, abundance, and secure intimacy. If spring marks origin and the daisy image marks early openness, the hydrangea scene represents the height of childhood ease but also its imminent ending.

The dog picture introduces a different mood. (chapter 94) Kim Dan is no longer in an open field, but in a structured outdoor hallway. Around him we can identify a trolley, a watering can, large containers, and in the background a large chimney. There is also a patterned door with birds and flowers, which echoes the decorative logic of the later cabinet without being the same object. These details suggest a hybrid environment where living and working coexist. His clothes are warmer than in the summer pictures, which indicates a drop in temperature. This does not allow us to assign the season with total certainty, but the heavier clothing, the functional setting, and the disappearance of open flowering landscapes point more convincingly toward late summer or early autumn. Symbolically, this matters. Autumn is the season of transition, upkeep, and preparation. The carefree openness of earlier pictures begins to recede. At the same time, this image introduces class more clearly than the others. The child still appears affectionate and gentle, but the world around him is already marked by labor, maintenance, and material necessity.

Finally, the hidden image completes the cycle. (chapter 94) Only fragments are visible: one foot in motion, a fence, a pale surface that resembles snow, and what looks like a hill in the background. Since only one foot is shown, the child must be running. This is not a posed portrait but a captured instant. The suggestion of snow or frost, together with the more closed landscape, points toward winter or perhaps late fall. The symbolism here is different from the others. Winter is not simply the season of hardship. In this sequence, it is the season of movement, exposure, and unfolding time. The child is no longer merely being shown. He is already in motion. This is not without significance. Kim Dan was born on December 26th, at the very beginning of winter. In this context, winter does not represent an end, but a point of origin. It marks a beginning that unfolds under conditions of cold and vulnerability, but also one that requires inner warmth and resilience. Rather than opposing warmth, winter redefines it. Since winter is his birth season and his “running” season, it suggests that Dan’s natural state is one of internal resilience. He is a “winter child”—he doesn’t need the sun to thrive; he generates his own warmth. This explains why he could survive next to Jaekyung’s distance. It is no longer given by the environment, but must be created and preserved. In this sense, winter becomes the season in which growth takes place in a less visible, more internal way.

Taken together, these images form a full cycle: spring with the baby in arms, late spring or early summer with the daisy, summer with the hydrangeas, late summer or early autumn with the puppy, and winter with the running child. The author does not show only growth, but a childhood unfolding through the seasons. This is not insignificant. Seasons imply rhythm, continuity, and immersion in a living world. Kim Dan’s childhood is therefore associated not with institutional milestones, but with natural time. That already tells us something about the kind of child he was and the kind of life he came from.

The symbolism of the clothes strengthens this reading. As a baby, he wears clothes patterned with little sweets (chapter 94), an image of softness and indulgence, as if childhood were still associated with comfort and delight. Later, he appears in a shirt with a duck, another gentle and playful motif. (chapter 94) These patterns are not random. They connect him to a childlike world of animals, tenderness, and whimsy. They suggest that he was once seen and dressed as a child who could be cute, soft, and playful. This matters all the more because, later in life, that softness will be reinterpreted as weakness.

Another recurring feature deserves attention. What matters is not whether Kim Dan’s eyes are open or closed, but how he relates to the presence behind the camera (chapter 94). In several photographs, he appears visibly aware of that presence. (chapter 94) In the image with the daisy, for instance, his eyes are closed, yet his gesture and expression clearly indicate engagement. He is blushing, smiling, and extending the flower outward. This is not withdrawal, but a form of shy openness. The gesture only makes sense if someone is there to receive it. The photograph captures an interaction. The child responds to the observer, and the observer is implicitly included in the scene.

A similar attentiveness can be sensed in other images, where his gaze is directed outward, alert and receptive. In these moments, Kim Dan appears fully present to the world and to the person who is looking at him. The photographs do not merely record him. They suggest a relationship with the photographer.

By contrast, the hydrangea photograph introduces a shift. (chapter 94) Here, Kim Dan is seated on his grandmother’s lap, and the composition is entirely centered on the two figures. There is no outward gesture, no attempt to reach beyond the frame. The scene is closed. The person behind the camera is no longer included in the same way, but remains outside, observing. The child is no longer interacting with that presence, but contained within a relationship that is already defined.

This does not diminish the warmth of the image, but it alters its structure. What was previously a shared moment becomes a framed intimacy. The child is no longer primarily engaged with the world around him, but situated within it. The difference is subtle, yet decisive. The closing of the frame mirrors the closing of his world; the open fields of the daisy photo (chapter 94) are replaced by the protective, yet narrow, lap of his grandmother. This picture announces Kim Dan’s imminent loss of innocence due to his parents’ vanishing.

This is what the photographs finally show about Kim Dan. He is presented as a child of openness rather than control, of movement rather than discipline, of relation rather than domination. He belongs to fields, flowers, animals, changing seasons, and spaces where work and life overlap. In other words, he embodies nature. He can be held, he can hold, he can stand, he can run. He is not yet trapped in one function. At the same time, the backgrounds complicate the apparent innocence of these scenes. The dog picture in particular reveals that this freedom existed within a modest environment already touched by labor and transformation. Kim Dan’s childhood, then, cannot be reduced either to pure happiness or to pure suffering. It appears instead as a life suspended between warmth and fragility, between natural abundance and quiet precarity.

This is precisely why these images matter so much. They do not simply preserve a past. They reveal a child who was still able to inhabit the world freely, even though the conditions of that freedom were already beginning to change. And that is where the unseen game starts to take shape.

A Changing Landscape

If the photographs (chapter 94) are read not only as personal memories, but as traces of a lived environment, they begin to reveal something more than childhood itself. They point toward the world in which that childhood was embedded.

The image with the dog and the puppy is particularly revealing (chapter 94). The setting is neither purely domestic nor entirely natural. It is a transitional space. The presence of a trolley, a watering can, and large containers suggests a place where living and working coexist. This is not a leisure environment. It is a space of small-scale labor.

At the same time, the child is not working. He is sitting, holding the puppy, fully absorbed in play. This contrast is decisive. It shows that his childhood unfolds within a world already shaped by work, but in which he himself is not yet subjected to it. This allows us to situate the family within a specific social context.

The environment suggests a modest, possibly semi-rural or peri-urban setting, where economic activity is directly tied to nature. The recurring presence of flowers, plants, and open spaces supports the idea that the family may have been involved in a form of small-scale production, such as flower cultivation or local trade. (chapter 94) The fact that Shin Okja later mentions taking him to the market reinforces this connection. The child is not isolated. He is part of a network of everyday economic life. This also explains why he is entrusted to her.

If the parents were working, possibly outside the immediate household or within demanding conditions, the grandmother’s role as caretaker becomes necessary. (chapter 47) Her presence does not replace the parents. It supplements a structure already under pressure.

This pressure becomes more visible when we contrast these images with the later urban landscape. (chapter 48) In the city view, nature has not disappeared entirely, but it has been pushed to the margins. Hills and trees remain in the distance, while the foreground is dominated by dense construction, commercial buildings, and rooftops. The naming of places such as “The Lake Shops” is particularly revealing. The reference to the lake suggests a natural environment that is no longer accessible. What remains is its name, preserved as a surface within a commercial structure. This transformation is not incidental. Striking is that this image mirrors the painting in the champion’s penthouse: (chapter 93) But the lake has been replaced by a building. It corresponds to a broader process of urban redevelopment, in which natural or semi-rural areas are progressively absorbed into economic systems based on property, rent, and commercial use. In this context, land is no longer lived on. It is monetized.

To understand the “Unseen Game,” we must look beyond the frame of the photographs and into the historical shadow of the 1997 South Korean financial crisis. This was the moment the “Monopoly board” of the nation was violently reset. Triggered by a toxic cocktail of corporate debt, speculative volatility, and the sudden flight of foreign capital, the crisis forced the country into a brutal era of IMF-supervised restructuring.

For families like Kim Dan’s, this wasn’t just a headline—it was an earthquake. Property values didn’t just “fluctuate”; they collapsed. Debts became predatory. The “small-scale livelihoods” we see in the photographs—the gardening tools, the modest outdoor hallway, the flowers—were the exact type of “informal” or “traditional” economies that were liquidated to satisfy the demands of global capital. (chapter 94)

This is where the connection to Monopoly becomes more than metaphorical. The logic of the game — acquisition, accumulation, rising costs, and eventual dispossession — reflects the mechanisms at work in such transformations. Small-scale environments are gradually replaced by larger structures. (chapter 27) Those who cannot keep up with increasing economic pressure are displaced. Seen from this perspective, Kim Dan’s childhood does not only precede a personal rupture. It is situated within a world that is already undergoing structural change.

This also sheds light on his later relationship to money. And what did the physical therapist suggest back then, when the star was on the verge of bankruptcy? He could take a loan… that’s how the parents’ misery started. But there’s more to it. (chapter 42) As an adult, Kim Dan does not accumulate. He spends what he has on others. He supports his grandmother, pays for her needs, and later repeats this pattern with Joo Jaekyung. He does not invest in himself. He does not secure his own position. This behavior is not simply a matter of personality. It reflects a life shaped by instability, where resources are used for survival rather than growth. In this sense, his position within the “game” is already determined before he becomes aware of it. He does not enter it as an equal player. He enters it from a position marked by loss, adaptation, and necessity.

And this is what the photographs ultimately reveal.

They do not show a world that was stable and later broken. They show a world that was already fragile, already exposed to forces that would eventually transform it. What appears as a peaceful childhood is, in reality, a moment suspended between continuity and disappearance.

This context also allows us to comprehend the gap between the two main leads.

Kim Dan, who is three years older and approaching thirty, experienced the immediate impact of the 1997 financial crisis during his early childhood. He lived through a period of instability, displacement, and economic pressure without fully understanding its causes. The transformation of his environment, the loss of his family structure, and the increasing precarity of everyday life formed the background of his development.

Joo Jaekyung, by contrast, belongs to a slightly later moment. When he was a child, the crisis had already reshaped the social landscape. Its consequences were no longer unfolding, but had become part of a normalized reality. This is reflected in Hwang Byungchul’s description of his neighborhood
Joo Jaekyung grows up in its aftermath.(chapter 72): a “cutthroat” environment in which neglect was common and institutions such as the boxing gym functioned as substitutes for basic care. The difference is subtle, but decisive. Kim Dan grows up at the moment of rupture. This is why the unseen game does not begin with loss. It begins much earlier, in the conditions that make that loss possible.

The Same Image, a Different Truth — Memory, Loss, and Reinterpretation

If the first set of photographs suggests a childhood shaped by freedom and affection, the images (chapter 94) involving the grandmother (chapter 94) introduce a more complex and unsettling dimension. At first glance, they appear similar. In both cases, Kim Dan is held close, framed within a moment of intimacy. The composition seems almost identical. And yet, a closer reading reveals a fundamental divergence.

In the image of Kim Dan as a baby, one detail cannot be ignored: his expression. (chapter 94) His eyes are wide, his gaze tense with tears, his mouth covered with his hand. He is not calm. He is not smiling. He has been crying. This raises an unavoidable question. Why?

If we take the image seriously, the tears cannot be dismissed as a trivial detail. They contradict the idea of a peaceful, happy moment. Instead, they suggest distress, discomfort, or even rupture. Such a reaction is not unusual. Infants often display what developmental psychology describes as stranger anxiety, a phase in which unfamiliar environments or faces provoke fear or distress. But in this context, the reaction points toward something more specific. Because this form of distress is not neutral. It implies the absence of a familiar figure. The child does not simply react to strangers; he reacts because the person to whom he is attached is no longer present.

In this sense, the image does not only show fear. It outlines a strong connection to the mother — a bond that is being disrupted at the very moment the photograph is taken. The child is no longer with his mother. He has been handed over, entrusted to Shin Okja. The presence of other women reinforces this reading. This is not an intimate, private scene. It is social, almost public. In this sense, the photograph does not simply show affection. It records a transition.

This reading becomes even more significant when we consider that Shin Okja refers to the “good old days” while looking at this very image. (chapter 94) She even associates this scene with Kim Dan’s happiness, while the photography contradicts this notion. The child is not at peace. He had just been crying. The moment is not one of stability, but of rupture. And yet, it is precisely this image that becomes the anchor of nostalgia. This creates a displacement.

This is where the contrast with the later hydrangea image (chapter 19) becomes particularly revealing. In the first photograph, the women from the market are visibly present. (chapter 94) The moment is shared, exposed, embedded in a social environment. By contrast, in the hydrangea image, these figures have disappeared. They are replaced by flowers. What was once a public scene becomes a private one. At first glance, this shift may appear to enhance intimacy. The child is now alone with his grandmother, surrounded by blooming hydrangeas. The composition is softer, more harmonious, more contained. And yet, this transformation raises a question. What has been removed, and why?

What disappears is not only the social environment, but the structure that defined the earlier image. In the first photograph, the presence of the women from the market situates the scene within a moment of transition that is witnessed and shared. (chapter 94) The child’s tears unfold within this exposed space, and his reaction is oriented toward a presence beyond the frame.

In the hydrangea image, this structure has changed entirely. The scene is no longer oriented outward. The composition is closed, centered, and self-contained. The gaze that once participated in the moment is no longer included. This is not a simple shift toward intimacy. It is the consequence of a rupture. (chapter 94)

The hydrangeas do not merely decorate the scene. They occupy the space left by what has disappeared. Traditionally associated with apology, regret, and a desire for forgiveness, they introduce the idea that something unresolved persists beneath the surface. But they also carry another implication. Blooming fully, they mark a moment of completion — and, at the same time, of transition. They announce departure. Within this context, the image no longer represents a stable present. It captures a threshold. The child remains, but the relational structure that once connected him to the outside — and to the one behind the camera — has already begun to dissolve. (chapter 94)

Striking is that the image that most closely corresponds to a moment of calm, rest, and emotional balance is not part of the album at all. It is the photograph with the hydrangeas — the one Kim Dan himself has kept and framed. (chapter 94) In that image, he is older, composed, and seated on his grandmother’s lap, surrounded by blooming flowers. The scene is quiet, contained, and visually harmonious. According to my past interpretation, the last photography most likely represents the last moment before he lost his parents, a moment in which his world had not yet fully collapsed. And yet, this is not the image preserved in the album.

This difference is crucial. It reveals that the album does not simply gather memories. It reflects a specific point of view. (chapter 94) The photographs it contains are not neutral. They are selected, arranged, and interpreted according to Shin Okja’s perspective. The image of separation becomes the “good old days,” while the image of relative stability is excluded from that narrative.

By contrast, the framed photograph belongs to Kim Dan. It is the only image he has chosen to keep. Unlike the album, which organizes memory collectively and retrospectively, the frame isolates a single moment. It suggests a different attachment, a different understanding of what should be preserved.

This divergence exposes two distinct relationships to the past. For Shin Okja, memory moves backward, reconstructing earlier moments and integrating them into a narrative of care and responsibility. For Kim Dan, memory condenses into a single image, one that he does not reinterpret verbally, but silently preserves.

The absence of the hydrangea photograph from the album, and its presence in his possession, therefore marks more than a simple difference in taste. It reveals a gap between two memories that do not fully coincide. Because if we follow the internal logic of the photographs, the moment that could most plausibly correspond to the “good old days” is not this one, but the later image with the hydrangeas. (chapter 94) In that scene, Kim Dan is older, calm, and seated on his grandmother’s lap, surrounded by blooming flowers. His clothing and the vegetation clearly situate the image in summer, a season associated with fullness and continuity. If your interpretation is correct, this photograph would mark the last period before he lost his parents — a moment when his family was still intact.

This creates a striking contradiction. (chapter 94) What we see is a child in distress. What is remembered and narrated is happiness.The gap between these two levels is crucial. It reveals that the photographs are not interpreted neutrally. They are reinterpreted through memory, filtered by emotion, and reshaped by nostalgia. Shin Okja does not lie consciously. Rather, she projects her own feelings onto the images. For her, these moments represent closeness, responsibility, and perhaps even purpose. The child’s tears disappear behind her own perception of care.

This becomes even clearer when we consider how she moves through the album. (chapter 94) Her gaze is not oriented toward the future, but toward the past. She flips through the pages in reverse, moving from the most recent images back to the earliest ones. This movement is not chronological. It is selective and directional. It functions as a form of regression.

In this sense, her gesture stands in direct contrast to the logic of a competitive game. A game such as Monopoly advances relentlessly toward an outcome, (chapter 80) structuring time as progression, accumulation, and eventual resolution. Her movement does the opposite. It moves backward, not toward victory, but toward a point of refuge. The album becomes a space in which time is reversed and the pressures of the present are temporarily suspended.

This reversal is not abstract. It is material and visible. (chapter 80) Each turn of the page, marked by the tactile flap of the paper, reduces Kim Dan. The sequence narrows. The independent boy who runs, stands, and interacts gradually disappears, replaced by a smaller, more contained figure. The movement through the album functions like a visual funnel: from autonomy to dependence, from mobility to stillness, from openness to enclosure. (chapter 94) At its endpoint stands the image of the infant.

Here, the contradiction becomes explicit. The baby had been crying, yet the grandmother is smiling in front of the photography. The scene contains two opposing emotional registers that are not experienced as such. The child’s distress is immediate, visible, and unresolved within the frame. And yet, for her, it does not signify rupture. It signifies need. This distinction is crucial. (chapter 94) Because a crying infant represents a form of suffering that can still be answered. It is simple, direct, and, above all, solvable. In that moment, she is able to position herself as the source of relief. The child depends on her, and that dependence gives structure and meaning to her role. This is why the contradiction does not appear as one. What we read as distress, she experiences as confirmation. She still views herself as his “source of happiness”.

By moving backward through the album, she does not merely revisit the past. She reconstructs a position in which her role is absolute and uncontested. The adult Kim Dan — the one who provides, who suffers, who exists outside her control — disappears from view. This psychological orientation explains why she continues to treat the professional physical therapist as a helpless infant (chapter 94) Her persistent desire to see him “fattened up” is quite telling; it is not truly about the pleasure of eating, but about returning him to a state of physical dependence. To “fatten” a child is to exert a primary form of care that requires no complex dialogue or adult understanding—it is the most basic “rule” of her version of the game.

The photographs, then, are no longer treated as evidence of Dan’s life, but as emotional anchors for her own identity. This explains why the contradiction between his tears and her “good times” remains unaddressed. For her, the “good times” were a period of perfect dependence. In the space of the album, the 1997 crisis hasn’t arrived, the parents haven’t vanished, and the child’s only problem is a discomfort that a grandmother’s arms—and her “fattening” meals—can still resolve.

(chapter 94) What remains is a simplified structure in which the child’s distress is immediate and her response is sufficient. Not a time without suffering, but a time in which suffering was still manageable.This is what she calls the “good old days.”

Where the childhood images can be transformed into “good old days,” (chapter 94) the later photographs (chapter 47) remain tied to necessity. They reveal that, over time, the relationship between Kim Dan and his grandmother was no longer defined solely by care, but also by dependence.

The Mirror of Erasure: Doc Dan’s Compliance

The discrepancy between the photographs and Shin Okja’s verbal narrative reveals a profound structural shift in Kim Dan’s identity. On the beach, she insists that she (Chapter 65), a statement that appears humble but subtly centers her own effort as the only relevant force in his life. When she speaks of her struggle, she envisions a calm baby. This makes her “failure” purely internal. By remembering him as calm while she felt “not enough,” she frames herself as the tragic martyr who was suffering even when things looked peaceful. It centers the entire era on her emotional state, not the child’s. But the picture from episode 94 displays a certain MO. She is simply ignoring reality. (chapter 94) In the physical photograph, the baby is clearly in distress (crying), but she is smiling. She is literally overlooking the child’s present reality in the photo to preserve her own feeling of “good times.” The child’s actual pain is invisible to her because, in that moment, she was the one holding him—and for her, being the “holder” is the only thing that matters. She frames his childhood through the definitive claim that he (chapter 65). This is not merely a description of loss; it is a transformation. By labeling him an absolute orphan, she erases the specific love and sacrifice documented in the early photographs, stripping him of his right to a specific grief. If he “never knew” them, he never lost them. In her version of the “game,” Dan is a blank slate upon which she has written her own narrative of care. At the same time, she

Strikingly, Kim Dan corroborates this void (Chapter 94). He speaks as if he were a baby when they vanished, yet the memory indicates the opposite. Moreover, the photos of him offering daisies and running prove he was old enough to know them. To survive under his grandmother’s care, Dan had to adopt her memory as his own, internalizing the image of a man who started from “nothing.” By erasing the parents, Shin Okja effectively erased the “Dan” who was once the center of a loving world, leaving behind only the “Doc Dan” who exists to serve the needs of others.

From Play to Performance: The Trophy Child

This shift becomes visible when comparing the childhood album shown to Jaekyung (Chapter 94) with the graduation photos Dan recalled at the hospital. (Chapter 47). The early images are structured around spontaneity—movement, animals, and open fields. However, as the timeline progresses toward his youth, the “Natural Cycle” is replaced by a trajectory of performance.

In these later institutional spaces—classrooms and stages—Dan no longer moves freely; he poses. (chapter 47) He stands still, holding bouquets, looking at the camera to comply rather than engage. He is no longer a child “being,” but a trophy of successful care. His growth is recontextualized as the “interest” on his grandmother’s sacrifice, transforming his development into something useful and legible. This logic of appropriation is the “unseen rule” Dan eventually internalizes: his value is no longer grounded in his existence, but in his functional utility.

This is where the emotional register shifts again. The earlier photographs suggested a gaze directed toward the child — attentive, affectionate, and open. Here, the direction of that gaze becomes more complex. The child is still visible, but he is also being positioned within a narrative that exceeds him. His life is no longer only his own. It becomes intertwined with her need for meaning, recognition, and continuity. This is why these images feel different. They are not only more structured. They are more purposeful. The camera no longer captures a moment. It records a result.

The Crybaby

She looks fondly at this picture (chapter 94), she is able to position herself as the source of relief. The child depends on her, and that dependence gives structure and meaning to her role. This is why the contradiction does not appear as one. What we read as distress, she experiences as confirmation. And yet, her own words introduce a subtle tension within this dynamic.

When she refers to him as a “crybaby” (chapter 94), she does more than describe a child’s behavior. The term carries a judgment. It implies excess, weakness, a deviation from what is expected. Crying is no longer simply a response to pain or separation. It becomes something that must be corrected. This is where another layer emerges.

Because the child she describes is, in fact, behaving in a completely normal way. (chapter 94) He is a baby, or a very young child. If he cries in another one, it could be because he hurt himself, or he is frightened, or overwhelmed. The image of him crying after falling and injuring his knee (chapter 47) confirms this. The tears are not excessive. They are appropriate. Thus he could have cried, because he lost the dogs for example. (chapter 94)

The label, then, does not describe the child. It reflects her perception. It reveals a discomfort with vulnerability, and more specifically, with the persistence of that vulnerability over time. The “crybaby” is not only the infant in distress. It is also the figure she does not want him to remain. This is reinforced by her later remark to Joo Jaekyung, where she praises his strength, his physique, and his masculinity (chapter 21) The contrast is implicit but clear. The ideal is no longer the dependent child who cries, but the strong young man who does not. And now, you comprehend why he went to the restroom in order to cry. He is not allowed to express his sadness. (chapter 94) In this sense, her perspective is structured by a normative expectation. A boy should be strong. He should endure. He should not cry. This creates a paradox.

On the one hand, she returns to the image of the infant because it secures her role as caretaker. On the other, she implicitly rejects the qualities associated with that same state. The crying child is both the foundation of her identity and something that must be overcome. This tension is crucial.

Because it helps explain the transformation we observe later. The child who once cried freely gradually becomes someone who suppresses his needs, who endures silently, and who defines himself through resilience rather than expression. In other words, the “crybaby” disappears. But what replaces him is not strength in the sense she admires. It is a form of self-erasure.

Because this transformation does not occur in isolation. It is mediated through her gaze. (chapter 47) Over time, Kim Dan learns to see himself as she sees him. The qualities that once defined his childhood — openness, sensitivity, emotional responsiveness — are no longer recognized as strengths. (chapter 94) They are recoded as weakness, something to outgrow, something to suppress.

This is why he cannot recognize his own strength. (chapter 94) What he has developed is not the visible, dominant form of strength embodied by Joo Jaekyung, but something quieter: endurance, patience, and an exceptional capacity for care. His strength lies in his ability to persist, to adapt, and to remain attentive to others even under pressure.

In other words, he stands for genuine empathy. And yet, because he perceives himself through the lenses of his grandmother, this form of strength remains invisible to him. What he sees instead is lack — a failure to meet an ideal that was never his to begin with.

The Production of Worthlessness

The consequences of this transformation are absolute. As Dan becomes the support structure of the relationship, he develops a pathological selflessness. His refusal to invest in himself—his empty wardrobe and skipped meals—is the continuation of a role where his only valid function is to provide. His lack of self-worth is not innate; it is a manufactured condition. (chapter 94) The original “Dan,” who offered daisies without expectation, has been overwritten by a provider who must justify his presence through constant sacrifice.

These later photographs (chapter 47) are excluded from the “happy” album because they resist reinterpretation. They cannot be turned into “good old days” because they document the exact moment care turned into dependence. They reveal a rupture that didn’t just remove his parents, but dismantled his entire environment—home, neighborhood, and unconditional joy. They expose her reliance on him and the doctor’s suffering and growth. By focusing on her role as the sole caretaker, Shin Okja reorganized the past, making the parents’ absence more visible than their existence ever was. Ultimately, Dan adopted this simplified history, losing the memory of the world that was taken from him.

The Glasses: Seeing the Past, Losing the Present

This dynamic becomes even more visible through a small but significant detail: the grandmother’s glasses (chapter 94) When she looks at the photograph, she is wearing them. This is not incidental. The glasses mediate her vision. They frame the way she perceives the image. She does not look at the past directly. She sees it through a lens. And that lens is not neutral.

It allows her to focus on what she wants to preserve: closeness, affection, meaning. At the same time, it filters out what cannot be integrated into that narrative: rupture, loss, contradiction. This is why the photograph can be reinterpreted.

The tears disappear behind the idea of “good old days.” (chapter 94) The moment of separation becomes a moment of connection. What is seen is not what is shown, but what can be emotionally sustained.

But this also implies a form of blindness. Her gaze is turned entirely toward the past. The present, by contrast, is only partially perceived. (chapter 94) She noticed his absence, but she failed to see his red eyes, his suffering. She does not fully register the adult standing in front of her. She continues to relate to him through the image she has preserved. This is where the gesture of removing the glasses becomes significant.

When she takes them off, the mediation disappears. The lens through which she has been interpreting the world is no longer in place. (chapter 94) This moment signals a possible rupture in her perception. The constructed coherence of her memory is about to be confronted by a reality that cannot be filtered in the same way. Her vision, quite literally, is about to collapse.

The Birthday: Time, Erasure, and the Illusion of Permanence

This tension between past and present becomes even more striking when we consider the question of the birthday. (chapter 41) Birthdays are not trivial details. They function as markers of time, inscribing the individual within a social and temporal order. They acknowledge growth, change, and the passage from one stage of life to another. (chapter 11)

And yet, in this scene, the birthday is absent. This absence is revealing.

Jinx-philes already know that Kim Dan’s birthday follows immediately after Joo Jaekyung’s scheduled match on December 25th (chapter 88). The temporal proximity is clear. If the grandmother is aware of his matches — if, as she claims, they “give her strength” (chapter 94) — then she should also be aware of this date. But she does not mention it.

Instead, her attention is directed elsewhere. She complains that he does not spend enough time with her and asks him to come earlier next time. (chapter 94) She asks him to come earlier next time. (chapter 94) Her concern is not oriented toward his life as it unfolds, but toward maintaining a certain relational dynamic.

This is where the contradiction emerges. She speaks as if she is connected to the present, yet her perception is anchored in the past. The fact that she only “heard” about his victory suggests distance rather than genuine involvement (chapter 94) Her knowledge is indirect, fragmented, and yet presented as intimacy. This gap is not incidental. It has structural consequences.

By not acknowledging his birthday, she does not acknowledge the passage of time. She does not recognize him as someone who is approaching thirty , as someone whose life extends beyond the role she has assigned to him. In this sense, the absence of the birthday is not a simple omission. It functions as a form of erasure.

Without temporal markers, the individual becomes fixed. He no longer moves forward. He remains suspended in a past that can be revisited, reshaped, and controlled. This is why he appears, in a certain sense, frozen in the end. (chapter 94) This also explains why she continues to treat him as a child. If time is not acknowledged, growth is not recognized. If growth is not recognized, the child never fully becomes an adult. He remains within a structure in which his role is defined by dependency, proximity, and care. This is where the notion of the “Unseen Game” reaches another level.

It is not only about economic structures or social conditions. It also operates through time itself. Through what is remembered, what is omitted, and what is allowed to change. And in this case, what disappears is not only the parents. It is Kim Dan as an individual. (chapter 11) When Jinx-philes encounter the birthday scene, they may assume that this celebration was a recurring ritual. But is that necessarily the case? The narrative does not confirm repetition. On the contrary, the absence of any reference to his birthday in the present suggests discontinuity rather than tradition.

This absence becomes even more striking when we consider the logic of the photographs. If, as suggested, one of the images corresponds to winter (chapter 94) then this season should have triggered her memory. And yet, it does not. The seasonal cycle that structures the photographs no longer structures her perception.

This indicates a deeper divide. She no longer inhabits the same temporal reality as her grandson. While his life continues to move forward, her perception remains anchored in a reconstructed past that she revisits selectively.

What disappears, then, is not only the parents. It is Kim Dan as an individual. He becomes, in a very precise sense, a ghost within his own life: present, functioning, necessary—but not fully recognized as someone who exists independently of the role he has been assigned.

And yet, this structure is not immutable.

Because the absence of the birthday does not mean that time has stopped. It only means that it has not been acknowledged. This is precisely where Joo Jaekyung’s role becomes decisive. By celebrating Kim Dan’s birthday, he does something that has been missing until now: he reintroduces time. He marks a transition. He recognizes not the child of the past, but the adult of the present. This gesture is not symbolic in a superficial sense. It has structural consequences. For the first time, Kim Dan is acknowledged as someone who has grown, who has endured, and who has reached a stage that cannot be reduced to dependency. The celebration does not create his maturity. It makes it visible. So this image could be seen as a picture taken by the main lead on Kim Dan’s birthday. And observe that this image lets transpire the presence of the photographer and the strong connection between the main lead and the photographer.

In this sense, Joo Jaekyung does not simply “care” for him. He restores a dimension that had been erased. He gives him back a temporal position. And with it, an identity.

The Function of the Photographs

This allows us to understand the true function of the photographs. (chapter 94) They are not simply memories. They are instruments of perception.

At first, Joo Jaekyung looks at them and sees only what is immediately visible: a child, innocence, warmth. (chapter 94) He recognizes the purity of that image, but not the conditions that surround it. The past appears self-contained, detached from the structures that shaped it. This limitation has consequences.

When he later recalls the encounter between Kim Dan and Choi Gilseok, his interpretation follows the same logic. (chapter 48) He suspects manipulation, imagines betrayal, and attributes agency to the most visible figure, because he knows about the loan and debts. And don’t forget that in his mind, they are the result of gambling and not of an economical crisis. In this framework, Kim Dan appears as someone who could be bought (chapter 51), influenced, or used. Baek Junmin becomes the primary culprit, the one who acts openly, who attacks his wounds, who embodies threat. One might say that he looked at the pictures through the gaze of the photographer. But something remains unexamined.

Choi Gilseok. (chapter 48) He did not notice that these pictures were staged.

Because, unlike Baek Junmin, Choi Gilseok does not hide his position. On the contrary, he reveals it. In the café he owns, he lays out his resources with striking clarity. (chapter 48) He speaks of his parent company, of pharmaceutical connections, of international treatment. He offers to cover medical expenses, to provide accommodation, to double Kim Dan’s salary, even to place a car at his disposal. This is not a conversation. It is a display.

What he presents is not simply help, but a system of possession. If we read this scene through the lens of Monopoly, the structure becomes unmistakable. Choi Gilseok is not a player struggling within the game. He is someone who already owns the board. The café, the company, the network, the capital—these are not isolated elements. They form a coherent system in which value is accumulated, controlled, and redistributed according to strategic interest.

Kim Dan, by contrast, is placed in the position of someone who has landed on another’s property. The offer appears generous. But like in Monopoly, generosity is never neutral. It is tied to incorporation. To accept means to enter the system, to become part of a structure in which the terms are already defined. This is where the illusion operates. Because what is presented as opportunity is, in fact, a form of capture. (chapter 48) And the switched spray was the price to pay for the “visit” at the café. (chapter 49) The meeting with Choi Gilseok is no longer a simple interaction between individuals. It becomes part of a larger configuration — one in which visible actions and invisible structures intersect. Responsibility is no longer attributed only to the one who strikes, but also to the one who orchestrates.

As you can see, the pictures can help Joo Jaekyung to see not only the director, but also his position within the game. This shift is crucial. (chapter 94) Because it allows him to recognize that Kim Dan is not defined by greed, weakness, nor by passivity, but by a history that required endurance, adaptation, and silent resistance. The child he saw in the photographs is not separate from the man he stands beside. It is the foundation of that man.

To conclude, this is where the photographs about Kim Dan’s childhood begin to transform Jaekyung’s perception. Indirectly, he has sensed the care and loving gaze of the parents. Because once he has learned to look beyond the surface — once he understands that what appears as innocence may contain loss, that what appears as simplicity may conceal structure — his way of seeing changes. He no longer looks only at what is shown. He begins to question what is hidden. And it is the same for Kim Dan (chapter 94) who could be forced to remember painful moments (chapter 19) (chapter 59) by rediscovering the photos from his childhood, like the vanishing of the “puppy”. (chapter 94) I don’t think, it is a coincidence that Potato has pictures of the puppies as well. (chapter 60)

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Piercing 🪬Amber 🪙 Shore 🏖️

The Language of Foreshadowing

Have you ever noticed how Jinx often tells us what is about to happen, long before the characters themselves realize it? I am quite certain that my avid readers are already thinking about the puppy (chapter 57) and its future adoption which got reinforced with the reappearance of an old picture showing Kim Dan holding a puppy. (chapter 94)

Yet a small detail from episode 93 (!) caught my attention, and I couldn’t ignore it. Do you remember the breakfast scene in episode 18? (chapter 18) Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung are sitting together, but there is still a distance between them. And between them, almost quietly, hangs a painting: a winter landscape. Bare trees, cold tones, a distant city. Everything feels still… almost frozen. (chapter 18) This image reflects their state at that moment, that’s why it is placed between them, even behind them. They are close in space, yet emotionally far apart — trapped in silence, routine, and roles. Alive, but not truly living. At the same time, this shows how they treat their past and themselves. Additionally, they seem to draw a line between themselves and others, as if hiding behind invisible walls. Present, yet unreachable.

The painting reinforces this impression. It is not shown as a single, unified image, but divided into separate panels. Fragmented—just like them. They are not whole.

Much later, in episode 93, we encounter a similar composition. (chapter 93) The setting remains, but the painting has changed. Winter has given way to a living landscape: trees with leaves, a mountain rising in the background, and beneath it a stretch of water reflecting the light. (chapter 93) The atmosphere is warmer, softer, alive … yet not fully bright. The colors matter. The trees are not green, but muted—brown, almost beige. Life has returned, but it remains subdued, as if the scene itself is hesitating between seasons. And yet, the structure persists. The image is still divided. The fragmentation remains—but the distance between the panels has narrowed.

This shift is not incidental. It reflects a transformation in both Joo Jaekyung’s and Kim Dan’s internal states. (chapter 93) The winter of isolation gives way to a quieter, emerging warmth—one that prepares the ground for the conversation on the beach. There, under the amber light of the setting sun, this internal change becomes visible: what was once buried in silence begins to surface, and what once signified loneliness is reinterpreted as endurance.

But the characters are not whole yet. The walls have not disappeared. They had only begun to soften, until the both of them went to the beach together.

So what exactly are we witnessing here? (chapter 94) A simple change in atmosphere? A moment of intimacy? Or the beginning of a deeper transformation in the way Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung perceive themselves and, above all, each other?

To answer that question, we need to look more closely at what comes next. I would like to begin with a contrast: the expensive golden keychain on the one hand, and the beach conversation on the other. Why gold then—and why amber now?

Gold as Silence

The contrast began long before the beach. On his birthday, Kim Dan tried to express what he felt through a gift and a card. He chose an expensive golden keychain (chapter 55) —something polished, valuable, appropriate. Alongside it, he wrote a message that sounded careful, respectful, almost rehearsed: (chapter 55) “I truly appreciate everything you’ve done for me.” “I’ll work even harder.” “I hope to work with you for many years.” At first glance, nothing seemed wrong. The gesture was thoughtful, the words polite. And yet, something felt restrained.

The language belonged to a world of duty and hierarchy. It reflected the position Kim Dan believed he had to occupy: a subordinate expressing gratitude to someone above him. His words were correct—but they were not fully his. And the card itself revealed that.

He began to write “To be honest”… but stopped after “To be ho”. (chapter 55) The letters were erased before the sentence could even exist. This is not a correction. It is a hesitation made visible. The thought emerged—but it was interrupted. Before honesty could take shape, it was already suppressed.

What remained on the card was therefore not what he first intended to say, but what he allowed himself to say. What was missing was not sincerity, but freedom. He did not speak from a place of confidence, but from a need to maintain balance. The gift and the card functioned as a safe substitute for something he could not yet articulate. They allowed him to remain within the structure he knew: gratitude, effort, loyalty.

Gold, in this context, carried a precise meaning.

It represented value, recognition, and status. It was something that could be measured, offered, and accepted without ambiguity. But it was also impersonal. It created distance rather than closing it. The keychain was expensive, but carried no warmth of its own.

This only becomes fully clear later, on the beach. (chapter 94) There, when he finally spoke without the protection of formality, his words shifted. He admitted what had remained hidden at the time of the gift: To be honest, he did not think he could do it. He did not feel confident enough to stay by Joo Jaekyung’s side. (chapter 55) Though his words seemed clear, this “hope” was not entirely his. It was shaped by something that had not yet been severed. At that point, Kim Dan had not truly separated himself from his grandmother. (chapter 94) His sense of self was still tied to her—emotionally, morally, almost structurally. He was not yet standing on his own, but continuing a role he had long internalized: enduring, adapting, staying where he was needed.

So when he spoke of “many more years,” it was not the expression of a free decision. It was an extension of obligation. (chapter 41) A continuation of a life he had learned to accept, rather than one he had chosen. This is why the card feels so careful, so measured. Not because he lacked sincerity – but because he lacked strength in his eyes.

And the erased beginning—“To be ho”—makes this even clearer. Because what he had wanted to say was not a promise. It was doubt. He did not trust himself. (chapter 51) And because of that, he clung to Joo Jaekyung—not simply as an employer, but as a figure through whom he could stabilize his own sense of worth. Remaining by his side, working harder, staying useful… all of this allowed him to compensate for what he felt he lacked. (chapter 55)

His “hope” was therefore not an expression of desire, but a strategy. A way to hold himself together. This is why the confession on the beach reframed the entire birthday scene. (chapter 94) He can no longer use his grandmother or the champion to define himself, as their collaboration is limited in time as well.

What had once appeared as gratitude now revealed itself as restraint. What had sounded like commitment now exposed hesitation. And what looked like gold… turned out to be something else entirely. Under this new light, we begin to understand why Kim Dan could neither confess his affection—nor fully express his gratitude.” (chapter 45) Because gold, in that moment, could only represent value imposed from the outside—status, reward, recognition.

But the sunset on the beach spoke a different language. (chapter 94) And perhaps this shift is not only carried by words—but already visible.

If we look closely, something subtle emerges. (chapter 94) The colors of the scene echo the keychain itself. (chapter 55) The gold, of course—but also the red and black attached to it. On the beach, these same tones reappear in what they wear, in how they are visually composed within the frame.

What had once existed as an object—held, offered, external—now surrounds them. It is no longer something exchanged between them. It is something they inhabit together. (chapter 94) But there is more. They are not simply sitting side by side. They are looking at each other. And that gaze changes everything. Because for the first time, the connection is no longer mediated—neither by a gift, nor by roles, nor by unspoken expectations. It is direct. Mutual. Sustained. The gaze becomes the binding element.

It replaces the object. It replaces the silence. And in doing so, it creates something new. Without fully realizing it, they begin to form the outline of a team—one that is no longer defined by hierarchy or obligation, but by presence and recognition.

Not of display, but of transformation. Not of perfection, but of something preserved, altered, and made meaningful over time. And this is why I could no longer associate that scene with gold. The gold had spoken in his place—but it had spoken the wrong language. Only later did Kim Dan begin to replace that language with something more direct, more vulnerable. And it is precisely at that moment that the tone of the story begins to change.

The shift from gold to amber starts here.

Between Silence and Honesty

If we return to the beach scene, something immediately stands out—not only what Kim Dan says, but how he says it.

“To be honest…” (chapter 94)
(chapter 94) “If I’m being totally honest…”

This phrasing is not new, as we have seen its interruption before. On the birthday card, the sentence never reached completion. It stopped at “To be ho”. But what was interrupted there was not simply honesty. It was the fear of burdening someone else.

For Kim Dan, speaking honestly had never been neutral. (chapter 94) To express doubt, sadness, or uncertainty meant placing weight on another person. It meant becoming a problem rather than a solution. And this was something he had learned to avoid.

Even in small, seemingly harmless moments, this pattern had already been visible. Being called a “crybaby” may sound trivial (chapter 94), but it reveals something deeper: emotions were not meant to be expressed freely. They were something to control, to contain, to keep from overflowing. This means that by his grandmother’s side, he learned to hide his suffering behind a smile, something I had long detected.

Sincerity, for him, was inseparable from vulnerability. And vulnerability risked becoming a burden. This is why the sentence could not be completed. “To be honest…” was not just difficult to say. (chapter 94) It was something he believed he should not say.

And yet, on the beach, that same sentence returns. (chapter 94) Not once—but twice. Not as a clean declaration—but as something he repeats, almost carefully, as if testing whether he is allowed to continue. Each time, he creates a small distance before speaking, as if preparing both himself and the other for what might follow.

The hesitation is still there. Either he apologizes or he makes a pause. He lowers his gaze or looks at the horizon. He assumes that what he says might not be welcome. It even becomes truly palpable, when he employs this idiom for the first time on the beach: (chapter 94) He fears reproaches or discomfort. And this is where something shifts. Joo Jaekyung interrupts him: “Don’t say that.”

At first glance, this could sound like a refusal—as if he were rejecting what is about to be said. But in reality, it does something else. He is encouraging Kim Dan to speak. He rejects the assumption behind his words. Not the confession—but the idea that it is unwelcome. In that moment, Kim Dan is not silenced. He is allowed to continue. And this changes everything. He proceeds carefully, but he proceeds. So he is honest, but not yet free. And this is precisely what makes the moment meaningful. Because this time, he does not stop; not because fear has disappeared, but because it is no longer decisive.

And yet, something else becomes visible here. When he later says, (chapter 94), he does not look directly at Joo Jaekyung. His gaze shifts toward the horizon. At first, this might appear as hesitation reflected by the points of suspension, but it carries a different meaning. He is not withdrawing. He is protecting it. Because what he is about to say touches on something deeply personal—not only for himself, but for the other as well. By avoiding direct eye contact, he creates a space in which Joo Jaekyung does not have to respond, does not have to defend himself, does not have to expose what he may not yet be ready to show. In this sense, his restraint is not a sign of fear or shame. It is a form of respect. A way of allowing honesty to exist without embarrassing the other and forcing him into vulnerability.

To understand why he speaks here—and not before—we need to look at the place itself. (chapter 94) The beach is not a random setting.

But there is another reason why this place matters. Kim Dan does not only go there when he is alone. (chapter 59) He goes there when he is struggling—when something within him can no longer be contained. (chapter 94) In those moments, the usual mechanisms—enduring, adapting, maintaining balance—begin to loosen. The roles he has learned to perform no longer fully hold. And this is what links the beach to something more fundamental.

Honesty. Because if we think back, the first time this place was truly defined was not through him—but through his grandmother. (chapter 53) At the hospital, she spoke openly. She expressed regret, desire, and a final wish without filtering it, without protecting him from the weight of it. (chapter 53) It was a moment of sincerity that did not try to reduce itself.

And Kim Dan carried that moment with him. So when he returns to the beach, he is not only seeking comfort. He is returning to a place that has already been marked by truth—a place where emotions are not managed, but felt.

This is also why the scene in episode 59/60 becomes so significant. (chapter 60) When he reaches his breaking point, it is here that the boundary between control and collapse begins to dissolve. The beach is no longer just a refuge—it becomes a space where everything that has been contained threatens to surface at once.

And this is what Joo Jaekyung perceives as well. (chapter 80) For him, the place becomes associated with something dangerous: loss, disappearance, the possibility of not returning. Hence he taught him later how to swim.

But for Kim Dan, the meaning is different. The beach is not where he wants to disappear. It is where he can no longer pretend. He had come here before, in chapter 59, after Heesung and Potato had left. (chapter 59) It was already a place he chose in difficult moments. Not to avoid something—but to face it in his own way.

And this place carried meaning. (chapter 53) Through his grandmother , the ocean had been described as something beautiful, something capable of giving strength and comfort (chapter 53) — even when experienced alone. It did not require company to feel complete. Kim Dan held onto that idea.

So when he returned here, he did not come empty-handed. He came with an expectation. (chapter 59) That this place could give him something. That it could help him endure. That it might allow him to feel what she had felt—and, perhaps, soften what he himself was feeling. In that sense, the beach was more than a memory. It was a possibility. That’s why he visited the beach, when he was struggling.

But there is another layer to this. The beach was not only a place he returned to when he was struggling. It was also a place through which he tried to reconnect. (chapter 94) Not simply to escape— but to experience, in her place, what she had once described. To share that moment indirectly, as if the beauty of the ocean could bridge the distance between them, soften the absence, and momentarily silence his loneliness.

This is what gave the place its meaning in the past. Because if he could see what she had seen — if he could feel what she had felt — then perhaps he would not be alone in it. (chapter 59) And yet, this meaning does not remain stable.

In episode 94, he returns to the same place—but for a different reason. (chapter 94) Not to maintain the connection — but to bring it to an end.

But this possibility is no longer simple. Because the beach is also tied to his grandmother in another way. (chapter 94) When she suggested going for a walk together, he refused, for in his mind, the destination would be the ocean. To go there with her would have meant transforming that space into something else: a shared moment marked by what was about to end (chapter 53). It would have forced him to confront her condition directly, and don’t forget that this place is strongly intertwined with sincerity. He couldn’t mask his feelings. So he postponed it. And instead, he returns later—with Joo Jaekyung.

Now ask yourself: why here, and why with him? Because this is where the scene shifts. Kim Dan did not only come to the beach to find comfort. He also came to reach a form of closure. (chapter 94) For the first time, what had always structured him—enduring, adapting, protecting others—no longer works.

And in that moment, he is not alone. Joo Jaekyung is there. He could have stayed in the car. (chapter 94) He was even told to. But he didn’t. He chose to remain beside him.

This changes the situation entirely. Because Kim Dan is no longer speaking into silence. He is speaking in the presence of someone who stayed. And that creates a new tension. On the one hand, he still does not want to burden him. On the other, he can no longer remain silent. This is why his honesty takes this form: hesitant, repeated, apologetic—but expressed. So what are we witnessing here?

Not simply a confession. But a shift in conditions. The place offered meaning—but not enough to contain what he felt.
The memory of his grandmother gave direction—but not resolution. (chapter 94) And the presence of Joo Jaekyung created something new: A space where silence was no longer the only option. The sentence that once stopped at “To be ho” now reaches its end.

Not because fear has disappeared — but because, for the first time, it is no longer stronger than the need to speak.

The Shore: Where Two Worlds Meet

If we look more closely at the setting of this scene, we begin to understand why it had to take place here—and nowhere else. (chapter 94) The beach is not just a backdrop. It is a boundary.

A meeting point between two elements: Water and earth. Movement and stability. Depth and surface.

Water carries memory. It is fluid, unstable, impossible to fully grasp. It reflects what lies beneath—emotion, unconscious experience, everything that cannot easily be contained or articulated. The shore, by contrast, belongs to the realm of the tangible. Sand, ground, the space one can stand on. It represents reality, structure, adulthood—the world of roles and responsibilities.

And where are Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung positioned? (chapter 94) Exactly at that threshold. They are not in the water. They are not fully on stable ground either. They sit at the point where both worlds meet. And psychologically, this position mirrors their state. Both men are suspended between two identities:

  • the child shaped by past experiences (chapter 94) (chapter 94)
  • the adult defined by roles, expectations, and survival strategies (chapter 94) (chapter 94)

The amber light of the setting sun intensifies this ambiguity. It does not belong fully to day or night. It merges opposites rather than separating them. Just like this moment. Just like them.

But the meaning of this place becomes clearer when we compare two moments that occur here. When the grandmother speaks about Kim Dan, her words establish a distance: (chapter 65) Even though they have lived together for years, she positions herself outside his inner world. She observes him—but does not truly reach him. And the image reflects this separation. The water and the sand remain clearly divided. The boundary holds.

Now compare this to the later scene. (chapter 94) Joo Jaekyung appears to create distance—but in reality, he reduces it. The “friend” is himself. What cannot be said directly is nevertheless expressed. And this time, the image of the shore changes. The colors warm. The boundary between water and sand begins to dissolve. The elements no longer remain strictly separated—they begin to blend.

This shift is decisive. Where the grandmother’s words maintained distance, Joo Jaekyung’s words—however indirect—open a space. And this is why Kim Dan can ask a question here. (chapter 94) Because he does not interrupt. He listens. (chapter 94) He allows the confession to unfold—even in its distorted form. And once it has been spoken, he does something no one else has done before. He recognizes it. (chapter 94) In that moment, indirect speech is no longer needed. What Joo Jaekyung could not say directly is named—clearly, without hesitation. And this act changes the structure of the exchange.

Because Kim Dan is not simply responding. He is translating. (chapter 94) Not simply because of the place. But because of who is beside him.

Joo Jaekyung does not fully understand him. But he does something essential. He stays, as he has come to associate solitude with boredom. (chapter 94) He waits and later listens. And he does not turn away. He shows an interest in his thoughts and inner world. (chapter 94)

For the first time, Kim Dan is no longer facing a boundary that reflects distance—but a presence that allows something to pass through it. The shore, then, is not only a line between two worlds. (chapter 94)

But this exchange is not one-sided. Because Joo Jaekyung’s confession does more than reveal something about himself—it creates a form of acceptance and reciprocity. By exposing his own vulnerability, however indirectly, he does not remain outside Kim Dan’s inner world. He steps into it—and, at the same time, invites Kim Dan to do the same. Hence he is now capable to express his true admiration: (chapter 94)

And this changes not only their exchange—but the meaning of the place itself. Because for Kim Dan, the beach had never been just a location. It was tied to a memory that was not his own. To something his grandmother had described—something beautiful, something meaningful—but always experienced alone. What he sought there, in the past, was not simply comfort. Like mentioned above, it was connection.

The hope that, by returning to that place, he might feel what she had felt. That the beauty of the ocean could bridge the distance between them. That it could, even briefly, soften his loneliness. But that experience had always remained incomplete. Because it was never shared. Now, for the first time, that changes.

He is no longer alone in front of the ocean. He is not imagining what someone else once felt. He is living something—here, in the present—with someone beside him. (chapter 94) A moment that is not remembered. Not borrowed. Not projected. But shared.

That’s why he will never forget this moment. Because what he had longed for was not only to be understood—but to experience something meaningful with another person, without distance, without roles, without having to carry it alone.

And this is where the difference with the grandmother becomes clear. She spoke about Kim Dan without ever truly entering his experience. The distance remained intact. Joo Jaekyung, by contrast, does something else. He does not know Kim Dan’s entire past —but he reaches toward him. Not by asking directly. But by making himself available.

And this movement carries an implicit request: (chapter 94) not to remain alone in what has just been revealed.

In other words, Joo Jaekyung is not only confessing. He is asking—quietly, almost unconsciously—to be trusted and as such accepted. And Kim Dan responds to that request. Not by withdrawing. Not by protecting the other through silence. But by speaking.

The shore no longer separates. It begins to connect. Not fully. Not clearly. Not without hesitation. But enough for something new to emerge.

And this “something” can now be named more precisely. (chapter 94): friendship.

Not as a completed bond—but as a shift in how they relate to one another. Until this moment, their interactions had been structured by roles: patient and therapist, employer and subordinate, champion and supporter. Each exchange was framed by function, expectation, or necessity. Here, that structure loosens. They are no longer speaking from their roles—but to each other. Hence they look at each other at the end.

Not to fulfill a function. Not to maintain a balance. But to share something that belongs to neither of those frameworks. The first moment that carries the shape of friendship.

Signs of Direction: Sun, Lighthouse, Pier, and Umbrellas

If the shore marks a boundary, the horizon introduces another question altogether: not where they are, but where they are heading. (chapter 94)

And here, the visual composition becomes extremely revealing. The scene does not simply give us a beautiful beach. It places in front of the reader several structures of orientation: the sun (chapter 94), the lighthouse (chapter 94), the pier (chapter 94), and, more discreetly, the red tent with the two umbrellas (chapter 94). None of them is accidental. But their meaning is not only symbolic. They reveal something that neither of them have not yet fully realized. That they were never entirely alone.

The Lighthouse and the Sun: Two Models of Survival

The contrast between the two protagonists is rooted in how they seek light. For Kim Dan, orientation was never about an abstract goal, but a concrete person: his grandmother. She was the fixed point that prevented him from drifting into total darkness.

This is why the lighthouse is his defining symbol. (chapter 94) It stands visible and steady—a structure built to guide and prevent loss. Yet, Kim Dan associates it with loneliness. The lighthouse embodies the gap between what is present and what he is able to perceive. It provides direction, but not warmth; it signals, but does not embrace. It stands near, yet remains fundamentally separate. For Dan, the lighthouse represents support without true intimacy—a guidance that keeps him vertical but leaves him emotionally shivering.

Joo Jaekyung operates by a different celestial logic. When he speaks of his “friend,” he associates survival with the sun—a distant, overwhelming source of power. (chapter 94) In Jaekyung’s philosophy, one endures by fixing their eyes on a high, unreachable goal. The sun provides the energy to keep moving, but like the lighthouse, it offers no closeness. It is a strategy of survival based on projection and distance. It kept him alive, but it also kept him isolated. His “goal” is like his life strategy: disciplined and bright, but emotionally unreachable. And what is the common denominator between them? By keeping their gaze on the sun or lighthouse, they couldn’t see that they are surrounded —by nature and by human structures. (chapter 94) They are in reality not alone. The sea, the sky, the light… but also the lighthouse, the pier, the tent.

The Pier: The Human Path

Between the verticality of the lighthouse and the distance of the sun lies the pier. Extending outward into the water, it represents something fundamentally different: not a distant point, not a fixed signal—but a path. A human construction.
A movement toward something not yet reached.

But more importanty, the pier leads toward the lighthouse. (chapter 59) In other words, it connects movement to orientation.

And this is exactly what happens in the dialogue.

(chapter 94) his words seem, at first, to reinforce isolation. They reduce human experience to sameness. They remove the possibility of being uniquely understood. But that is only one side of it. Because these words also do something else. They reach Kim Dan. They meet him precisely at the point of his fear: the fear of being alone, of being left behind, of losing the only structure that gave his life direction.

By framing loneliness as something universal, Jaekyung transforms it. Not into something to escape—but into something survivable. And this is where the visual composition becomes decisive. While he speaks, the pier extends behind him—toward the lighthouse. His words follow the same movement. They begin in distance— but they arrive at Kim Dan, the “lighthouse”.

Even if unconsciously, he builds a bridge. On the other hand, his advice reflects his past philosophy. One could say that he isn’t offering empathy, for he is erasing difference. By reducing everyone to a single condition, he creates a defense against true connection. If everyone is “the same,” no one is uniquely lovable or truly distinct. His words reflect his indifference towards others.

Yet, his life contradicts his cynicism. He speaks as if he survived by solo strength, ignoring the “piers” in his own life—people like Hwang Byungchul (chapter 72) or his mother. He resists any narrative of dependence because to acknowledge others is to acknowledge vulnerability. He looks at the horizon and overlooks the pier at his side, even though he has been standing on it all along. It is because he was constantly staring at the “sun”. Therefore his reaction is not surprising. (chapter 94) To acknowledge others would mean acknowledging vulnerability—not just as a condition, but as something shared. So instead, he generalizes. He replaces relationship with sameness. And in doing so, he protects himself from the risk of trust.

As you can see, each element reflects something about Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung’s inner state and philosophy. This means that as soon as the athlete’s words reached the doctor’s lighthouse, the latter showed him that there was a light much closer to him than the “sun”… the “lighthouse”.

And then there are the more discreet signs in the background: the red tent and the two umbrellas. (chapter 94) These details are easy to overlook, and yet they may be among the most intimate symbols in the entire sequence. Observe that when Kim Dan admits that he wished he had met him sooner, the red tent and the two umbrellas already stand there in the background.

The symbolism is almost painfully clear. The red tent suggests shelter, enclosure, perhaps even the outline of a home. The two umbrellas echo the possibility of shared protection, of two people occupying the same protected space. And yet, neither character has stepped into that space. The tent remains in the distance, just as the umbrellas remain unused. Home exists as a possibility, but it is not yet inhabited.

This is what makes the image so moving. They are no longer completely separate, but they are not “inside” yet either. They are still outside the shelter that awaits them. The home is there, but it has not yet been entered. In other words, the beach scene does not conclude their journey. It stages the threshold of it.

And that is why all these directional symbols matter together.

The sun shows the old logic of survival through distant purpose. The lighthouse shows the old logic of attachment through lonely guidance. The pier shows the beginning of a path toward someone else and stands for connection, endurance and trust. The tent and the umbrellas show the possibility of a shared dwelling that has not yet been claimed.

So the horizon in this scene is not empty at all. It is crowded with future meanings. But none of them is fully realized. The characters are still between states, between models of life, between kinds of love. They can see direction now, but they have not yet arrived. And perhaps this is precisely the point.

The scene does not tell us that they are already safe. It tells us that they are no longer directionless and alone. (chapter 94) They are moving toward each other mentally and emotionally.

The Champion Without a Childhood

And yet, even within this setting, something is still missing. When Joo Jaekyung speaks about his past, the visual language becomes striking.´We do not see a child. (chapter 94)

We see an adult figure—walking through a space that should belong to childhood. A silhouette. A presence without age. It is not simply that the child is absent. It is that he was never allowed to exist. But this absence does not emerge in isolation. It is embedded in the environment itself. Look closely at the setting of his memory. The narrow streets. The damaged houses. The dense accumulation of structures. Everything is gray, as if there was no life at all.

And above all: the mountain in front of him—blocked, obscured, almost inaccessible. He is surrounded by civilization. But not in the sense of protection or community. Rather, as constraint. As enclosure. As a space already marked by hardship, deterioration, and survival. This is not a childhood landscape. It is a system.

And this observation leads me to the following deduction. Jaekyung does not know nature. Not as openness. Not as refuge. Not as something one can enter freely.

The mountain is there —but it is not reachable, as it has lost its true function. The sky is present—but it is not experienced. Everything is filtered through structures. Through walls. Through streets. Through necessity.

This is why the sun becomes so central in his narrative. (chapter 94) Not as beauty. Not as warmth in a relational sense. But as something else: as air. (chapter 94)

As the only available form of escape. When he speaks of finding “a goal to work toward,” and the image shifts toward the sun, this is not just ambition. It is survival. The sun is the only thing that cannot be blocked by his environment. The only thing that exists beyond the system surrounding him. He does not move toward nature. He looks upward—because upward is the only direction that remains open.

And this is precisely where Kim Dan’s response becomes so striking. (chapter 94) He can’t help himself asking him for a confirmation. When Joo Jaekyung begins with (chapter 94), the formulation appears to create distance. It suggests another person, another life, another experience. But this distance does not hold.

Because the narrative that follows immediately undermines it. The “friend” is described as someone who, at a decisive moment, felt as if he was completely alone in the world. (chapter 94) Someone who grew up without parents, without siblings, without any form of support. The statement is absolute. It leaves no room for exception. And this is where the logic of the confession reveals itself.

If this person truly experienced himself as entirely alone—if there was no one to rely on, no one to turn to—then the very idea of a “friend” becomes impossible. The term contradicts the condition it describes. (chapter 94) In other words, the story cancels its own premise. The “friend” cannot exist as a separate figure. He can only be the speaker himself. At the same time, the main lead’s confession displays that he has no true friend in his life in the end. These words expose his isolation and loneliness.

In addition, this allows us to understand the deeper structure of his trauma. This is not only parentification. It is deprivation on multiple levels. Emotional, yes. But also spatial. Experiential. He was not only denied care. He was denied an environment in which childhood could unfold. (chapter 94), the exact opposite of Kim Dan.

This is why the visual metaphor is so radical. (chapter 94) There is no rupture between past and present. No transition. No visible child. Only continuity. A life that begins already in function. A childhood replaced by endurance.

And this absence is reinforced later. When his mother denies this reality (chapter 74), she does not simply reject his suffering. She erases the condition that produced it. Which leaves him with no framework to understand what is missing.

This explains everything. Why he distances himself. (chapter 94) Why he reduces relationships to roles. Why he cannot understand his own emotions. Because there is no internal reference for them. The child is missing.

And this is precisely where the connection to the present becomes decisive. Because the landscape he carries within him—the enclosed streets, the obstructed mountain, the unreachable outside—stands in direct contrast to the image that surrounds him now.

The open horizon. The visible sea. The unobstructed light. (chapter 94) This shared experience makes him see the world in a whole new light. It is no longer gray, but colorful, as he is not alone anymore. He no longer needs to look at the horizon or the sun. (chapter 94)

And even more importantly: the painting. (chapter 93) The mountain.
The sunlight. A version of nature that is no longer blocked—but offered. This is not accidental. It suggests something fundamental: what was once inaccessible is now placed before him. But he cannot reach it alone.

This is where Kim Dan’s role becomes clear. Because Kim Dan is not only the one who listens. He is the one who already belongs to that space. He understands nature—not as distance, but as experience. (chapter 94) Not as something to look at—but something to enter.

And this is where we can return to the director’s words. (chapter 75) This was never only about people. It was about environment. About perception. About everything that exists beyond the narrow structure in which Jaekyung learned to survive: shared experience.

In that sense, Kim Dan does not simply recognize the child in him. (chapter 94) He represents something else: a path. Not upward, like the sun. But outward. Toward a world that was always there— but never truly lived.

The Piercing Amber Gaze

And this is precisely where Kim Dan’s role becomes decisive. When he says, (chapter 94) something subtle, but profound, happens. He is no longer addressing the champion, the figure admired by others for his strength and victories. He is speaking to the child. Not the one who succeeded, but the one who endured. That’s why later the author turned the adult Joo Jaekyung into a “child” (chapter 94) In that moment, admiration shifts into recognition. What is acknowledged is not performance, but survival.

This is where the symbolism of amber becomes essential. Amber is not merely a color. It is fossilized tree resin—something that once flowed from a living organism, exposed to light, warmth, and time. Over time, this fluid substance solidifies, preserving within it traces of what once existed: fragments of life, suspended and protected. For this reason, amber has long been associated with the preservation of time, with memory made tangible, with something that endures beyond its original state. But this preservation is not neutral. What amber holds within it are not only traces of life, but also moments of rupture —organisms (insects, pollen) that were caught, immobilized, unable to escape. In this sense, amber is inseparable from loss. It preserves not only what once lived, but also what was interrupted, what was wounded, what could not continue. It is memory—but memory marked by pain.

But amber carries another layer of meaning. Often described as “sunlight in solidified form,” it is linked to warmth, vitality, and life energy. At the same time, across many cultures, it has been used as a protective talisman—worn to ward off harm, to bring balance, to protect the vulnerable. It is both a carrier of memory and a source of protection. Something that does not erase what has been, but transforms it into something that can be held, endured, and even passed on.

This dual nature is crucial. Because Kim Dan embodies precisely this transformation.

Like amber, he originates from something living—from the “tree,” (chapter 41) from a place of growth, exposure, and vulnerability. This interpretation gets once again validated on the beach. (chapter 94) A tree is placed right behind the main lead. Doc Dan has experienced loss, abandonment, and instability. And yet, unlike Joo Jaekyung, he has not responded by distancing himself or hardening into detachment. He has not rejected what he felt. Instead, he has absorbed it.

What he carries is not untouched innocence, but something altered through time—something that has endured. His capacity to care, to attach, to return to others despite the risk of loss is not naïve. It is the result of transformation.

This is what defines his gaze. (chapter 94) When Kim Dan looks at Joo Jaekyung, he does not stop at the surface—the fame, the strength, the constructed identity. He perceives what lies beneath it, but he does not expose it in order to dismantle it. He preserves it differently. (chapter 94) And this is where the nature of his admiration becomes clear. Kim Dan does admire strength, but not the kind that needs to be constantly proven or displayed. (chapter 94) He recognizes something prior to all of that: endurance, resistance, the ability to survive without support, without childhood, without refuge.

When he says that enduring such hardship is a testament to Joo Jaekyung’s strength, he does not diminish that strength—he relocates it. (chapter 94) He shows him that it was never dependent on winning, never tied to performance or recognition. It existed long before the fights (chapter 94), long before the titles, long before anyone acknowledged it. And this changes everything. Because if strength has already been proven, then it no longer needs to be demonstrated again and again. It no longer needs to be defended, tested, or confirmed through every challenge.

This is why the moment is both destabilizing and liberating. It destabilizes Joo Jaekyung because it undermines the foundation of his entire system (chapter 94), which was built on proving himself through action and endurance. But at the same time, it frees him from that necessity. For the first time, strength is no longer something he has to chase: it is something he already possesses.

And this shift has a deeper implication, because it directly contradicts the words that had defined him for so long. The father’s voice that told him: (chapter 73) A statement that reduced his existence to failure from the very beginning, leaving him with only one option—to prove, endlessly, that this judgment was wrong.

Up until now, everything in his life can be understood as a response to that accusation. Every fight, every victory, every act of endurance functioned as a counterargument. Strength was not something he had—it was something he had to demonstrate, again and again, in order to negate that original condemnation. But Kim Dan’s words on the beach break that logic. (chapter 94) He even wishes, he had known him before so that he could express his admiration much sooner. That’s how the jinx gets removed.

By recognizing his endurance as strength, he removes the need for proof. He does not argue against the past. He does not deny what happened. Instead, he reframes it. What was once the basis for humiliation becomes the evidence of resilience. What was meant to define him as a “loser” is revealed as the very condition that required strength to survive.

In that sense, Kim Dan is not simply comforting him. He is undoing the structure of that internal voice. Because if Joo Jaekyung’s strength is already real—already proven through what he endured—then the accusation loses its power. It no longer requires an answer. It no longer demands a reaction. This is precisely why his response is not verbal, but visual. (chapter 94) He keeps looking at Kim Dan, unable to look away, as if held in place by something he cannot yet fully process. It is not fascination in the superficial sense, but recognition. The words reach a part of him that had remained unaddressed for years. (chapter 94) The child, who had long been denied acknowledgment, is finally being seen—and more importantly, affirmed.

If he no longer needs to disprove that he is “nothing,” then he is no longer bound to constant confrontation. He no longer needs to accept every challenge, no longer needs to measure himself through endless trials. For the first time, he can step out of that cycle. He can choose. He can decide what is worth engaging with—and what is not.

In other words, Kim Dan’s recognition does not simply validate him. It releases him. What he is responding to is not only kindness, but accuracy. For the first time, someone names his past without reducing it, without turning it into weakness or failure. (chapter 94) And this is what makes Kim Dan’s words so powerful: they do not impose meaning—they reveal it.

Because in that moment, the structure through which Joo Jaekyung had perceived both himself and others begins to shift. Kim Dan is no longer reduced to a role, no longer confined to the position of a physical therapist or a tool meant to counter his “jinx.” He becomes something else entirely.

A presence. Someone who sees him. Someone who understands him. Someone who reaches him. In other words, for the first time, Joo Jaekyung is able to recognize him not through function, but through relation. Not as a means—but as a person. And this is precisely what opens the possibility of something he has never truly experienced before:

friendship.

This is exactly what amber does. It does not erase the past, nor does it glorify it. It preserves it, but transforms its meaning. What was once a source of isolation becomes something that can be acknowledged. What was once hidden becomes something that can be seen without shame. This is why Kim Dan’s gaze is piercing—not because it is aggressive, but because it reaches what had been sealed away and makes it visible without destroying it.

And this transformation has consequences. Because if his past is no longer a source of shame, but of strength, then it no longer renders him silent. What he had once accepted—criticism, blame, humiliation—because he believed it reflected who he was, begins to lose its legitimacy. The internalized voice that reduced him to nothing is no longer left unanswered. And in doing so, it offers something new. Not judgment. (chapter 57) (chapter 89) Not expectation. (chapter 88) But a form of recognition that restores his position in relation to others. For the first time, he is no longer defined by what was done to him. He is no longer confined to enduring in silence. Instead, he gains something he had been denied: the ability to respond.

To speak back. To defend himself. To demand respect—not as a performance, but as a condition of his existence.

Seeing Each Other

This is why the final image of the scene carries so much weight. (chapter 94)

They sit on the same bench. They face the same horizon. There is no confrontation. That’s why they are no longer facing each other like rivals or challengers. (chapter 9) The tension that once structured their encounters has disappeared.No imbalance of power. No role to perform. For the first time, their positions align. (chapter 94)

Earlier, the movement seemed to come from Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 94) Like the pier, he extended something of himself outward—hesitant, indirect, not fully conscious—yet reaching toward the other. His words, even in their abstraction, had begun to bridge a distance. Now, something shifts. It is as if the lighthouse responds. (chapter 94) That’s why doc Dan is wearing the color than the lighthouse. Not by moving—but by illuminating.

By revealing how far that movement has already gone. (chapter 94) By casting light on a path that was not recognized as such. What Joo Jaekyung could not see—what he could not yet name—is made visible through Kim Dan’s recognition. The distance he believed to be absolute is shown to be already crossed, at least in part.

And this changes the meaning of the moment. Because for the first time, they are not approaching each other from opposite sides. (chapter 94) They are already there. Together. And this is why for the first time, they see each other.

Not as:

  • champion and employee
  • strength and dependence
  • giver and receiver

But as two individuals shaped by their past. Two people who have endured. Two people standing—at different points—on the same threshold between what was and what might still become. They are finally friends.

The Direction of The Gaze

So if we return, one last time, to the images that quietly accompanied them—the paintings—we might begin to see it differently. At first, it seemed to reflect distance. (chapter 18) A frozen landscape, divided, silent. Then, later, it changed: the trees regained life, a mountain appeared, water began to reflect the light. The scene softened, but it never became whole. (chapter 93) The fragmentation remained.

And perhaps this is precisely the point. Because what the painting was showing was not only a change in atmosphere—but a direction.

A destination. The forest. The mountain. The water.

Places that exist beyond the walls, beyond the roles they had learned to inhabit. And perhaps the scene in episode 93 makes this even clearer. (chapter 93)

This time, Kim Dan is the one facing the painting. He looks toward the landscape—the trees, the mountain, the water—while Joo Jaekyung sits beside it, almost turned away. The image is closer to him, placed on his side, and yet he does not truly see it. The distance between them has narrowed—but their orientations are not yet the same.

Kim Dan is already aligned with what the painting suggests. Joo Jaekyung is not. The destination is near him—but not yet accessible to him. And this is where their roles begin to shift. The painting is already announcing that doc Dan is taking the lead. Thus Joo Jaekyung followed him to the beach. (chapter 94)

Because if the painting indicates a direction—toward the woods, the mountain, a space beyond the structures that confined them—then it is Kim Dan who is able to recognize it. Not because he is stronger. But because he has already learned to move through loss without closing himself off. Hence he could confess in his drunken state and later recognize his feelings pretty quickly. (chapter 41)

And this is where the story quietly folds back onto itself. The puppy and the dog we are invited to remember… are no longer there. (chapter 94) They vanished from Doc Dan’s life, exactly like the puppy who is now buried near those same hills and trees. (chapter 59) The image of warmth we associate with it is, in reality, the trace of a loss. So he did not just lose his parents, but also pets.

Just like the painting. Just like the beach. What appears as beauty is never separate from what has been lost.

And yet—this is where Kim Dan becomes truly significant. Because despite that loss, he did not turn away.

He did not close himself off (chapter 57), nor reduce others to something distant or manageable. Instead, he remained capable of attachment. Of care. (chapter 7) Of returning, again and again, to places that carried pain—because they also carried meaning.

In this sense, the painting was never just a background. (chapter 93)

It was a quiet anticipation. Not only of the beach, or the conversation, or the emerging honesty—but of something more fundamental: a way of being. Not whole. Not free from fragmentation. But no longer frozen.

And perhaps this is why the image never becomes fully bright. Because what we are witnessing is not a completed transformation—but a movement. From silence to speech. From distance to presence. From loss… to the possibility of loving again.

And perhaps this is where the meaning of that moment on the beach becomes clearest. Because this is also where Joo Jaekyung begins to find an answer to a question he could not yet articulate: (chapter 93) “ The answer is not given to him directly. It appears in front of him on the beach. (chapter 94)

In the way Kim Dan looks at him—without distance, without calculation, without turning away. There is no performance in that gaze, no role to maintain. Only a quiet, unguarded presence. And in that moment, something shifts.

The one who had learned to distance himself, to objectify, to control… is now confronted with something he cannot reduce. Not strength. Not obligation. But something else. Something he does not yet fully understand — but can no longer ignore. Love. And perhaps this is why the image lingers. Because while the champion is still searching for words, the “child” has already sensed it.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Man 👤 Who Knew Too Much 👮‍♂️ – part 2

I know that my avid readers were expecting an analysis of episode 94, especially because the conversation between the two main leads was so moving. Actually, the illustration and the title are already prepared. Beautiful, right? Yet I could not help myself returning once again to the criminals. My fascination with thrillers and investigations probably gives it away: when I read this story, I instinctively begin to examine every image, words and event like a detective reconstructing a case.

You may therefore wonder what triggered this sudden return to the question of conspiracy.

Surprisingly, it started with a very quiet panel. (chapter 94) In this moment we learn that Kim Dan lost his parents in an accident when he was a child, though we shouldn’t trust this confession as the truth due to the debts. Anyway, the word “accident” immediately resonates with a principle that has appeared again and again throughout the story: someone being at the wrong time, at the wrong place.

In Kim Dan’s case, however, the catastrophe is natural. It is not the result of manipulation or conspiracy. Fate simply intervened. The tragedy shaped his life, leaving him alone with his grandmother and forcing him to grow up prematurely. This explains the origins of his powerlessness and passivity. His entire existence is marked by the consequences of that accident. Yet precisely because this accident is natural, it casts a revealing light on the world of the criminals.

In their world, accidents are manufactured. (chapter 40) What appears to be coincidence is often carefully engineered.

The Criminal Method

When we examine the schemes surrounding Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan, a recurring structure becomes visible. The antagonists rarely attack their targets directly. Instead, they create situations where events unfold in such a way that someone appears to have been caught at the wrong place, at the wrong time.

The pattern is remarkably consistent. First, the media narrative is prepared. Hence an article about his shoulder injury was leaked to the press. (chapter 36) At the same time, social medias were manipulated in order to stir public pressure and push the champion toward accepting the match in the States. (chapter 36) But we only discover this MO thanks to the match with Arnaud Gabriel and the Entertainment agency’s involvement. (chapter 81)

After the incident in the United States, the manipulation did not stop. On the contrary, it entered a new phase. The media reported that Joo Jaekyung had been suspended because of his temperament. (chapter 52) Officially, the story suggested that his own behavior had caused the problem. In reality, however, this removal also had another function: it cleared space for Baek Junmin’s rise. That’s the reason why the article with The Shotgun was placed directly below the star’s and why the director Hwang Byungchul accepted easily the disqualification of his former pupil. (chapter 71)

At the same time, the public image of the champion was gradually reframed. (chapter 54) He was increasingly portrayed as reckless and irresponsible for continuing to fight despite his condition. (chapter 54) In this new narrative, the original leak of confidential medical information was no longer treated as the real wrongdoing. The focus shifted entirely onto the athlete himself.

Rumors about the champion’s injuries, his unstable recovery, and his arrogance could now circulate in advance, so that any later setback—including a possible defeat in Paris—would appear understandable, even inevitable. (chapter 70) Once such stories enter public discourse—injury, temper, arrogance—every later incident can be read as confirmation. The narrative becomes self-reinforcing. The media no longer merely reports events; it prepares the framework through which future events will be judged.

Second, a destabilizing trigger is introduced. Often this takes the form of drugs or pharmaceutical substances. The drugged beverage in the United States (chapter 37) and the suspicious spray (chapter 49) used during the manipulated match both belong to this category. These substances create uncertainty about the athlete’s physical condition and about the legitimacy of his treatment. But this implies the involvement of the pharmaceutical industry. (chapter 41)

The third step in this pattern is the involvement of authorities and institutions. Once the destabilizing event has occurred, official actors step in: security personnel, referees, medical staff, health centers, or the sports organization itself. Their intervention transforms a chaotic incident into an officially documented event.

This stage is essential, because institutions possess something criminals do not: legitimacy. The incident in the United States reveals how institutional authority can be used to control the narrative. After the incident with the drugged beverage was reported to the MFC, security personnel intervened and brought Kim Dan into an interrogation room. (chapter 40) The scene resembled a police investigation, yet these men were not representatives of the state. Hence there was no translator and lawyer. They were dressed-up employees of a private organization whose primary objective is to protect the company from scandal and as such from losing money

During the interrogation, the agents attempted to frame Kim Dan by focusing on the “nutrition shake” he had allegedly consumed. He seemed to be part of a scheme. (chapter 40) At first glance, this strategy appears effective. By redirecting attention toward the therapist, the organization can distance itself from the real problem: the suspicious beverage that had been introduced into the environment of the fight.

However, the scheme overlooks an important detail. The incident did not remain entirely undocumented. (chapter 40) A doctor took a blood sample from Kim Dan, and the laboratory later produced a component analysis report. (chapter 41) This report becomes significant for two reasons. First, it confirms that the contamination was real. The substance had indeed been introduced into the environment surrounding the fight. Such a finding inevitably raises questions about how the drink entered the system controlled by the MFC. In order to avoid institutional responsibility, the organization therefore needed a convenient explanation—someone outside its sphere of influence who could be blamed for the incident, antis. (chapter 41)

Second, the timing of the report is revealing. The results of the component analysis appear in the very same episode in which the MFC doctors give their approval for the next fight. (chapter 41) This coincidence exposes another layer of the mechanism. While the laboratory analysis confirms that an illicit substance had been present, the medical authorities simultaneously authorize the champion to continue fighting. The two decisions cannot easily be separated. Together, they suggest that the involvement of the doctors helps stabilize the narrative: the suspicious beverage becomes a secondary issue, while the focus shifts toward the champion’s physical condition and his decision to fight despite his shoulder injury.

In this way, medical authority does not simply clarify the situation. It contributes to transforming a troubling incident into a new plot and manageable story. To conclude, the MFC medical authorities approving the fight are now part of the scheme, accomplices of the set up as well. Doctors have entered the chain of events. But why did all the employees (security agents, doctors) started helping? The fear of a scandal and the involvement of the media … and naturally loss of money (chapter 40) That’s why they needed a scapegoat. First Kim Dan, later antis and finally the athlete himself. And who fears a scandal in Jinx? One might say Park Namwook (chapter 31) who always hides behind authorities and shows distrust toward fighters. But he is just reflecting the attitude of the other MFC accomplices.

The same mechanism appears during the events surrounding the manipulated match and the switched spray. Joo Jaekyung’s ankle got injured after the substance had been used. (chapter 50) Observe that in the locker room, the coach declares the athlete as fit despite the injury before going to the health center. The chronology is important, as the MFC doctors have the final saying. So when the champion is taken to the health center before the fight. the responsibility is shifted.

By examining the athlete and clearing him for the match despite the injury, the medical authorities effectively became responsible for the decision that allowed the fight to proceed. In principle, such a medical examination should have resulted in documentation of several elements: the condition of the ankle, the treatment administered, and the circumstances surrounding the injury. But I am suspecting that the documentation was either ignored or deliberately minimized the ankle injury. Why?

Keep in mind that the narrative that later circulated in the media tells a different story. Instead of focusing on the injured ankle and the suspicious spray, the discussion shifted almost entirely toward the champion’s shoulder injury. (chapter 54) The public narrative portrayed him as reckless for continuing to fight despite his physical condition. The responsibility for the situation was therefore redirected toward the athlete himself. MFC’s notoriety remained clean, the employees were all safe, they were not facing any financial or legal repercussion contrary to the star. (chapter 54) Hence Park Namwook remained passive.

The later meeting at the restaurant confirms this strategy of containment. The CEO of the MFC (chapter 69) apologized for the behavior of the security staff toward one of Joo Jaekyung’s team members. (chapter 69) Significantly, this apology took place behind closed doors, not in front of the media, and doc Dan is still left in the dark about it. The goal was therefore not transparency but damage control. They were in reality attempting to bury everything, to buy some time, until the athlete would lose his next match.

By presenting the incident as the result of overzealous security agents, the organization could deflect attention from the more troubling questions raised by the drugged beverage and the switched spray, the lack of security and neglect. (chapter 69) The problem was reduced to a matter of manners rather than a potential security failure or institutional complicity. In this way, the apology functioned less as an admission of guilt than as a mechanism to close the case quietly before it reached the public sphere.

Interestingly, the executive describes the substance as a “fake supplement.” This terminology already reveals a subtle shift in language. The laboratory analysis had identified the compound as an aphrodisiac. In other words, a drug that can exist within the legal pharmaceutical sphere. By presenting the substance as a “fake supplement,” the organization avoids raising uncomfortable questions about the origin and distribution of the compound. The problem is no longer framed as the misuse of a pharmaceutical drug but as the circulation of a counterfeit product introduced by an external criminal actor. In this way, the language protects not only the organization itself but also the broader pharmaceutical system from scrutiny. And don’t forget that Doc Dan got informed about the connection between the rival gym and the parent pharmaceutical company in the States.

And now, the modus operandi of the villains and schemers becomes clear. When these incidents are considered together, a consistent criminal method emerges. The antagonists try to trap their targets like hunters. Instead, they construct situations in which events appear to unfold naturally while responsibility is quietly redirected elsewhere.

The structure remains remarkably stable: first a compromised situation is created, then a destabilizing act of sabotage is introduced, and finally responsibility is redirected toward a convenient scapegoat. In this way, institutions remain intact while the blame falls on expendable individuals.

This is how the underworld functions. Someone is always placed in the wrong place at the wrong time, and the lowest figures in the hierarchy—the minions—are left to take the fall. For this very reason, criminal organizations and drug cartels are notoriously difficult to dismantle: the system protects itself by sacrificing those at the bottom while the structures above remain untouched.

If this pattern truly governs the criminal strategy, then the attack against Kim Dan cannot be limited to a single incident. The physical therapist represents the most vulnerable element in the entire situation: he comes from poverty, lacks institutional protection, and his professional credibility can easily be questioned. For this reason, it is likely that the conspirators will attempt not one manipulation but several. And the last one will force them to expose their true nature: they are criminals and no doctors, directors or athletes (kidnapping).

These stunts will almost certainly revolve around the same thematic field that has already appeared in the story: wrongdoings, drugs and substances. Whether through medication (chapter 91), drinks , smoking, (chapter 65), or other forms of contamination, each incident would undermine Kim Dan’s credibility as a medical professional. If the therapist can be portrayed as irresponsible, incompetent, or compromised by substances, the institutional narrative could once again shift responsibility onto him.

Kim Dan and The Medical Trap

Once this mechanism becomes visible, the events in the locker room acquire a different meaning. At the very moment when the scheme reaches its decisive phase (chapter 52), Kim Dan is no longer present. After confronting him and suspecting a betrayal (chapter 51), Joo Jaekyung leaves the locker room alone and goes to the health center. And don’t forget that before, he even refused his treatment for the ankle injury before. (chapter 50)

As a result, Kim Dan is absent when the champion is treated at the MFC medical center and at the health center. (chapter 50) He therefore has no knowledge of what happens there: the medical examination, the decisions taken by the doctors, and the institutional narrative that later emerges from this encounter.

This absence is crucial. The criminal method described above requires the presence of a convenient scapegoat at the moment when the official version of events is constructed. (chapter 51) But this time, the pattern is disrupted. Kim Dan is not there when the institutions intervene.

Paradoxically, the accusation that drove Joo Jaekyung to distance himself from his therapist also removes him from the very situation in which he might once again have been blamed. The scapegoat has disappeared from the scene.

That’s why Joo Jaekyung had to take the blame for the outcome and the “scandal”, the brawl burying the incident with the switched spray!! (chapter 52)

To understand the consequences of this absence, we must therefore return to the locker room itself—where suspicion, photographs, and accusations first triggered the rupture between the two men. The confrontation in the locker room marks the moment when this criminal mechanism nearly achieves its objective. At this point in the story, suspicion has already begun to circulate around Kim Dan. (chapter 48) Photographs of him had been sent to Joo Jaekyung, suggesting that the physical therapist might have been communicating with Baek Junmin through the director of the other gym. (chapter 51) Confronted with these images and the growing confusion surrounding the match, the champion reaches a painful conclusion: that his roommate may have betrayed him.

In the locker room, this suspicion finally erupts into open accusation. (chapter 51) Joo Jaekyung confronts Kim Dan directly and demands an explanation. For the first time, the therapist is placed in the exact position that the criminal schemes had been preparing all along: the position of the possible traitor.

From the champion’s perspective, the logic seems simple. The photographs appear to show a connection between Kim Dan and his rival. While Joo Jaekyung believes he has finally uncovered the truth behind the sabotage, he is in fact reacting to a carefully constructed illusion. He is not realizing that the match was rigged, the jury and moderator had been bought. They had planned the tie. That way, MFc appears as a legitimate sports organization. The images and circumstances that appear to implicate Kim Dan are themselves part of the larger mechanism designed to redirect suspicion toward the most vulnerable figure in the entire situation. (chapter 51)

Timing, however, remains the key element in the criminals’ strategy: everything depends on placing someone at the wrong time and at the wrong place. Yet in this instance, the timing fails. The report of the incident surfaces only much later, after Potato hears about the situation. (chapter 52) By that point, the circumstances have already changed. The use of the switched spray introduces a new dimension to the case, and with it the possibility that another authority must intervene.

For the first time, the matter can no longer remain confined within the internal structures of the MFC. (chapter 52) The situation now risks attracting the attention of the police. As you can see, by remaining passive, Joo Jaekyung in his own way protected the physical therapist from real trouble. If he had truly blamed him, he could have “called” the police, but he did not.

In other words, the conspirators would have obtained their perfect scapegoat. The champion’s rejection therefore becomes a blessing in disguise. By removing Kim Dan from the scene, he prevents the therapist from being trapped inside the very mechanism designed to destroy him.

Baek Junmin and the Shadow of the Police

The appearance of the police in chapter 52 introduces an element that cannot be ignored. Up to this point, the incidents surrounding Joo Jaekyung have largely been contained within private structures: the MFC, its security personnel, and its medical institutions. These actors possess authority, but they remain part of a controlled environment where scandals can be managed internally.

The police represent a very different kind of authority. Interestingly, the narrative later reveals that Joo Jaekyung himself had previously spent time at a police station following an incident involving damaged property and a street fight. (chapter 74) The coincidence between these two moments—chapter 52 and chapter 74—suggests more than a simple narrative repetition. Both situations involve the same institutional actor: the police.

This connection raises an important question. Why does Joo Jaekyung immediately suspect Baek Junmin with the switched spray (chapter 51), when the pictures only show Choi Gilseok and he was not even present in the locker room?

The answer may lie in his own past experience. When the champion finds himself at the police station in the earlier incident, the situation appears similar to the pattern we have already observed elsewhere: a chaotic confrontation, witnesses present, and a narrative that quickly identifies him as the responsible party. Moreover, observe that during that night, the future champion (chapter 74) has a similar wound on the forehead than The Shotgun. (chapter 74) If Baek Junmin had orchestrated that earlier event, the strategy would have been simple but effective. Instead of attacking his rival directly, he could create circumstances that forced the authorities themselves to intervene. But why would he involve the police, when he is involved in the criminal world? Such a tactic would allow him to remove or weaken Joo Jaekyung without openly violating the protection imposed by his hyung (chapter 74), who had explicitly forbidden him from harming the champion.

In this scenario, the police become an instrument. By manipulating witnesses—perhaps even paying students who had previously been bullied (chapter 74) —Junmin could ensure that the story presented to the authorities pointed toward Joo Jaekyung. For the students involved, the arrangement would offer a practical advantage: financial compensation and a chance to escape their own precarious situation. But for that stunt, The Shotgun got to pay a heavy price: not only the scar on his forehead (chapter 93), but also a life in the shadow forever. It is clear that he could never get rich and famous through his illegal fights. Hence he resents the main lead so deeply.

The result would be a classic example of the principle that governs the criminal world depicted in the story: placing someone at the wrong time and the wrong place. His suspicion toward Baek Junmin does not arise from speculation alone. It is grounded in experience.

If this interpretation is correct, Baek Junmin’s strategy becomes clear. By orchestrating a situation that attracts police intervention, he can remove his rival without ever directly attacking him. IMO, he is on his way to play a similar trick than in the past. Hence he looks at the calendar, timing is essential. (chapter 93) The authorities perform the task that Junmin himself is forbidden to carry out.

Moreover, the champion understands another important rule of the criminal world: organized crime usually avoids the police whenever possible. The mob prefers to settle conflicts quietly through money, intimidation, or internal arrangements. Calling the authorities risks exposing the entire network. This interpretation also explains why Joo Jaekyung doesn’t report the trespassing and assault to the authorities. (chapter 18) He knows how the criminal world functions.

Thus I deduce that with this new offer to the former hospital director, the Shotgun is involving not only the medical world more deeply into the scheme, but also the police. (chapter 91) The article reports that the director of X General Hospital was accused of sexual harassment by several members of the hospital staff. The scandal eventually forced the institution to suspend his medical license. Yet the wording of the report also exposes an important detail: the hospital reacted slowly, and the affair was handled primarily as an internal disciplinary matter.

In principle, repeated sexual harassment by a hospital director should not remain merely an administrative issue. Such actions constitute criminal offenses and could have led to a police investigation. Instead, the institution appears to have contained the scandal within its own structures.

In other words, the hospital followed the same logic that we have already observed in the MFC and within the criminal world itself: avoid the police whenever possible. The reasons are obvious. Once law enforcement becomes involved, internal arrangements lose their power and other crimes could come to the surface. Reports are reopened, testimonies are examined, and the entire chain of responsibility may become visible.

Another important ingredient of this plot is silence. The scandals are not denied outright; they are contained, privatized, and buried. The MFC admits the set-up only behind closed doors. The hospital treats criminal behavior as an internal disciplinary matter. The underworld, for its part, prefers money and intimidation to police reports. In each case, silence becomes a tool of power. What remains unspoken protects the system. That’s why the witnesses and victims need to speak up and report the crimes. Doc Dan has not reported the assault yet: (chapter 90)

Seen from this perspective, the Shotgun’s proposal to the disgraced director acquires a new meaning. By recruiting a figure who already stands at the intersection of scandal and institutional cover-up, he introduces another fragile element into the situation. The director represents a man whose career collapsed precisely because a scandal nearly escaped the control of the institution that protected him. But in his eyes, he stands for “respectability and trust”, as he is called doctor. (chapter 93)

If such a person becomes involved in the scheme against Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan, the consequences could extend beyond the criminal underworld or the sports organization. The medical world itself—and potentially the legal system—may be drawn into the conflict.

In that sense, the Shotgun’s move does not merely deepen the conspiracy. It risks bringing the one actor that all these systems usually try to avoid: the police. A lesson that he didn’t learn from the past.

And now you may wonder why I remain so focused on the earlier episodes instead of concentrating entirely on episode 94. The reason lies precisely in what this scene reveals.

The conversation between Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan makes something suddenly clear: together, they embody the opposite principle of the one that has governed the criminal schemes throughout the story. (chapter 94) Up to this point, the antagonists have relied on a simple but effective strategy. By manipulating circumstances, they repeatedly place others at the wrong place and at the wrong time. Each incident—whether involving the media, drugs, or institutional authorities—follows this logic. Someone is caught in a situation carefully arranged by others and must carry the consequences.

Episode 94 breaks this pattern. (chapter 94) There is trust, recognition, admiration and open-mindedness. In their mutual confession, the two protagonists do something that none of the criminals ever achieve: they seize the moment at the right time and in the right place. They speak and listen to each other. Instead of being manipulated by circumstances, they recognize the opportunity before them and act upon it.

The result is not merely emotional reconciliation. It quietly undermines the very mechanism that has been used against them. For the first time, the logic of coincidence and manipulation no longer dictates the outcome.

Turning the Method Against the Criminals

Yet the story introduces an important twist. The main couple gradually learns to use the same modus operandi against their enemies: at the right time and the right place. (chapter 59) (chapter 79) (chapter 94)

A revealing example occurs when Joo Jaekyung publicly challenges Baek Junmin after the fight against Arnaud Gabriel. (chapter 87) By issuing the challenge in front of the cameras, the champion forces the MFC to respond. Even though the season had effectively ended, the public nature of the declaration creates pressure that the organization and the media cannot easily ignore.

In that moment, Joo Jaekyung takes control of the narrative.

Baek Junmin suddenly finds himself in the same position that his victims usually occupy: he cannot escape the situation. Instead of manipulating time and circumstances, he must react to them. His glance toward the calendar reveals his awareness that the timing is no longer in his control. (chapter 93)

The antagonists attempt to regain that control by scheduling events close to Christmas, a moment when institutions and public attention may be distracted. Time itself becomes another instrument within the conflict. A second possibility also emerges from the same logic of timing. If the grandmother were to pass away soon (chapter 94), the situation could disrupt the plans surrounding the anticipated fight with Baek Junmin.

A funeral represents the ultimate example of being at the wrong place and at the wrong time. Death does not follow the schedules of sports organizations or criminal schemes. It interrupts them. In such circumstances, Joo Jaekyung might decide not to appear at the match himself and instead send a replacement fighter, much as similar substitutions have already occurred in the past. (chapter 47)

But the champion’s public statement has already changed the balance of power. By drawing the attention of the media and the authorities, he forces figures like Choi Gilseok to operate under pressure and make mistakes. The latter must begin bribing officials and manipulating the environment simply to buy time. The system that once protected the criminals begins to turn against them.

The Man Who Knew Too Much

This development also explains the deeper meaning behind the title “The Man Who Knew Too Much.”

Knowledge in this story does not come from theory or speculation. It comes from experience. (chapter 94) Joo Jaekyung has survived the criminal world long enough to understand how its mechanisms operate. Through his actions, he gradually passes this knowledge on to Kim Dan. (chapter 88)

He taught him how to swim. He taught him how to fight. He taught him how to take care of himself and to express his opinion and desires. In other words, Kim Dan came to internalize that he also deserved respect. (chapter 91) The athlete exposed him to situations that forced him to grow stronger and more independent. He shared his thoughts and philosophy to his “pupil” as well (chapter 94) so that at the end, Kim Dan admits to see him as a “younger sibling”. (donsaeng in Korean) (chapter 94)

Yet his transformation has another consequence. Kim Dan has also become both a witness and a target of the champion’s jinx. By standing beside Joo Jaekyung, he has been drawn into the very chain of manipulations that once isolated the athlete. He can expose the existence of money laundering.

For the first time, the couple begins to grasp wrongdoings and even understand how this mechanism works. And once someone understands the trap, the outcome of the game can change.

The criminals may continue to rely on their favorite principles— money and placing others at the wrong place and at the wrong time. But the situation has now changed. In fact, the schemers will end up being caught at the wrong time and at the wrong place.

Until recently, however, Joo Jaekyung himself was unable to expose Baek Junmin openly. One reason lies in a more personal burden: shame. (chapter 94) The champion carried the weight of his past—his violent environment, the humiliation he endured, and the circumstances that shaped his rise. Speaking about these events would have meant revealing parts of his life he preferred to bury. (chapter 94) The conversation on the beach changes this dynamic. By confessing his past to Kim Dan, Joo Jaekyung frees himself from the silence that had protected his enemies. The shame that once prevented him from speaking begins to lose its power.

And once the athlete is no longer bound by shame, he can finally do something he had avoided for a long time: he can speak and reveal his knowledge to the media.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Man 👤Who Knew Too Much 🕵️‍♂️-part 1

Sorry for the hiatus, but as you can imagine, it is related to my work. I recently got more responsibilities.

The Importance of Knowledge

Many classic thrillers have explored the dangerous consequences of knowing the wrong thing at the wrong time. Alfred Hitchcock once built an entire film around this very idea: someone who accidentally discovers too much becomes a threat. In The Man Who Knew Too Much, knowledge is not merely information—it is a liability.

The moment someone understands how the hidden mechanism works, that knowledge becomes dangerous. Insight is inseparable from the plot itself, because it exposes the existence of a conspiracy. To know too much therefore means to become a threat to those who depend on secrecy. Information stops being neutral; it transforms into a risk that must be contained, silenced, or eliminated. The moment a hidden truth surfaces, those who possess it risk becoming targets themselves. Episode 93 of Jinx seems to echo this logic. (chapter 93) Beneath the apparent calm of the chapter lies a growing tension: secrets circulate quietly, alliances remain uncertain, and certain characters may already know more than they should. (chapter 93)

At first glance, the chapter appears to focus on the evolution of the relationship between Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan. (chapter 93) linked to their previous night together. During the night they shared, the invisible wall that once separated them seemed to disappear completely. Their intimacy was no longer defined by domination or obligation. Instead, the encounter suggested equality (position of 69)(chapter 92) and reciprocity—an exchange, as Joo Jaekyung himself described it, of “give and take.” (chapter 92) In a striking reversal, Kim Dan took the initiative (chapter 92), after being asked about his own desires. (chapter 92) He was no longer driven by shame, debt or obligation. (chapter 92) For the champion, the moment carried the weight of something deeper than physical pleasure (chapter 92), for he was able to give pleasure to his partner. Thus his self-esteem could only be boosted. For Kim Dan, however, it remained simply sex. (chapter 92) The imbalance between their interpretations already foreshadowed the tension that would emerge the following morning.

That tension becomes visible when Kim Dan calmly refuses Joo Jaekyung’s attempt to continue taking care of him. (chapter 93) For the first time, he establishes a clear boundary. The gesture signals a new stage in his personal development: for the first time, Doc Dan speaks as a professional, as a physical therapist (chapter 93) who knows his role and his responsibilities. He refuses the help with the meals not out of pride, but because he clearly frames it as part of his job. In the past, he would have simply listened, letting others decide or speak in their name (chapter 42); now he asserts his own authority and expertise. But just as this moment seems to mark a quiet step forward in their dynamic (chapter 93), the narrative abruptly widens its focus, drawing the reader away from this personal shift toward a far more ominous development unfolding elsewhere. (chapter 93)

Far from the intimacy of the penthouse, Baek Junmin appears surrounded by an invisible barrier (chapter 93) separating him from Choi Gilseok and Heo Manwook. The atmosphere of that scene is strangely detached. Junmin seems unconcerned with the financial urgency discussed around him; his attention is fixed instead on the cellphone. Yet the readers cannot see what he is watching (chapter 93), while he casually blows a bubble of gum, creating a small moment of distraction that contrasts with the tension of the conversation around him. Only when he eventually reaches for the calendar on the desk, (chapter 93) does the focus of his attention become clear: the approaching match. What matters to him is not money, but time. What seems to occupy his mind is not the money being discussed, but the ticking clock before the fight—suggesting he may be searching for a way to reclaim his standing, restore his reputation, and probably settle an old score. But if this is indeed his objective, one question inevitably arises: what kind of weapon does he intend to use?

The cover illustration accompanying this essay proposes one possible answer. Rather than depicting a single event, it visualizes the network of hidden connections surrounding Baek Junmin: the underworld figures who support him, the organizations that benefit from his actions, and the champion who stands at the center of these intersecting interests. In such a configuration, information itself may become the most dangerous tool. If certain characters possess fragments of the past — memories, secrets, or assumptions about who Joo Jaekyung once was or about the physical therapist — then exposing or manipulating that knowledge could prove far more destructive than any physical confrontation.

This leads to the central question of this essay: who, in this story, truly knows too much—or believes that they do—and what happens when that knowledge is finally brought to light?

The Office – Where the Readers Begin to Know Too Much 😮

Episode 93 opens in a location that immediately signals danger: the office of Heo Manwook (chapter 93). The place is recognizable because the interior furniture (chapter 93) matches the office previously shown in episode 46. (chapter 46) Yet even before examining the room itself, the exterior sign already introduces an intriguing ambiguity. The building is labeled (chapter 93) “Errand Center – Repo – Demo.” At first glance, the name suggests a mundane service business. An errand center typically performs small tasks for clients—delivering packages, transporting items, or running administrative errands. Thus shortly after, Jinx-philes discover that a package has been successfully delivered. (chapter 93) The additional terms reinforce this impression: “repo” evokes repossession services that recover unpaid property, while “demo” suggests demonstrations or promotional tasks. Taken together, the sign appears to advertise a collection of ordinary logistical services.

However, within the narrative context the meaning becomes far more unsettling. Each of these activities revolves around the same principle: carrying out tasks on behalf of someone else. (chapter 93) The vocabulary is deliberately neutral, but the logic easily translates into criminal practice. Errands can become intimidation missions, repossession can turn into violent debt collection, and demonstrations can serve as distractions or staged incidents. The apparently harmless name therefore functions as a façade, masking a network that organizes coercion, surveillance, and illegal gambling operations. Even the office furniture contributes to this illusion. (chapter 46) The couch and armchairs resemble the kind of seating commonly found in legitimate businesses—familiar from many office settings in K-dramas—suggesting a place where clients might calmly sit down to discuss matters. Yet the scene reveals a striking contrast: no one actually uses this furniture except Baek Junmin. (chapter 93) The debtor is instead beaten near the entrance, deliberately kept far away from the seating area. In this way, the loan shark and his men ensure that the couch and chairs remain untouched, almost as if they were props. (chapter 93) The furniture thus reinforces the same strategy as the office name itself: it maintains the appearance of a respectable business while the violence of the operation is carefully kept out of sight.

This principle of delegated action (chapter 93) reveals something deeper about the structure of the organization itself. (chapter 46) At first glance, the office appears to belong to Heo Manwook (chapter 93), who confronts victims and manages the loan shark operation. Yet the scene gradually reveals that he is less a true mastermind than a frontman—a visible intermediary who handles the dirty work. (chapter 46) Hence he calls Choi Gilseok “boss” and asks about the current situation. (chapter 93) Behind him stands Choi Gilseok, the director of King of MMA, who clearly exerts greater influence over the situation. He coordinates financial decisions, negotiates with outside contacts, and attempts to contain the consequences of the recent scandal. And yet even Choi Gilseok is not the ultimate authority. (chapter 48) In episode 48, he revealed that his actions were connected to a parent pharmaceutical company (F Pharmaceuticals), suggesting that the criminal activities surrounding the fights, betting, and intimidation may ultimately serve a larger financial structure. In that sense, the Errand Center name becomes almost literal: every actor in this network appears to be running errands for someone higher in the hierarchy, forming a chain of delegated power in which responsibility constantly shifts upward.

This ambiguity becomes even more striking when one considers Kim Dan’s own situation in season 1. In order to offer an expensive gift to Joo Jaekyung, he took a job as a courier (chapter 42), delivering food or packages across the city during the night. His work is built on the same basic principle: completing tasks and transporting items for others which exposed him to dangers and shame. (chapter 42) The parallel is subtle but revealing. While Kim Dan runs legitimate errands for the athlete’s sake, the criminals in the Errand Center perform their own “services” within the shadow economy. Both operate within a system of delivery and obligation—yet one side does so out of feelings, while the other exploits the structure for predatory purposes. Gratitude versus Greed.

Thanks to my friend @Rin_de_eegana, I discovered that the Japanese translation

even labeled the place as a “detective agency,” a term that evokes investigation, surveillance, and the gathering of information. At first glance, the presence of such an office might suggest a professional organization specialized in surveillance and intelligence gathering. Earlier in the story, this is precisely the impression the narrative created. Kim Dan’s background was carefully investigated: photographs were secretly taken, a dossier was assembled, and details about his personal life were documented (chapter 46). The operation looked methodical, almost professional, as if a genuine investigative agency had been hired to monitor the champion’s environment.

Yet, the office scene in chapter 93 quietly dismantles that illusion. (chapter 93) Choi Gilseok, Heo Manwook and his minions are not behaving like investigators at all. No one is collecting new information. No one is analyzing evidence. Instead, the conversation revolves around debts, payments, and damage control. The supposed detective agency suddenly looks much closer to what it truly is: a loan shark operation that had previously hidden behind the façade of investigation. (chapter 93)

This shift becomes particularly visible in the dialogue between the director of King of MMA and Heo Manwook. The latter asks whether the situation has been “sorted.” (chapter 93) The reply reveals the underlying problem: they have already spent a considerable amount of money cleaning up the mess connected to Joo Jaekyung. The champion’s televised revelation has created waves. People had to be silenced, favors had to be paid, and the organization now finds itself under financial pressure. Choi Gilseok even admits bluntly that money is tight.

The financial tension visible in the office scene becomes even more revealing when one recalls an earlier accusation made by Heo Manwook in front of Kim Dan. (chapter 11) At that moment, the loan shark explicitly raised the possibility of money laundering. This detail suddenly casts the entire network in a different light. The illegal gambling operations visible on Heo Manwook’s computer are therefore not merely a source of profit; they may also serve as a mechanism through which larger sums of money circulate and are quietly reintegrated into the legal economy. (chapter 46) In this structure, Choi Gilseok himself appears less like the true mastermind than another intermediary in a much larger financial chain.

In episode 48, Gilseok revealed that his activities were connected to a parent pharmaceutical company (chapter 48), suggesting that the underground fights and betting operations might ultimately serve broader corporate interests. Yet the director of King of MMA does not behave as a purely obedient subordinate either. (chapter 46) In chapter 46, he was already acting behind the back of that parent company, manipulating events to influence the outcome of the fight. Later developments—such as the conversation at the café with Kim Dan and the suspicious use of the spray—suggest that he may eventually have received support from that higher structure. (chapter 49) At the same time, however, the director of the gym clearly took personal risks. By secretly betting on the “underdog” (chapter 52) and manipulating the situation through the switched spray, he appears to have pursued his own strategy within the system.

This double game helps explain why the organization now finds itself under financial strain. The fake director of the gym was not simply executing orders; he was gambling within the laundering mechanism itself. When Joo Jaekyung publicly exposed the situation on television, the carefully balanced financial structure began to wobble. Joo Jaekyung’s public provocation therefore did more than damage reputations—it interfered with the flow of money itself, forcing the network to spend resources on bribes and damage control while threatening the laundering pipeline that sustained it. Yet earlier in the story, the logic had been very different. As Park Namwook once remarked, Jaekyung’s fame made him the fighter who would “rake in the most cash.” (chapter 46) In other words, the champion was originally the system’s most valuable asset. His visibility and reputation attracted attention, betting activity, and therefore profit. However, once he disrupted the carefully orchestrated mechanisms behind the fights, that same visibility became dangerous. The athlete who once generated the most revenue suddenly turned into the network’s greatest liability. From that moment onward, the logic of profit shifted into the logic of elimination.

The sequence of panels reveals another layer of the network. Choi Gilseok is first shown speaking with a person (chapter 93) who may be connected to the police in a surprisingly casual tone, thanking him and even suggesting they play golf together. The expression “I’m glad it arrived safely” implies that the unknown person must have received some hush money. Rather than a confrontation between criminals and investigators, the conversation suggests familiarity and mutual benefit. Only later does he mention that they need to “wrap this up before the fuzz makes a move.” On the surface, this sounds like fear of law enforcement, but placed after the friendly phone call, the line reads less like genuine concern and more like a reminder to settle matters quickly before any official attention becomes inconvenient. In other words, they are attempting to buy some time, to interfere in the investigation so that they don’t get caught.

This moment becomes even more intriguing when one remembers an earlier scene involving Yosep. (chapter 52) After the dressing-room incident, Yosep reported the situation to both the MFC and the police, turning this incident into an official and legal issue. Yet the investigation immediately encountered a convenient obstacle: there were no cameras in the dressing room, meaning the case would take time to resolve. If the officer Choi Gilseok is speaking with belongs to the same network (police or MFC), the investigation itself may already be entangled in the system it is supposed to expose. But the revelation in the media made it impossible to bury it for good, as it was exposed to the “world”.

But there is another visual clue that deepens this interpretation. (chapter 93) If attentive readers look closely at the surroundings of the office in chapter 93, they will notice the presence of the rival gym King of MMA located next to the loan shark’s headquarters. This small detail quietly reveals the proximity between the world of professional MMA gyms and the underground economy of illegal fights and gambling. The boundary between legitimate sport and criminal activity appears far thinner than it first seemed. The gym known as “King of MMA” stands almost literally beside the loan shark operation, hinting at the structural connections that bind them together.

In this sense, the office scene becomes a place where readers begin to perceive the outlines of a hidden system. Throughout the story, they have witnessed conversations from multiple perspectives: between the protagonists and villains (chapter 48), between the loan shark and the director (chapter 46), and within the MMA world (chapter 69). They know, for instance, that Heo Manwook once misunderstood the name “Team Black,” interpreting it as a brothel rather than a gym (chapter 16). Jinx-Lovers have seen fragments of the schemes unfolding behind the scenes and can therefore begin to assemble the existence of several overlapping plots.

And yet, despite these clues, the full picture remains incomplete. One crucial element still escapes both the characters and the audience: the identity of the person who secretly took the photographs of Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung (chapter 46). If Heo Manwook’s organization—the supposed detective agency—had truly conducted that surveillance, they would already recognize Kim Dan and understand his connection to the gym. Moreover, the earlier phone conversation between the hyung and the loan shark indicates that Choi Gilseok already possessed those photographs while sitting in his own office at the gym. This strongly suggests that the person who gathered that information did not belong to the Errand Center at all.

The office therefore becomes the starting point of a different kind of investigation—not one carried out by the characters inside the story, but by the readers themselves. By piecing together scattered details across multiple chapters, Jinx-lovers gradually uncover the outlines of a conspiracy that none of the individual actors fully control. Somewhere in the shadows, (chapter 33) (chapter 46) (chapter 48) another observer must exist—someone who collected information long before Choi Gilseok revealed his second scheme to his right-hand. While the men in the office rush to repair their collapsing financial operation (chapter 93), the audience slowly realizes that the true structure behind these events may be far larger than any of them suspect.

Yet in this very moment another development quietly takes place. For once, Baek Junmin does not remain in the shadows behind his hyung, behind Choi Gilseok, or behind the criminal hierarchy. (chapter 93) He speaks himself. Addressing the disgraced hospital director, he offers to erase the man’s debt—on the condition that he carries out a task for him. (chapter 93) The threat that accompanies the proposal is unmistakable: failure will be punished with death.

In doing so, Junmin transforms the doctor’s debt into an instrument of coercion. (chapter 93) The indebted man is no longer merely a victim of the loan-shark system; he is being recruited as an expendable agent within a new scheme. Ironically, this moment also marks the point where Junmin unknowingly pulls another institution into the conspiracy. (chapter 91) By involving a former medical authority in an illegal act, he brings the corrupted medical world to the surface and connects it directly to the network of underground betting and money laundering.

What Junmin likely perceives as a safe and clever manipulation may therefore function as something far more dangerous. By offering to erase the doctor’s debt in exchange for a task, he believes he can remain safely removed from the action itself. (chapter 93) That’s why he is smirking. The wrongdoing will be carried out by someone else, allowing him to stay in the shadows as he always has. Yet Junmin underestimates the weight of his own words. (chapter 93) In both the criminal and the legal worlds, speech itself carries responsibility. A spoken order, a promise, or even the disclosure of information can create liability. The story has already demonstrated this elsewhere: the leaking of Joo Jaekyung’s patient file triggered legal consequences and led the champion to file a lawsuit against the hospital. (chapter 42)

Junmin’s proposal therefore does more than recruit a desperate man—it transforms him into the author of the scheme. (chapter 93) Hence the director asks him this question. He is now taking the lead. Knowledge and liability become inseparable. Once the doctor accepts the offer, Junmin’s words effectively pull the trigger: the moment the deal is spoken aloud, the hidden system that sustained the illegal fights begins to lose its stability. By drawing the corrupted medical world directly into the operation, the fighter who once thrived in the shadows may in fact become the spark that accelerates the collapse of the entire machine. I would even add, with this new stunt, he is not realizing that he could be blamed for the past crimes (drugged beverage, switched spray etc.).

Heo Manwook – The Hand of the Machine

Before turning to Baek Junmin’s intervention, it is worth examining the role of Heo Manwook more closely. Throughout the story, the loan shark repeatedly threatens the hands of his victims. (chapter 16) Doc Dan’s hand got crushed and the former hospital warden is warned that he might lose his fingers; thus he might no longer be able to work. (chapter 93) The threat is not random. It reveals the symbolic position Heo Manwook occupies within the criminal structure.

Heo Manwook represents the operational hand of the system. While others design schemes or manipulate financial flows, he executes the violence that keeps the network running. His task is not to think strategically but to enforce obedience: take care of the illegal gambling site (chapter 46), collect debts (chapter 11), intimidate victims, and ensure that money continues to circulate through the laundering mechanism. In this sense, the repeated focus on hands and fingers becomes meaningful.

The hand is the instrument of action (chapter 93) —the part of the body that allows people to work and generate the very income he seeks to extract. By threatening to destroy his victims’ hands, however, Heo Manwook undermines that capacity himself. The gesture exposes a certain narrow-mindedness: his violence contradicts the economic logic he is supposed to enforce, revealing not only his cruelty but also him as an enforcer who acts impulsively rather than strategically.

Yet the irony of his position becomes increasingly visible. Although he runs what appears to be a “detective agency,” he repeatedly demonstrates an inability to perform the most basic function of investigation. (chapter 11) When he confronts Kim Dan about the origin of the money used to repay his debt, he does not rely on financial records or systematic research. Instead, he interrogates the doctor through intimidation and violence. The encounter in episode 16 occurs almost by coincidence, when he meets Kim Dan on the street and hears about his imminent moving (chapter 16) rather than locating him through documentation or surveillance. This observation corroborates my previous deduction: he is not the one following the physical therapist in secret and taking pictures of him. Secondly, observe his reaction, when he reads the money transfer: (chapter 16) The loan shark reads the name quickly or without interest, so that he can only remember the most striking word. In this case, “Black” stands out, while “Team”—a generic word—disappears from his memory. So his phrasing suggests he did not pay attention to the full name. This displays his lack of professionalism. He doesn’t investigate carefully.

Even his interpretation of evidence proves unreliable. Upon seeing the name “Team Black,” his minions and Heo Manwook quickly assume that it refers to a brothel. (chapter 16) Instead of verifying the information, he projects his own criminal assumptions onto the situation. (chapter 16) The supposed detective agency therefore produces not knowledge but distortion. Rather than gathering reliable intelligence, it generates blind spots that weaken the entire network. In this sense, the situation ironically echoes the logic behind The Man Who Knew Too Much. In Hitchcock’s story, the danger lies in possessing knowledge that exposes a hidden conspiracy. In Heo Manwook’s case, however, the problem emerges from a different form of knowledge: experience. Years of operating in the criminal underworld have convinced him that he already understands how the world works. Hence he misjudged the champion’s skills. (chapter 17) Instead of investigating carefully, he interprets every new piece of information through the lens of his past encounters and knowledge. His boss is rigging fights, so the others must do the same. When confronted with the name “Team Black,” he immediately assumes it must refer to a bar or brothel. What appears to be practical experience therefore becomes a liability. The man who believes he knows reality best may in fact be the one most vulnerable to misreading it.

This failure becomes particularly significant when one considers his connections to the medical underworld. During his threats, Heo Manwook casually refers to organ trafficking (chapter 93), suggesting that his operations intersect with the shadow side of the medical system. Such activities require the knowledge and complicity of doctors. The earlier intimidation of Kim Dan and the threats directed toward his grandmother (chapter 11) (chapter 16) demonstrate that Heo Manwook was already operating within that gray zone where medicine, crime, and financial exploitation overlap. It is therefore not surprising that the disgraced hospital director later appears within this environment. The medical world has long been entangled with the loan shark’s activities and this through Choi Gilseok who has a connection to a pharmaceutical company.

At the same time, however, Heo Manwook himself occupies a precarious position within the hierarchy. Although he runs the office and commands his subordinates, his authority is ultimately dependent on Choi Gilseok. (chapter 46) The phone calls between the two reveal a relationship defined by obedience. When Choi Gilseok reprimands him for the failed scheme, Heo Manwook immediately accepts the criticism and follows his orders. (chapter 46) The “hand” of the organization may execute violence, but it does not decide the strategy.

Visually, the story even reflects his gradual loss of power. Earlier confrontations often depict Heo Manwook towering over his victim (chapter 16), emphasizing the asymmetry between predator and prey. Yet when he threatens the disgraced hospital director, the composition changes subtly. (chapter 93) The two men are positioned almost at eye level, confronting one another on the same plane. The shift is striking. The man who once dominated every encounter now appears lowered, forced into a confrontation with someone who mirrors his own corruption. The hierarchy begins to flatten. This visual transformation acquires an additional meaning when one recalls Joo Jaekyung’s realization in episode 91. (chapter 91) Reflecting on the men who had abused Kim Dan, the champion bitterly admits that he is “no different from the fuckers who took advantage of you.” Although Jaekyung is still unaware that Heo Manwook actually attempted to rape Kim Dan earlier in the story, the scene nevertheless establishes an unsettling parallel between different forms of abuse of power. The disgraced hospital director exploited his authority as a physician, while the loan shark uses violence and intimidation to dominate his victim. Both belong to the same shadow world where institutional positions become instruments of exploitation.

In this sense, Heo Manwook also resembles another figure hinted at by the narrative’s broader thematic references: the “man who knew too much.” As the operator of the supposed detective agency, (chapter 17) he possesses extensive knowledge about the hidden mechanisms of the criminal network — rigging fights, illegal betting, debt collection, organ trafficking, and even the exploitation of vulnerable individuals. Yet this knowledge does not grant him control; instead, it entangles him more deeply in the system’s corruption. The more he knows about its secrets, the less clearly he perceives reality. Years of operating within the criminal network have isolated him from the logic of the legal world. Surrounded by corruption, intimidation, and bribery, he gradually begins to believe that these mechanisms can shield him from any real consequences. The knowledge that once gave him power therefore becomes a distortion: it convinces him that he can act with impunity, imagining that the system protecting him will always remain intact. What once appeared to be power gradually reveals itself as liability. I would even add. This protection could only function as long as the system itself continued to run smoothly. It depended on the uninterrupted flow of money circulating through the laundering network. The moment that flow is endangered—when bets collapse, scandals emerge, and funds begin to disappear—the shield of protection weakens. Figures such as the director of the gym and the loan shark suddenly become far more exposed than before.

Another recurring element reinforces this tension: the knife. Earlier in the story, Heo Manwook is already associated with the sudden appearance of a blade during his confrontation with Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 17) The weapon signals impulsive violence rather than calculated strategy. (chapter 17) The knife belongs to the realm of direct physical force—the crude instrument of someone who acts rather than plans. At the same time, this weapon reveals why Heo Manwook believes that his power and strength are real. The latter stands for ultimate violence, someone can die with such a weapon. However, like exposed in a previous essay, MMA fighters can still die with bare hands. A wrong move or a mistake … (chapter 25)

Striking is that the attack with the knife did not occur in an open fight. (chapter 17) Instead, the weapon appeared abruptly from behind, transforming the encounter into an act of treachery rather than a fair confrontation. The knife therefore becomes a symbol of unfairness, backstabbing and betrayal. Rather than representing courage or open combat, the weapon exposes the opposite: deception, hypocrisy, and cowardice. Heo Manwook and his men do not confront their victims openly. Instead, they rely on tools—blades, bats, and intimidation—to frighten and wound those who cannot defend themselves.

This symbolism becomes even more striking when placed next to Baek Junmin’s later threat toward the disgraced hospital director. (chapter 93) When Junmin swears to “gut him like a fish,” the language itself evokes the imagery of a blade. Even though no weapon appears in the panel, the metaphor unmistakably suggests the act of cutting open a body. The threat therefore carries the same symbolic weight as the earlier knife attack: violence delivered through sudden, treacherous intervention rather than through open confrontation.

At the same time, Baek Junmin’s words unintentionally reveal something about the world he comes from. Earlier conversations among fighters hint that illegal matches often involve hidden weapons and brutal ambushes rather than regulated combat. (chapter 47) The underground arena operates according to entirely different rules, where knives are not anomalies but part of the environment. In this sense, Junmin’s threat does more than intimidate the former hospital director—it exposes the violent logic of the system that produced him.

This background also helps explain the visual markers associated with the fighter himself. (chapter 93) The scar crossing his face suggests past encounters with blades, while the demon tattoo carrying a knife in its mouth reinforces the imagery of violence as an ever-present companion. In the world of illegal fights, the blade is not merely a weapon. It is a sign of survival within a system where betrayal, ambush, and hidden violence are part of the rules.

Seen from this perspective, the knife becomes a recurring motif that links several narrative threads: the cowardly intimidation practiced by the loan shark, the brutal culture of underground fights, and the language of threats used by Baek Junmin. Each instance reveals a world where violence is rarely honorable. Hence it is rather fake, though both men believe that they are “real” and as such “strong”. Instead, it appears as something sudden, concealed, and treacherous—an instrument of systems that operate in the shadows rather than in the open.

Ironically, the greatest vulnerability of the loan shark is not a rival fighter, the police, or even the collapsing betting scheme. His true Achilles’ heel lies in a far more mundane object: the cellphone and as such the digital world. From the beginning, Heo Manwook demonstrates a profound distrust of digital evidence. Even after Kim Dan transfers the expected amount of money for the month, (chapter 11) the loan shark refuses to rely on the transaction itself. Instead of trusting the digital record, he personally visits Kim Dan and continues the physical abuse. In his worldview, confirmation must come through intimidation rather than documentation.

Yet this instinct reveals a crucial blind spot. The system he participates in increasingly operates through precisely the kind of digital traces he refuses to respect. (chapter 17) When Joo Jaekyung later transfers the money directly to him using his own phone (chapter 17), the transaction itself becomes a form of evidence. What Heo Manwook perceives merely as a convenient payment leaves behind a record — one that cannot be erased by violence. The phone quietly transforms the power dynamic: intimidation may silence witnesses, but it cannot erase a transaction history.

This weakness becomes even more visible when the narrative contrasts his behavior with Joo Jaekyung’s. (chapter 91) The champion carefully reads the news article exposing the former hospital director’s crimes. (chapter 91) Through that article, the audience learns that the man’s medical license has already been suspended.

Heo Manwook, however, never appears to read this information. (chapter 93) When confronting the disgraced hospital administrator, he still addresses him as “doctor.” He still thinks, he can treat patients. (chapter 93) The mistake is revealing. It shows that the loan shark operates not through careful verification but through assumptions and second-hand knowledge.

This vulnerability becomes even clearer inside the office itself. (chapter 46) The computer visible on Heo Manwook’s desk quietly contains a record of the entire operation. The illegal betting site displayed on the screen is not merely a tool for profit; it is also a potential archive of evidence—transactions, accounts, and financial flows that could expose the laundering system. In other words, the machine that allows the network to generate money simultaneously preserves the traces of its crimes.

The question, however, is whether Heo Manwook truly understands this danger. The computer is still on his desk, but this time unused, as he has other things to do. (chapter 93) Throughout the scene he appears less like an independent decision-maker than an obedient intermediary who follows the instructions of Choi Gilseok. (chapter 93) Rather than taking initiative himself, he waits for orders from the director of the gym. This dependency raises a crucial uncertainty: if the system begins to collapse, will he even recognize the need to erase these traces? If not, the very tools that enabled the network’s operations—the phone, the betting platform, the office computer—may ultimately become silent witnesses against him.

For this reason, the interaction with the disgraced doctor marks a turning point. As the system begins to destabilize, the “hand” that once enforced obedience now finds itself confronting forces it cannot fully control. The network’s operational executor is gradually being pushed downward, while another figure—Baek Junmin—steps forward with his own plans. The collision between these two trajectories appears increasingly inevitable.

Baek Junmin – The Man Who thinks Who Knows Everything

If the office scene exposes the true nature of Heo Manwook’s organization, the final figure sitting in that room introduces a different kind of mystery: Baek Junmin. (chapter 93) Unlike the other men present, he appears strangely detached from the conversation unfolding around him. While Heo Manwook and Choi Gilseok discuss debts, payments, and police connections, Junmin shows little interest in the financial urgency dominating the room. Instead, he lounges in the armchair typically reserved for the “CEO” or company owner, casually chewing gum while glancing at his phone.

This posture is revealing. In a room where the others are preoccupied with stabilizing a failing operation, Junmin behaves with the careless ease of someone who feels entitled to the space. The seat he occupies subtly reinforces this impression: he places himself in the position of authority without actually participating in the responsibilities that come with it. The attitude he projects is less that of a strategist and more that of a spoiled child, detached from the consequences of the situation unfolding around him. (chapter 93)

Only when he reaches toward the calendar, does the focus of his attention become clearer: the approaching match. (chapter 93) The fight appears to function as a deadline, a moment toward which his thoughts have been quietly moving while the others worry about debts and bribes. At first glance, this might simply indicate that he is counting down to the fight. Yet the gesture suggests something deeper. Unlike the others in the room, Junmin does not seem to experience time as a practical pressure linked to debts, bribery, or police intervention. His notion of time is psychological rather than material. He is not living in the present urgency of the criminal network; he is still trapped in an older temporal logic shaped by humiliation, resentment, and wounded pride.

This is why the televised revelation matters so much. (chapter 87) Joo Jaekyung’s public exposure of the stunt did not merely create financial problems for the organization. It inflicted a fresh narcissistic wound on Junmin himself. The humiliation was public, visible, and impossible to ignore. In that sense, the upcoming match is not only a sporting deadline but also a symbolic countdown: a chance to reverse the humiliation, reclaim his standing, and restore a damaged image. Time, for Junmin, does not move forward in a stable or mature way. It circles obsessively around injury, revenge and shame; he stores it.

(chapter 93) Seen in this light, the gum becomes more than a casual gesture. It reinforces his childishness. Junmin does not cry, does not openly rage, and does not confess weakness. Notice that he is not even training at the gym, though King of MMA is next door. This contrasts so much to Joo Jaekyung who continues to maintain a disciplined routine despite everything. Thanks to his determination, he was able to leave poverty behind and overcome a brutal childhood. As Kim Dan later remarks on the beach, this perseverance is (chapter 94)

The juxtaposition between the Shotgun watching the video (chapter 93) and the quiet conversation on the beach therefore reveals two radically different understandings of strength. For Joo Jaekyung, strength has gradually come to mean endurance: the ability to continue moving forward despite humiliation, hardship, and personal loss. (chapter 94) For Baek Junmin, by contrast, strength remains tied to wounded pride and the desire for retaliation.

Rather than transforming humiliation into growth, he remains trapped within it. This is precisely why his request to the doctor is immediately accompanied by a threat: (chapter 93) The sentence reveals the logic governing his actions. Authority, in his world, is not built on discipline, patience, or competence, but on intimidation. Violence becomes the only language through which he can assert control. In this sense, the panel exposes the profound immaturity behind his performance of indifference. While the champion disciplines his body and confronts his past, Junmin simply reproduces the brutality that once humiliated him.

But let us return to Baek Junmin and the bubble gum. His behavior only makes visible how immature his emotional world remains, exposing a lack of professionalism and inner strength. While the champion disciplines his body and confronts his past, Junmin sits idle, replaying an insult and waiting for an opportunity to restore his pride. The others are trying to save a criminal enterprise under pressure; Junmin is still silently thinking of the insult, fixated on the idea of revenge. Thus I deduce that he is watching Joo Jaekyung’s last match.

This deduction raises another possibility. If Junmin is indeed watching footage of Joo Jaekyung’s last match on his phone, the scene may contain a hidden clue. After that fight, the champion briefly turns toward the outside of the cage and asks someone whether he did well. (chapter 87) The moment appears insignificant to most spectators. Yet for someone who already knew the identity of the person standing there, the gesture could reveal something important.

If Junmin had previously followed Kim Dan and taken photographs of him (chapter 46) —as suggested by the anonymous surveillance images circulating earlier in the story—he would immediately recognize the pattern of Joo Jaekyung’s behavior. The champion’s glance toward the cage-side observer would no longer appear random. It would identify the person occupying that position: the physical therapist Kim Dan.

In this sense, the scene may quietly suggest that Baek Junmin already knows more than the other characters in the room. While Heo Manwook and Choi Gilseok remain unaware of Kim Dan’s real identity, Junmin might have been the one who first connected the champion to the young therapist. Doc Dan is the champion’s vulnerability, he has feelings for him. If this interpretation is correct, the invisible wall separating him from the others takes on a new meaning: Junmin is not merely detached from their conversation—he may already possess information that they do not.

Yet another detail complicates the situation even further. (chapter 93) Throughout the entire scene, Baek Junmin remains silent—but silence does not necessarily mean ignorance. While Heo Manwook and Choi Gilseok are focused on collecting money and resolving immediate problems, Junmin is still present in the room, quietly hearing everything that is being said.

One particular detail may therefore become significant: the repeated references to a “doctor.” The man being pressured by the loan sharks is clearly identifiable as the former hospital director who once fired Kim Dan. (chapter 93) His appearance leaves little doubt—he wears the same clothes and glasses seen in earlier chapters. (chapter 90) The only difference is the loss of his spectacles. They are not only broken, but also lying next to him. The loss of his glasses mirrors his situation: he is forced to face reality and as such he is discovering the true reasons behind doc Dan’s greed: despair and fear in front of the loan shark. (chapter 90) One could say, he is now receiving his karma. Like mentioned above, the behavior and words of the men (chapter 93) confronting him suggests that they are not left in the dark concerning the situation of the perverted hospital director. They are not truly interested in investigating his work place. Choi Gilseok and Heo Manwook appear not only impatient, but they don’t question his social status. Rather than asking questions about the man’s circumstances, he simply pressures him to produce money.

This urgency is revealing. If the loan sharks had taken the time to examine the man’s background carefully, they would almost certainly have discovered the recent scandal surrounding him. (chapter 91) An article had already exposed the accusations of sexual harassment and the suspension of his medical license. If Heo Manwook and Choi Gilseok had read that report, their reaction would likely have been very different. A disgraced doctor without a license represents a debtor with extremely limited means of repayment. Under normal circumstances, they would immediately question how he intended to pay them back.

The fact that they do not ask such questions suggests that they simply do not know. They are rushing the process, focused on immediate cash rather than information. Their attention is consumed by the financial damage caused by Joo Jaekyung’s televised revelation, leaving them little time to investigate the background of the man sitting in front of them.

But Baek Junmin’s position in the room is different. Unlike the others, he is not distracted by money or debts. While pretending to be uninterested—chewing gum and staring at his phone—he may in fact be absorbing every detail of the conversation. If Junmin has already connected Kim Dan to Joo Jaekyung, hearing the word “doctor” in this context could suddenly activate an entirely new chain of associations.

In that sense, the scene may represent a crucial turning point. The loan sharks believe they are merely collecting a debt. Yet the presence of the former hospital director introduces a piece of information that may be far more valuable than money. The moment Junmin realizes who this man is, a doctor, then he can jump to the conclusion that he represents a good tool against Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan. The question is: did he read the news and does he know what role he once played in Kim Dan’s life (the sexual harassment)?, especially if he was the one following doc Dan. I have my doubt about it, as he could never forget the humiliation on TV. Moreover, let’s not forget that officially, the main lead got “fired” after the incident leaving a stain on his resume. (chapter 1) So what did he hear at the office the whole time? (chapter 93) Doctor, doctor… And why did Joo Jaekyung speak about the prank in the first place? It was for Doc Dan’s sake and to restore his honor. (chapter 87) Joo Jaekyung came to the conclusion that the prank had destroyed Doc Dan. (chapter 91) Thus I deduce that the physical therapist has become the real target of the next plot.

Yet Junmin’s behavior reveals another pattern that runs consistently through the narrative: he rarely confronts his enemies directly. Instead, he repeatedly hides behind authority.

Earlier in the story, he invokes the protection of his mysterious “hyung.” (chapter 74) Later, he relies on Choi Gilseok to approach Joo Jaekyung with an offer (chapter 48) designed to manipulate the outcome of the fight. When the doctor rejects the offer, the scheme unfolds in a different way. The manipulation involves not only gambling but also medical interference — the suspicious spray used during the match and Choi Gilseok brought it himself and gave it to one of his members. (chapter 50)

The same logic appears within the institutional framework of the sport. The CEO of the MFC openly praises (chapter 47) Junmin’s “star quality” and supports his rapid rise within the organization. Such endorsement provides him with a form of institutional legitimacy that shields him from direct scrutiny. His authority does not come from discipline or merit alone but from the structures that elevate and protect him. And observe how the lady in red protected the “champion’s reputation”. (chapter 69)

Even the medical system itself appears to participate in these manipulations. In episode 41, the medics clear Joo Jaekyung to fight (chapter 41), though it was clear that the champion’s shoulder condition had worsened. (chapter 41) The official report contradicts the observations of the physical therapist. Moreover, they had allowed the fight, though the athlete’s foot had been injured. (chapter 50) Later, after the match, the examination of the fighters at the health center takes place in conditions that clearly lack privacy (chapter 52) : there are no curtains separating the athletes during their medical checks and treatment. This unusual setup allows information to circulate freely between competitors. Authority, rather than truth, determines the outcome.

This pattern repeats again in the media narrative that follows the fight. (chapter 54) Experts criticize the champion’s decision to fight despite his condition, and news reports emphasize the financial damage caused by his brawl and declining brand value. (chapter 54) Responsibility is gradually shifted away from the structures that enabled the situation and toward the fighter himself.

Seen together, these elements reveal Junmin’s true modus operandi. Rather than confronting his opponents directly, he operates through a chain of authorities: criminal patrons, gym directors, corporate executives, and medical institutions. Each layer provides protection while simultaneously distancing him from direct responsibility. Violence, manipulation, and reputation damage are carried out by others, while Junmin remains positioned just outside the immediate line of accountability.

Seen in this light, the presence of the disgraced hospital director in the office may represent a new opportunity for the Shotgun. While Heo Manwook and Choi Gilseok focus only on collecting a debt, Junmin may recognize a different potential. The man in front of them is not merely a debtor. He is a doctor — a figure associated with knowledge, prestige, and institutional authority.

If such a figure could be used to shift blame onto Kim Dan, the consequences would be devastating. The young physical therapist already occupies a vulnerable social position: he comes from poverty, lacks institutional protection, and carries the stigma of having been dismissed from the hospital (chapter 1) and even he made a “mistake” at the Light of Hope once. (chapter 59) Finally, because of the perverted hospital warden’s assault, the main lead ended up blacklisted. He could never get hired at another hospital. If the narrative surrounding the injury were manipulated, the responsibility for Joo Jaekyung’s worsening condition and the schedules could easily be redirected toward him.

Several elements would support such a strategy. Though the doctor protested, the champion nevertheless continued to fight and used the report from MFC doctors as justification. In a manipulated narrative, these facts could be rearranged to suggest that the inexperienced therapist had mismanaged the situation.

This possibility becomes even more disturbing when one considers Park Namwook’s role within the system. (chapter 46) Throughout the story, the coach frequently appears wearing glasses—a visual symbol traditionally associated with knowledge and clarity. Yet despite this apparent vision, he repeatedly fails to recognize the dangers surrounding Joo Jaekyung. As the champion’s manager, Park Namwook is responsible for organizing his schedule and protecting his long-term career. In principle, this role should place him in the position of a guardian. But he does not intervene (chapter 41), he just stands by his side.

In practice, however, the opposite often occurs. Earlier in the story, Joo Jaekyung openly questions why he was scheduled for so many events in the first place. (chapter 17) Instead of acting as a protective barrier between the athlete and the pressures of the industry, Park Namwook frequently defers to the logic of the organization. When the CEO of MFC later invites the champion to an important meeting, the coach encourages him to attend, once again placing institutional expectations above caution. (chapter 69) In this sense, Park Namwook’s authority begins to resemble the same pattern visible in Baek Junmin’s behavior: responsibility is repeatedly shifted upward toward the organization MFC or Joo Jaekyung as the owner of Team Black (chapter 88)

The result is a chain of authority in which no single actor fully accepts responsibility. The manager defers to the organization (MFC or the star), the organization relies on medical clearance, and the medical staff produce reports that legitimize risky decisions (chapter 61). Each layer appears authoritative, yet together they create a system in which accountability becomes blurred.

Baek Junmin’s strategy exploits precisely this weakness. By bringing the disgraced hospital director into the situation, he introduces a figure whose authority once belonged to the medical world itself. The newspaper article reveals that the hospital had tolerated the director’s abusive behavior for a considerable time before finally suspending his license under public pressure. (chapter 91) In other words, the institution protected him as long as the scandal remained manageable. Only when external scrutiny became unavoidable did the hospital distance itself from him. Hence his face got almost exposed.

Seen from this perspective, Junmin’s decision to involve the former doctor does not merely introduce a new accomplice. It exposes the deeper corruption already present within the medical system. The “rotten apple” did not emerge from nowhere; he was produced and sheltered by the institution that now claims to reject him.

This development creates a dangerous convergence between two worlds: the criminal network surrounding illegal fights and the institutional structures of sport and medicine. By aligning himself with the disgraced doctor, Junmin believes that he is protecting himself, unaware that he is effectively importing the corruption of the medical sphere into the arena of professional fighting and as such endangering his own position. The boundaries separating criminal manipulation, corporate interests, and medical authority begin to collapse.

In that sense, the situation no longer concerns only a personal rivalry between fighters. It reveals the fragility of the entire system surrounding the champion. The figures who should protect him—the manager, the organization, and the medical staff—are themselves embedded in structures that can be manipulated.

At this point, Baek Junmin’s nickname begins to acquire a deeper symbolic meaning. (chapter 49) A shotgun is not a weapon designed for precision. When fired, it releases multiple pellets that spread across a wide area, striking several targets at once. Junmin’s strategy follows a similar logic. Rather than confronting Joo Jaekyung directly, he destabilizes the structures surrounding him: the media narrative, the medical establishment, the leadership of MFC, and potentially even the champion’s personal relationships. Each move strikes a different layer of the system protecting the fighter. The goal is not a single decisive blow but a gradual weakening of the entire structure around the champion.

Yet this strategy carries an inherent danger. By firing into multiple institutional spheres at once, Junmin risks exposing connections that were previously hidden. The medical world, the fighting organization, and the criminal network surrounding illegal betting are not isolated domains; they intersect. In that sense, Junmin does not merely act like a fighter seeking revenge. At this moment, he becomes “the Shotgun.” The weapon does not only wound a single opponent; it blasts open the structures that conceal corruption. By pulling the trigger, Junmin risks revealing the true nature of MFC, the sport itself and the network of interests surrounding them (the medical world and the pharmaceutical company).

So if this interpretation is correct, the office scene may foreshadow the next stage of the conspiracy. Junmin does not need to attack Joo Jaekyung directly. Instead, he may target the person the champion cares about most.

Kim Dan.

The Disgraced Director – Knowledge as Liability

The appearance of the former hospital director in Heo Manwook’s office introduces another crucial figure into the unfolding conspiracy. (chapter 93) Unlike the other men in the room, this individual already stands at the intersection of several narrative threads. He knows Kim Dan. (chapter 90) He has encountered Joo Jaekyung. And he has personally witnessed the dynamics between them.

Yet this knowledge is fundamentally distorted. Because of the circumstances surrounding their earlier encounters, the disgraced director arrived at a false conclusion: he believed that the physical therapist and the champion were romantically involved. Let’s not forget that he had blacklisted him in his career. From his perspective, the young doctor could only be the athlete’s intimate partner rather than his professional caregiver. (chapter 90) Secondly, he was doing it for the money, hence he called him a slut. (chapter 90) This misunderstanding fundamentally shapes how he interprets the situation. In this sense, the disgraced director resembles Heo Manwook. Both men rely heavily on their past experiences when judging others. The loan shark assumes that Kim Dan must have obtained the money through prostitution or some other illicit activity, while the former hospital director interprets the closeness between the athlete and the therapist as evidence of a romantic relationship. In both cases, what appears to be practical knowledge becomes a source of blindness. Their experience allows them to recognize familiar patterns, but it also prevents them from seeing the complexity of the reality before them. The relationship between Joo Jaekyung and Kim Dan does not fit into a simple category such as business, manipulation, or romance. Their bond evolves gradually and reflects a far more complex emotional dynamic. (chapter 93) Yet characters like the loan shark and the disgraced director attempt to reduce it to a single explanation that matches their own expectations. In doing so, they illustrate another variation of the same paradox: those who believe they know the world best are often the least capable of perceiving its truth.

A Dangerous Instrument

At the same time, his position is extremely precarious. Unlike Baek Junmin or the loan sharks, the disgraced director cannot confront either Joo Jaekyung or Kim Dan directly. Both men already recognize him. His earlier misconduct in the hospital and at the restaurant have exposed his character, and his recent public scandal has destroyed his professional legitimacy. (chapter 91)

This is precisely why indirect strategies are the only solution for him.

If Kim Dan indeed becomes the next target of Baek Junmin’s schemes, the director initially appears to offer a convenient opportunity. As a doctor, he possesses the authority and reputation associated with the medical profession. From Junmin’s perspective, such a figure could provide legitimacy to accusations directed at the young therapist. Yet this calculation overlooks a crucial reality. The man’s reputation has already collapsed. The public scandal surrounding the accusations of sexual harassment has stripped him of his professional credibility and resulted in the suspension of his medical license.

This loss of status drastically changes his position. The disgraced director can no longer act openly within the medical world. Any direct accusation coming from him would immediately be discredited because of his scandal. However, this does not mean that he has become powerless. On the contrary, his former position may still grant him access to personal contacts and informal networks inside the medical system. Instead of acting publicly, he could therefore operate indirectly—reaching out to former colleagues or institutions and encouraging them to question Kim Dan’s competence or responsibility, as this is something he experienced in the past. (chapter 1)

The Vulnerability of an Invisible Doctor

Such a strategy would exploit an existing weakness in Kim Dan’s situation. Earlier in the story, when Joo Jaekyung attempted to locate him after his disappearance (chapter 56), hospitals repeatedly responded that they had never heard of anyone by that name. (chapter 56) This reaction suggests that the young therapist had already been erased from the professional network in Seoul. Far from protecting him, this invisibility places him in an extremely fragile position: without institutional recognition, he has no professional community capable of defending him.

If rumors about Kim Dan suddenly begin circulating within the medical world—or even appear in the media—the contradiction would be striking. Only a few months earlier, no hospital acknowledged his existence. Yet now doctors or the media would suddenly be discussing him as a controversial figure linked to the champion’s injury. Such a sudden shift would inevitably raise questions.

For Joo Jaekyung, this discrepancy could become the first clear sign that something is wrong and lets not forget that in the past, he doubted the doctors. (chapter 5) The athlete might realize that the narrative emerging around Kim Dan does not match the reality he previously encountered while searching for him. What appears at first as professional criticism could therefore reveal the existence of a coordinated attempt to manipulate the story.

Medical Confidentiality as a Weapon

Another possibility makes the situation even more troubling. If Junmin or the disgraced hospital director wished to discredit Kim Dan, they could not necessarily need to rely solely on rumors or professional criticism. A far more effective strategy would involve the selective leaking of medical information.

Kim Dan’s own patient file could become a weapon. (chapter 91)

The young therapist’s history of psychological struggles and emotional distress is part of his medical record. Under normal circumstances, such information would remain strictly protected by medical confidentiality. Yet the story has already demonstrated how easily such boundaries can be violated when institutional interests are at stake. (chapter 36)

Earlier in the narrative, the medical system showed little hesitation in discussing Joo Jaekyung’s injury publicly. Experts speculated on television about the champion’s condition, and reporters openly discussed his worsening shoulder problem despite the obvious ethical implications of revealing medical information without the patient’s consent. (chapter 54) Striking is that no one in the medical world sided with the star because of his law suit against a hospital (chapter 42)

These scenes suggest that medical confidentiality in this world is far from absolute. When money, reputation, or institutional pressure become involved, private information can quickly turn into public material.

If the same logic were applied to Kim Dan, the consequences could be devastating. And don’t forget how the main lead reacted to this situation: he was rather indifferent. A leaked file describing his mental health struggles could easily be used to construct a narrative portraying him as unstable, unreliable, or professionally unfit. Under this light, you comprehend why I placed Choi Heesung in the illustration, as he was the first one bringing up the notion of mental illness. (chapter 89) In such a scenario, the young therapist would not simply be accused of incompetence. His entire credibility could be undermined, before he even had the chance to defend himself.

The strategy would also serve several interests at once. And like mentioned above, the medical institutions involved could shift responsibility for the champion’s worsening injury onto a crazy outsider. MFC could distance itself from the controversy surrounding the fight. And Baek Junmin could exploit the scandal to weaken both Joo Jaekyung and the man closest to him.

What makes this possibility particularly disturbing is that it would rely on a form of violence that leaves no visible wounds. Instead of physical intimidation, the attack would take place through information — through documents, rumors, and carefully constructed narratives.

In other words, the same system that once erased Kim Dan from the medical world could suddenly reintroduce him into public discourse under the worst possible circumstances.

The Man Who Knows Too Much

Yet the plan also contains a dangerous flaw. The disgraced director is far from a reliable ally. His public scandal has already destroyed his credibility, and his own actions in the past reveal a man driven by opportunism and self-preservation. If pressured too far, he may choose to reveal far more than Junmin expects. Instead of stabilizing the situation, his intervention could expose the corruption of the very system Junmin is attempting to manipulate. How so? It is because he was brought to Heo Manwook’s office. (chapter 93) In the past, the loan shark never brought his victims into his own headquarters. Debtors were usually confronted in their homes (chapter 5) or attacked in the street . (chapter 1) His office functioned as a hidden lair, carefully separated from the violence carried out by his subordinates. The presence of the disgraced director inside that office therefore represents a significant rupture in Heo Manwook’s usual methods. (chapter 93) Moreover, this time he is the one beating the victim, while one of his minions is standing. (chapter 16)

The doctor’s presence there represents a source of danger. He is no longer merely a possible instrument; he also becomes a witness. By hearing the conversation about bribes, police pressure, and debt collection, he acquires dangerous knowledge about the criminal network itself. (chapter 93) In that sense, the same man whom Junmin hopes to use as a tool against Kim Dan simultaneously becomes a liability capable of exposing the entire scheme.In other words, the former doctor could end up betraying the schemers, something the Shotgun is not expecting.

The urgency created by recent events has forced the organization to abandon its usual caution. At the same time, the visual composition of the scene creates a revealing illusion. (chapter 93) Seated prominently in the center of the room, Baek Junmin appears almost like the true authority figure — the one silently observing while others handle the negotiations. His posture suggests the role of a mastermind directing the operation from the background. Thus the scared director could misjudge the true position of the “champion”, he is the real mastermind behind this. And this time, he could no longer hide behind his hyungs or organizations.

This creates a striking contrast with Kim Dan himself.

Kim Dan also possesses knowledge about the hidden world surrounding Joo Jaekyung. He has witnessed suspicious medical decisions (chapter 41), manipulations within the fighting organization (chapter 37, the drugged beverage), and the athlete’s deeply personal belief in the so-called “jinx.” Yet despite these insights, Kim Dan remains largely excluded from the decision-making processes that shape the champion’s career. In several crucial moments—such as the incident at the health center—he was deliberately kept in the dark.

The contrast between the two figures could not be sharper. The disgraced director possesses knowledge but uses it as a potential weapon. Kim Dan possesses knowledge but has no idea about his own power. What distinguishes them is that the main couple is starting sharing their thoughts and insight to each other, while at the office, the schemers keep their insight to themselves. Yet, a plot can only work, if intel is exchanged. At the same time, the information has to be accurate as well. But for that, the villains have to expose their “knowledge” and as such “vulnerabilities”.

In the end, the question is no longer simply who knows too much. Baek Junmin believes he understands everything: Kim Dan, Joo Jaekyung, and the system surrounding them—especially the power of money. Yet his confidence rests on misinterpretations and assumptions. Kim Dan, by contrast, never claims such certainty. Still, he has witnessed the hidden mechanisms of that same system—its corruption, its manipulation, and its violence—without fully grasping their meaning. Yet the way he acquires this knowledge is fundamentally different. His insight does not come from intimidation or control, but from the confessions of others. He listens patiently and attentively, without judgment. (chapter 47) (chapter 48) (chapter 74) Joo Jaekyung represents yet another form of knowledge: the knowledge of experiences. Through hardship, defeat, and survival, he has learned to recognize the realities of the world step by step. By living next to doc Dan, he learned to listen and observe so that he is now more aware of the world surrounding him. The true tension of this arc therefore lies not simply between ignorance and knowledge, but between three different ways of understanding reality. One man believes he understands everything, another quietly carries knowledge that could expose it all without realizing it, while the third slowly learns the truth through experience.That is precisely why, in the illustration, they now stand facing each other.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Hidden 🐍 Predators 🐺🦊(part 2)

Why Two Wolves?

In the first part, I mentioned both Perrault and Grimm not because the stories differ superficially, but because their shared surface—the famous bed scene—hides radically different logics of danger. If one remembers only the dialogue (“What big eyes you have!”), the two versions appear nearly identical. A wolf deceives a girl; she is eaten. Yet the decisive differences lie not in the dialogue but in the structure surrounding it.

In Grimm’s version, the moral is embedded in the ending. The girl disobeys her mother by leaving the path.

Because of her disobedience, she is swallowed, but she is rescued. The huntsman cuts open the wolf’s belly; order is restored; the wolf is killed through a trick. The lesson is corrective and communal: authority intervenes, discipline saves, error can be redeemed. Red Riding Hood learns. She does not stray again. The world remains morally structured.

Perrault’s ending, by contrast, is final. There is no huntsman, no rescue, no second chance. The girl is eaten and remains eaten. One might wonder why. The answer lies not only in the conclusion but in the construction of the encounter itself. In Perrault’s original French text, the wolf is introduced as “Compère le loup”. The word compère does not designate a stranger. It implies familiarity — a companion, an acquaintance, even a friendly associate. From the beginning, the wolf is socially positioned, not alien. Hence the forest in this version is not associated with danger or wildness. The woods are seen as a prolongation of the civilization and society. The predator belongs to the same communicative world as the girl. The danger is therefore not external intrusion but internal misrecognition.

This familiarity is reinforced in the bed scene. When the girl arrives, the wolf does not immediately attack. He instructs her to place the cake and butter aside and then tells her to come into bed with him. Perrault explicitly writes that she removes her clothes before getting in. The intimacy is staged. Closeness precedes violence. The scene imitates adult seduction before revealing predation. The girl is not seized; she participates in the proximity. That participation is precisely what makes the ending irreversible in Perrault’s social universe. Thus the old French expression “avoir vu le loup” (to have met the wolf) means to have lost virginity or have gained sexual experience. Under this light, one might understand why the wolf as Joo Jaekyung’s personality fits so well. (chapter 3) The latter became responsible for the hamster’s sexual education.

In Grimm’s version, this dimension disappears. The wolf does not construct a prolonged intimacy. After the dialogue, he simply springs from the bed and devours her. There is no undressing, no extended staging of physical closeness. Violence interrupts; it does not grow from apparent consent. Grimm transforms the libertine into a beast. The danger becomes physical appetite rather than social seduction.

Striking is that at the end of the story, Perrault articulates the moral explicitly:

The ending is the moral. There is no reversal because social damage, in Perrault’s world, is irreversible. The wolf represents not wild nature but libertine society. He does not attack in the forest because woodcutters—witnesses—are nearby. He waits until he can move the girl into a private domestic space. He speaks politely. He proposes a race so that he can reach the grandmother’s house sooner. He performs civility. Once in the house, the girl observes inconsistencies, but she accepts the animal’s explanations. Her failure is not merely disobedience; it is misjudgment.

That distinction is why both versions were necessary. Grimm teaches obedience within a moral universe that restores balance. Perrault teaches discernment within a social universe that does not. He is promoting critical thinking.

And Jinx unfolds more in the latter.

The Director: An Anaconda or a Wolf?

At first glance, the hospital director resembles Perrault’s wolf. (chapter 90) He is not impulsive. He is not openly violent. He operates within institutions, within offices, within controlled environments. He isolates rather than attacks. He frames rather than forces. Like Compère le loup, he is not a stranger; he is part of the social order. He belongs to the system. That belonging is precisely what grants him access.

His resentment (chapter 90) reveals that his true wound is territorial. He can no longer find his targets within the hospital. He lost control. He lost narrative dominance. This explicates why the predator retaliated against Kim Dan by badmouthing him. (chapter 1) He made sure that the protagonist was economically and socially “ruined”. However, at the restaurant, what did he discover? A happy man with a companion! Despite his “revenge” for the loss of his territory, the physical therapist’s life had not been ruined. Thus he tried to slander the physical therapist, he was just a slut. (chapter 90) The problem is that the champion did not react like expected. He got angry at the “client” and not at the “prostitute”. He never thought that the main lead would side with such a person. Thus the hospital director voiced a menace: (chapter 90) His threat is not confession; it is defensive strategy. It reveals what he fears most: exposure. Not moral reckoning, but visibility. The predator who once operated in sealed rooms now imagines himself dragged into the open. And that possibility terrifies him.

In Perrault’s logic, harm succeeds because it occurs without witnesses. The wolf avoids the woodcutters. Thus he relocates the act into a private domestic space. But one might wonder about the identity of the woodcutters in the Korean Manhwa. In the architecture of a scandal, the “Woodcutter” represents the Bystander Effect woven into the fabric of an organization. In the fairy tale, the woodcutters are physically present but functionally absent; their focus on their “job” creates a peripheral noise that masks the wolf’s approach.

(chapter 91)

When an institution like Saero-An Hospital (chapter 90) prioritizes its “output” (reputation, profit, or clinical operations) over the safety of its staff, it adopts the woodcutter’s axe. By focusing only on the work at hand, the institution effectively grants the predator a “sealed room.” The wolf doesn’t need to hide from the woodcutters; he only needs them to keep their heads down. What makes him powerful is not brute force but the absence of eyes. The director functioned the same way. His authority depended on institutional insulation — doors closed, hierarchy unquestioned, narratives controlled. As long as no one looked too closely, he remained Compère — familiar, respectable, legitimate.

However, visibility destroys that structure. It is no coincidence that the name of the institution is not revealed. It is strategic, it is about containment and damage control. (chapter 91) “Director of X General Hospital.” The letter X replaces identity. The institution remains faceless, protected, intact. Only the individual is exposed. He becomes the “black sheep,” the aberration, the singular deviant whose removal restores the illusion of purity. This means the system has not truly fractured. It has absorbed the shock. The management is shielded. The hospital’s reputation survives. The corruption is reframed as personal misconduct rather than structural tolerance. And that explains why the director initially felt safe. It is because he knew the “Mother” (the institution) and the “Woodcutters” (the staff/administration) were more invested in the “Big Hospital” image than in the safety of the “daughters” (the employees). And this is precisely where Perrault’s logic returns — not only through the wolf, but through the adults. In Perrault’s version, one might ask: where are the parents? The mother sends the girl into the forest without any warning. The grandmother only thinks how lovely her grandchild is, hence she is not talking about the dangers. None of them prepare her to recognize manipulation. Neither the mother nor the grandmother teaches her to question charm. She is well-bred, polite, obedient — but not trained to distrust sweetness.

Perrault’s moral seems directed at the girl, but indirectly it exposes society. A culture that values politeness over discernment produces vulnerability. The wolf thrives not only because he is cunning, but because the girl was raised to comply. The blame, therefore, is not purely individual.

The same mechanism appears in the hospital scandal. By omitting the hospital’s name, the article preserves the illusion that corruption was singular. But the panel in which Kim Dan reflects (chapter 1) disrupts the illusion that this was ever an isolated deviation. It reveals that shielding authority at the expense of subordinates was already the hospital’s modus operandi. The management’s instinct was not investigation, but preservation. Not accountability, but hierarchy.

This is crucial. Before the scandal became public, the hospital had already demonstrated where its loyalties lay. The director was protected. The subordinate was expendable. Dan lost his position; the director remained secure. That earlier incident establishes a pattern: institutional cohesion prioritized over justice. Now compare this to the anonymous article. (chapter 91) The article does not expose the forest. It exposes one wolf. Hence the hospital name remains concealed, while the man’s face is “revealed”. The director’s license is suspended. Publicly, the system appears decisive. But structurally, the logic remains the same: protect the institution, isolate the individual. The difference is only in scale. Previously, Dan was sacrificed to shield the director. Now the director is sacrificed to shield the hospital.

The mechanism is identical. This is where Perrault’s tale deepens the analogy. In the fairy tale, the mother sends the girl into danger unprepared. The adults create conditions in which charm is not interrogated. When the wolf succeeds, the girl bears the consequence. Society remains unexamined. Hence in Perrault’s tale, there is no huntsman because society itself is implicated. The wolf is not defeated because the environment that produced him remains untouched.

Likewise, the hospital’s earlier response shows that vulnerability was institutionalized. Victims were isolated. Complaints were contained. Authority was insulated. The forest was never safe; it was simply unacknowledged. The article does not expose the forest. It exposes one wolf.

And that is the most disturbing parallel: predators thrive where institutions prefer appearance over introspection. And now, let me ask you this question: what about MFC as institution then?

Perrault’s warning is therefore double-edged. It cautions young women about gentle wolves, but it also exposes a society that raises daughters to be agreeable rather than analytical. In both cases, the danger is not only the wolf. It is the world that allows him to pass as familiar.

That is why his language is not remorseful but retaliatory. (chapter 90) “If I fall, he’s going down with me” translates into: If I am exposed, I will contaminate the narrative. I will ensure that no one stands clean beside me. The threat is not about truth; it is about mutual ruin. This is Perrault’s mechanism inverted: when privacy collapses, the wolf attempts to drag the girl into public disgrace so that exposure harms both equally. If he cannot remain hidden, he will ensure that the victim appears complicit. What the director fears most is not prison, nor even moral judgment. It is losing control of the story.

And this leads me to the following observation: (chapter 90) The director claimed that doc Dan ruined his life, though the article makes it clear that it happened because of the collaboration of different victims. (chapter 90) The moment he got caught by the nurse in the office, gossips started circulating, and previous victims recognized that they were not the only ones. The man could no longer escape the gaze from the staff. Hence he had to seek his “targets” elsewhere. The restaurant scene clarifies his new method. He is sitting with a man in a curated adult space—low light, alcohol, controlled proximity. (chapter 90) It resembles the wolf’s preferred setting: intimacy that appears voluntary. What caught my attention is that he complained about his partners. (chapter 90) That line exposes the structural wound. “Pandering” implies performance. It implies negotiation. It implies mutuality. It implies that he must now ask rather than take. In the hospital, he did not have to pander. Authority substituted for charm. Hierarchy substituted for consent. Privacy substituted for persuasion.

Outside that territory, he is reduced to the marketplace of mutual agreement, — dating apps, casual meetings, drinks that require conversation rather than compliance. And he resents it. I came to think about dating apps, because the perverted hospital director did not meet the man at the XY club (chapter 33), but at the restaurant. If he had known such a club, he could have met the green haired-guy or the “uke” from episode 55. Thus I deduce that the sexual predator is actually hiding his “homosexuality”, he had been living a double life in the end, like the wolf in Perrault. That’s why he targets “virgins”. Since he used the expression “pandering… get by”, Mingwa implies that this man must have told the men (“all kinds of people”) he met, he was looking for a boyfriend to justify his action. (chapter 90) However, this lie was quickly caught by the unknown companion, as the perverted director paid no attention to him. (chapter 89) This exposes that the sexual predator hadn’t dropped his old mind-set, selfishness and entitlement. When the man abruptly stands and leaves, the director is surprised. (chapter 90) That surprise matters. It suggests expectation of compliance, of silent agreement, of recognition of coded signals. The man likely does not belong to the director’s ecosystem; he does not recognize the invitation as opportunity but as lack of respect. Thus he exits. (chapter 90) The fact that the wolf tried to talk him out of it indicates that their relationship was not only superficial, but also more equal. Humiliation is crucial. Predators who rely on social camouflage depend on territory. When territory collapses, strategy must change.

This is where the transformation begins. Until he meets Doc Dan, the director functions like an anaconda: silent constriction, gradual suffocation, no visible struggle. The anaconda does not bite first; it coils. It removes oxygen slowly. The hospital setting enabled precisely that kind of predation—isolated rooms, professional hierarchy, reputational shields. After the loss of his territory, we could say that he becomes acting like a “wolf” from Perrault’s version. He has many relationships (all kinds of people to get by). Perrault’s wolf survives because he is charming and unmarked. He passes as “Compère.” Yet, the moment the champion crosses his path, the director transforms one more time: (chapter 90) This is where Grimm enters. His true nature got exposed, he is socially identified as predator.

Thus I initially deduced that the perverted hospital director would retaliate against the famous champion. (chapter 90) Jaekyung represents exposure. He is public, visible, media-facing. He has sponsors, contracts, a name that circulates. Reputation is capital in MMA. A scandal can destabilize a career faster than defeat in the ring.

But the new development alters this trajectory. (chapter 91) The director has already been exposed. His license is suspended. His name circulates in headlines. Even if the hospital remains anonymous, he does not. His face may be blurred, but within professional and social circles, recognition is inevitable.

This changes the mechanics of revenge. Previously, he could have weaponized narrative. Now, narrative cannot be weaponized — because he lacks credibility. Any accusation coming from him would be read as retaliation. He is already stigmatized as the wolf.

And stigma has consequences beyond reputation. He complains that he must “pander to all kinds of people just to get by.” (chapter 90) That line once indicated resentment toward consent. Now it reveals something deeper: he may no longer even succeed in pandering. Who would willingly meet a man publicly accused of harassment? (chapter 91) Even if strangers do not immediately recognize him, someone eventually will. His social ecosystem contracts.

He becomes even more isolated than before. This is where the transformation accelerates. And when charm is no longer viable and narrative manipulation is no longer credible, only one option remains: force without pretense.

This is where Grimm’s wolf enters fully. In Grimm’s version, the wolf does not maintain prolonged civility. He springs. (chapter 90) He devours. (chapter 90) There is no sustained camouflage. Violence becomes explicit.

The director’s inner monologue already reveals this potential pivot: (chapter 90) That sentence reframes restraint as error. It converts missed coercion into regret.

Now add stigmatization. If he cannot find partners, if he cannot reclaim status, if he cannot control narrative, if he has nothing left to lose, then the probability of retaliation and desperate reassertion increases. Not because he desires intimacy. But because he desires dominance. And dominance without insulation becomes assault.

The restaurant rejection already wounded his ego. Besides, his behavior at the restaurant could be seen as intrusion. (chapter 90) Hence he ran away. The exposure destroyed his credibility. The public article marked him. His ecosystem collapses. He is no longer hidden wolf. He is identified predator.

Predators who lose camouflage often escalate rather than retreat. Thus the revenge element shifts from narrative contamination to bodily assertion. Not scandal against Jaekyung. Not media manipulation. But an attempt to reclaim asymmetry through direct coercion. This does not guarantee success.

But it increases probability. The fairy-tale logic therefore completes itself:

Perrault shows the wolf who hides behind civility. Grimm shows the wolf who leaps when civility fails.

In Jinx, we may be witnessing the precise moment where camouflage is no longer possible — and where the predator, stripped of territory and credibility, risks becoming the brute he once avoided being. The resentment we see in his thoughts suggests precisely that possibility. When he sees Kim Dan thriving elsewhere, when he frames him as “whoring himself out,” he begins to rewrite the narrative: if Dan is already a “whore,” then coercion becomes transaction. In that logic, force becomes justified. And remember how Heo Manwook reacted, when he imagined that doc Dan was selling himself: (chapter 16)

This is the most dangerous pivot. Perrault’s wolf survives through civility. Grimm’s wolf initially survives through brutality, until he is caught (the huntsman = police). The director initially belonged to the first category. After losing territory, he risks evolving into the second. To conclude, the shift from anaconda to wolf is not a metaphorical flourish; it is psychological escalation. Camouflaged predators who lose control often intensify behavior rather than retreat.

And now, you are probably wondering why I included the actor Choi Heesung in the illustration of “predators”, though he is a second lead.

The False Mirror: Choi Heesung and The Gentle Wolf

At first glance, Choi Heesung stands disturbingly close to Perrault’s wolf. Not only he appears as polite and gentle (chapter 30), but also as selfless. (chapter 30) Yet, he is a libertine, though he claims to be pure by stating that he is looking for his soulmate. (chapter 33) Hence no one is suspecting the darkness in his heart. Even the champion believed in his words, when he claimed that he had some feelings for doc Dan. (chapter 58) The resemblance is deliberate. He is discreet. He avoids public scrutiny. He hides his intimacy with Potato. (chapter 43) Therefore the latter was not present at the champion’s birthday party. The actor operates in private spaces (special episode 2) and prefers silence over visibility. Like Perrault’s Compère le loup, he does not appear monstrous. He appears socially legible — even charming. He navigates controlled environments. He is careful about who sees what.

On the surface, the symmetry is unsettling. Perrault’s wolf does not attack in the forest. He speaks politely and seduces next to the Woodcutters. (chapter 35) He proposes a “race”to the little girl, in Jinx it’s a meal (ramen in Korean, an allusion to sex) (chapter 35) He softens his voice. He invites the girl into bed. (special episode 1) He constructs intimacy before violence. He depends on civility as camouflage.

But what distinguishes a “libertine” is the absence of responsibility in their actions and words. Once the “Little Red Riding Hood” loses their virginity, the culprit is not blamed, but the victim. That’s why Perrault warns young women. The latter have to take the responsibility for the wolf’s behavior. Therefore it is not astonishing that the actor agrees that the chow chow becomes “responsible” for him. (special episode 1)

Because Heesung, too, prefers the private over the public, he exists in the gray zone where discretion and desire intersect.

But resemblance is not structure.

The decisive difference lies in how secrecy is used. Perrault’s wolf hides in order to extract. Civility functions as access. Privacy ensures there are no woodcutters. Sweetness precedes consumption. The wolf’s politeness is not restraint — it is strategy. Heesung’s secrecy functions differently. It is not just defensive, he still wants his partner to have fun. (special episode 1) It is not about power display, but fun. He hides not to isolate his partner, but to shield himself from exposure. His discretion protects his own public image, not his access to another’s body. The imbalance exists — it cannot be denied — but it is not systematically mobilized to erode consent. The latter comes from their initial contract: Potato is at his beck and call.

The wolf uses secrecy to manufacture vulnerability. Heesung uses secrecy to simply avoid visibility and responsibility. This distinction becomes clearer in their relation to inexperience.

For Perrault’s wolf, virginity is not intimacy. It is resistance waiting to be broken. (chapter 90) The girl’s naivety is eroticized precisely because it promises asymmetry. The invitation into bed is staged. Her undressing is narrated. Closeness is prolonged. The violence emerges from intimacy.

Control is primary. Desire is secondary. Heesung’s response to inexperience produces discomfort rather than appetite. (special episode 1) He has been avoiding “virgins” for one reason. He knows how a “virgin” would react to his dream ” to find his soulmate”. They would take his “words” seriously and imagine him as someone serious and reliable. But by selecting partners with sexual experience, he can claim that he made a mistake, they were no soulmate. (special episode 1) But this panel exposes even better why the actor is so different from Perrault’s wolf. Youth symbolizes “vulnerability and innocence” and that’s something he has been avoiding. The reason is simple. That way, he can avoid accountability. That’s why he panics, when he hears the age. He realizes his mistake! This reveals that though Heesung is a libertine, he is different from the hospital warden. He is not seeking pleasure in asymmetry, fear, shame and power. He is not targeting “virgins” to exploit their vulnerability. He has been avoiding “virgins”, as he knew that he would have to take responsibility. In reality, he has always feared attachment. Where the wolf eroticizes vulnerability, Heesung is destabilized by it.

What complicates the contrast with Choi Heesung is not that with his smiles, he resembles (chapter 34) the predator by accident (chapter 90), but that he resembles him convincingly enough to be confused with him.

In the first part, we wrote: “Something walks close, warm and familiar — speaking softly, until trust opens the way.” That description applied to the wolf. But it also applies to the fox. Heesung’s true animal is not the wolf. It is the fox (chapter 89) — clever, adaptable, socially fluid. The fox does not devour. It maneuvers and as such plays tricks.

And yet the fox can be mistaken for a wolf. Heesung repeatedly uses proximity through work to create intimacy. (chapter 32) He first approaches Kim Dan through professional contact. Later, he suggests a gig to Potato (special episode 1) or uses training space to remain near Potato. (chapter 88) Even in the gym, he casually asks Yoo-Gu to hold mitts — reorganizing the work structure in ways that subtly serve his private interest. Work becomes the bridge. The boundary blurs.

And here lies the dangerous resemblance. He reproaches Joo Jaekyung: (chapter 89) The accusation implies that Jaekyung contaminates professional space with sex. Yet Heesung himself collapses that boundary. He initiates intimacy with Potato after drinking. He knows the other is intoxicated. He proceeds anyway.

This is not predatory orchestration. But it is negligence toward asymmetry. This is where the question becomes unavoidable: when is it consent, and when is it coercion?

Is consent present simply because no explicit “no” was spoken? Is coercion present only when force is visible?
Or does the line lie elsewhere — in power, in context, in intention? Mingwa gave us the answer: (chapter 90) It is when one makes a clear decision and accepts the consequences. Yet, Heesung violated this rule, for he knew Potato was drunk. He did not stop. He did not insist on postponement. He allowed desire to override clarity. That choice introduces asymmetry. Alcohol clouds agency. Youth complicates balance. Professional proximity blurs roles. Secondly, he is rejecting accountability. Finally, he never tried to correct Potato’s error and false belief. He took advantage of his ignorance. So his behavior could be perceived as manipulative and coercive.

From the outside, the structure resembles the predator’s method: work proximity, private space, imbalance, intoxication. But coercion is not defined by imbalance alone. It is defined by how imbalance is used. The hospital director manufactures dependence. (chapter 90) He isolates. He rewrites refusal. He eroticizes resistance. He regrets restraint. His desire intensifies when asymmetry is greatest. Heesung does not erode consent systematically. He does not isolate Potato over time. He does not rewrite refusal as invitation. But he does blur boundaries. He does allow alcohol to intervene. He does prioritize desire over clarity.

From the outside, that distinction may not be visible. And that is where misrecognition becomes dangerous.

Heesung does not publicly acknowledge the relationship. (special episode 1) He hides it, though he tried to reveal it to doc Dan (chapter 58). If the truth were exposed — an actor secretly sleeping with a younger, inexperienced partner whom he approached through work — the narrative could easily frame him as exploitative. He could be accused of sexual harassment.

He would appear as a predator. Not because he functions like the hospital director — but because the structure resembles it. Fox mistaken for wolf.

The key distinction lies in aftermath. When Jaekyung reflects (chapter 91) the emotion is internalized. He experiences remorse not because he was exposed, but because he crossed a boundary. He separates work from intimacy afterward. He becomes rigid about consent, alcohol, and clarity. Therefore imagine his reaction, when he discovers the true nature of the relationship between Choi Heesung and Potato. He can only be shocked and angry.

This is why Jinx constructs the resemblance so carefully. Surface similarity forces the reader to confront how easily desire, secrecy, and proximity can resemble coercion. The difference lies not in discretion, nor in imbalance, nor even in sexual contact under imperfect conditions. It lies in how power is processed before and afterward. At the same time, it gives an answer how to read the first night between the main couple. It was no sexual harassment.

The wolf converts vulnerability into entitlement. The fox risks vulnerability through miscalculation.

And yet — in a world quick to judge by appearances — the fox may be labeled as a wolf. That is the uncomfortable tension Mingwa builds. Because the story is not only about identifying predators. It is about learning to distinguish between domination and error, between strategy and immaturity, between systematic coercion and boundary failure.

If Choi Heesung’s relationship with Potato were to become public, how would it be read? Would he be framed as a predator — the older actor who used work proximity and intoxication to seduce an inexperienced partner? Would he become the new “black sheep,” sacrificed to protect the image of the entertainment agency? (chapter 33) Or would attention shift to the structure that allowed blurred boundaries to exist in the first place?

This question is not hypothetical. It repeats a pattern already established. Observe how Joo Jaekyung sued a hospital for leaking information, though the lawyer and the institution put the blame an individual. (chapter 36) When the hospital scandal broke, the institution remained unnamed. (chapter 91) The director was isolated as the deviant. The system survived. Corruption was reframed as personal misconduct. Structural tolerance became invisible.

If Heesung were exposed, would the narrative follow the same logic? Would he be condemned as an individual aberration? Or would the agency be questioned for cultivating environments where professional and private hierarchies overlap, where young trainees depend on seniors, where silence protects image?

The fox can easily be mistaken for the wolf. But the forest still matters. And this brings us to a larger structural mirror: MFC.

When schemes unfolded inside the fighting world — manipulated matches, concealed injuries, silent complicity — who bears responsibility? The CEO? The manager? The doctors who testified selectively? (chapter 41) The security guards who enforced silence? (chapter 40) The sports reporters who repeated the official version? The referees? The moderators? The corrupted director of the gym Choi Gilseok? Or the institution itself?

If one fighter becomes the scapegoat (chapter 52), does the structure remain untouched?
If one CEO falls, does the culture disappear? (chapter 47)
If one predator is exposed, does the ecosystem dissolve? (chapter 48) As you can see, I have the feeling that the pharmaceutical company might become the topic of the next scandal.

Perrault’s tale quietly asks the same question. The wolf is blamed. But who raised the girl to trust sweetness without discernment? Who allowed her to walk alone? Who normalized obedience over critical thought? The fairy tale ends with the wolf devouring the girl — and society intact. Grimm adds a huntsman, but the forest remains.

So when the next scandal erupts — whether in the hospital, in the agency, or in MFC — the real question will not be merely who acted wrongly.

It will be: who benefited?
Who remained silent?
Who enforced the hierarchy?
Who preferred reputation over accountability?

And perhaps the most uncomfortable question of all: Will another wolf be sacrificed — while the forest survives once again?

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Hidden 🕸️ Predators 🕷️🐍⚕️(part 1)

Entering the Forest

A forest. Dense. Green. Familiar and yet uneasy. At its center, a clearing: a fragile figure, the terminally ill grandmother, Shin Okja, surrounded by watchful silence. At its edges, shapes barely visible. Eyes. Teeth. Stillness.

Anyone looking at this image will recognize the echo of a fairy tale. A red hood. A forest. A wolf. Yet something feels wrong. The danger does not come from a single direction. The forest hides more than one animal. That is the key.

In Jinx, predation does not wear a single face. It does not always announce itself through violence. It often arrives disguised as smile, care, opportunity, professionalism, or inevitability. Like the forest, the story teaches its characters and Jinx-lovers that what is most dangerous is rarely what is most visible.

The wolf is there, of course. He always is. But the wolf is not alone.

Something waits above, patient and still.
Something coils, slow and deliberate.
Something laughs from the margins, waiting for weakness.
Something walks close, warm and familiar—speaking softly, until trust opens the way.

This essay does not begin by naming these creatures. It begins by asking a simpler question: What makes a predator in Jinx?

Is it violence or power?
Intent or outcome?
Hunger or indifference?
Necessity or luxury?

Across hospitals, gyms, agencies, and intimate spaces, the same structure repeats itself: asymmetry. Of strength. Of money. Of knowledge. Of age. Of status. Those who stand higher decide the pace, the rules, the price. Those below learn to adapt, to endure, to apologize.

And yet, not all predators look the same. Some act openly. (chapter 14) Others hide behind systems. (chapter 1) Some exploit bodies. (chapter 11) Others exploit labor, fear, loyalty, or belief. The forest contains them all. The tragedy is not that the little red riding hood enters the woods. It is that she is taught to trust what should never have been neutral. This logic is already present at the very beginning of the tale, in both its major versions. In the seventeenth-century version by Charles Perrault, the child is introduced as “the prettiest creature who was ever seen,” excessively loved by her mother and even more so by her grandmother, who expresses affection not through instruction, but through gifts—most notably the red hood that gives the girl her name.

The Grimm brothers repeat the same structure: a sweet child, adored by all, especially by her grandmother, who again responds to love by giving rather than teaching.

In both versions, the child’s defining trait is not curiosity or disobedience, but being loved too much. That excess of affection becomes a curse. Because she is cherished, she does not expect danger; because she is protected in theory, she is never prepared in practice. The forest is not introduced as hostile, but as neutral — until it proves otherwise. Only later does Little Red Riding Hood learn what the forest truly is, and what kind of creatures have always lived there.

This essay argues that Jinx is not about identifying a single villain, but about learning to see: to recognize how predation hides behind smiles, contracts, concern, gifts, medicine, and “opportunity”; to understand why innocence is repeatedly punished for trusting the wrong voice; and to ask why those who survive often do so not by strength alone, but by forming true alliances.

In a forest like this, the most dangerous predators are not the ones we fear — but the ones we excuse or trust blindly.

Learning to See in the Forest

Before naming any creature, it is necessary to understand how predation functions. Not as moral failure, but as structure. Not as exception, but as pattern.

The word predator is deceptively simple. In everyday speech, it evokes an animal: claws, teeth, a chase in the forest. But that image is already an interpretation — and in an essay like this, interpretation must come after criteria. That is why I begin with language.

Most dictionaries (merriam) describe a predator first in biological terms (an organism that preys on others for food), then broaden the meaning toward human behavior: a person or business exploiting others for personal advantage, and, more specifically, a person who seeks sexual contact in a coercive or manipulative manner. It is precisely this lexical structure — the word expanding from nature to economy (cambridge) to sexuality — that makes the three-part distinction not arbitrary but necessary. The story itself demands it: in Jinx, harm is not produced by a single monster, but by a system in which bodies, labor, and vulnerability are consumed in different ways.

The first definition matters because it prevents moralism. If preying exists in biology, then predation is not automatically synonymous with “evil.” It is a function: one being’s survival depends on another’s depletion. From there, the question becomes not “Who is wicked?” but “What structure allows consumption without consequence?”

A predator, in the strict biological sense, is an organism that survives by consuming another organism.

One might wonder why I do not simply say “animal,” since predators are commonly associated with wolves, snakes, eagles or hyenas. Yet biology itself corrects this reflex: predatism is not limited to animals. A plant can be predatory (carnivorous plants that trap and digest insects). Parasites and certain worms can behave like predators, feeding on living hosts over time. Some predators kill quickly; others drain slowly. Some hunt actively; others wait. The key point is not the image of an animal, but the logic of consumption.

The green-haired man offers one of the clearest, and most unsettling, illustrations of predation as a relational process rather than a fixed identity. (chapter 42). When he speaks of Joo Jaekyung, his language is explicit: the champion was a source of milk, a body that could be “milked” for money, favors, and reflected status. In biological terms, this is parasitism rather than hunting — survival not through direct attack, but through prolonged attachment to a stronger host. As long as the host remains productive, the parasite thrives. When the bloodsucker is removed, flow stops, hunger turns first into regret (chapter 42) before resentment. (chapter 42)

What matters is not that the green-haired man misidentifies Kim Dan as a parasite (chapter 42), but why he does so at the precise moment he does. (chapter 42) His hostility does not emerge from poverty alone, nor from moral outrage. It is triggered by a rupture in his expectations.

At first, he assumes the relationship between Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung has ended. The evidence, to him, is visual and economic: Kim Dan’s clothes, his delivery job, his visible precarity. From this perspective, Kim Dan appears to have lost access to the “resource.” The assumption is revealing. For the green-haired man, intimacy is legible primarily through consumption. If there is no visible benefit, then the bond must be broken.

The turning point occurs when Kim Dan defends Joo Jaekyung’s name (chapter 42) In that moment, the green-haired man realizes that closeness still exists without visible profit. This is intolerable to him. It contradicts the logic through which he has justified his own past behavior: the belief that proximity to power must be monetized, that relationships exist to be exploited, that affection without gain is either naive or dishonest.

His response is not to accuse Kim Dan of exploitation, but to collapse Kim Dan into his own worldview. (chapter 42) The insult is precise. He does not say Kim Dan is living well; he says Kim Dan is a toy. A tool. (chapter 42) Something used and discarded. In other words, he reframes Kim Dan’s loyalty as delusion and reasserts predation as the only intelligible model of intimacy.

This is where resentment replaces regret. In the past, the green-haired man convinced himself that he was “dating” Joo Jaekyung (chapter 02) and that the exchange of attention and money implied mutuality. Joo Jaekyung’s refusal shattered that illusion. What Kim Dan represents now is not competition, but refutation: proof that closeness does not require extraction, and that survival does not have to pass through exploitation.

The cruelty of the delivery-job remark lies precisely here. Kim Dan’s visible labor disproves the parasite fantasy — and therefore must be reframed as humiliation. If Kim Dan is still close to Joo Jaekyung and still poor, then the green-haired man’s entire understanding of relationships collapses. Rather than revise that understanding, he weaponizes it.

In this sense, the green-haired man does not simply enact predation; he naturalizes it. He believes relationships are ecosystems of use, where someone must feed and someone must be fed upon. What enrages him is not that Kim Dan is exploiting Joo Jaekyung — but that he is not.

This logic becomes even more ambiguous inside the shared apartment. (chapter 42) The green-haired man refuses to pay for food this, while implying that his roommate is taking advantage of him, as if he would barely contributes. On the surface, the image suggests exploitation: one man living off another’s labor. Yet the scene refuses to clarify who truly benefits. The roommate remains largely invisible, economically opaque, almost spectral. Is he a dependent quietly feeding off the green-haired man’s remaining resources? Or is the green-haired man himself the parasite, overstaying, consuming, and justifying his presence through grievance? The narrative does not resolve this tension — deliberately so. Predation here is not readable at a glance. It hides in everyday arrangements, in domestic negotiations, in the language of fairness and contribution.

This ambiguity is precisely the point. If predation in Jinx were a simple hierarchy, it would be easy to assign fixed roles: predator above, prey below. Yet the story repeatedly undermines this comfort. A predator is often also prey — and predation rarely exists in isolation. It circulates. Thus the wolf in the Grimm’s version gets killed by the hunter. Like an ecosystem under pressure, it adapts, redirects itself, and seeks new hosts when old ones disappear.

This nuance is important for Jinx, because the most dangerous forms of predation in the story are not always fast or visible. Sometimes the harm is incremental: a little more pressure, a little less rest, another shift, another compromise — until collapse looks “natural,” as if the victim simply lacked resilience. In that sense, the wolf is only the beginning of the forest, not its full population.

From this first definition, the second emerges naturally. If predation is a structure of consumption, then it can occur without teeth. In modern life, many forms of consumption happen through money, authority, and contracts rather than through jaws. This is what I call economic predation: a mode of survival or profit that depends on extracting labor, time, reputation, or risk from others while refusing to bear the cost.

A minor but telling example appears in the entertainment industry. In the panel where Heesung’s manager protests,

(Chapter 31), the contract is made visible: the manager’s income depends entirely on the star’s uninterrupted productivity. When work stops, pay stops. Yet neither the star nor the agency appears exposed. Heesung himself, who proposed the risky sparring, shows no empathy for his caring manager. He doesn’t feel concerned for this arrangement and makes no attempt to renegotiate it for his manager’s sake. Financial risk is displaced downward, onto the least protected figure. The manager is not the predator here, but a human buffer, absorbing the instability produced by a structure that benefits the star and the Entertainment agency while refusing to insure those who sustain them.

The same logic governs Heesung’s interpersonal conduct. He requests treatment from Kim Dan not only for free, but also late in the evening (chapter 34) or on Saturdays (chapter 32), treating the physical therapist’s work and time as indefinitely available. This is not an isolated lapse but a recurring pattern, later reproduced with Potato as well. (Chapter 88) In both cases, access replaces consent: labor and care are extracted on polite request, while the cost—fatigue, intrusion, and loss of private time—is borne entirely by the subordinate.

Economic predation often presents itself as normal. It hides behind professional language: discipline, opportunity, schedule adjustments, liability, brand value. (chapter 54) Its hallmark is externalization: the institution benefits while the vulnerable party carries the damage. A hospital extracts unpaid endurance and calls it devotion. A league extracts bodily risk and calls it career ambition. An agency extracts loyalty and calls it partnership. Even when no one screams, the asymmetry remains: those above set the terms; those below absorb the consequences.

In Jinx, this structure repeats across settings. Kim Dan’s exhaustion in institutional spaces is never read as a sign that the environment is predatory; it is reframed as personal weakness or incompetence. The moment he falters, the language shifts: not “We pushed too far,” (chapter 70) but “Take better care of yourself.” Not “We failed to protect you,” but “You caused inconvenience.” This is the core of economic predation: the harm is real, but the blame is displaced downward so the system remains clean.

The third definition is narrower but more intimate: sexual predation. Here, consumption is not primarily of labor or reputation, but of vulnerability and bodily boundaries. And again, the defining feature is not just “lust,” but also asymmetry. (Chapter 90) A sexual predator targets someone whose circumstances make refusal impossible or costly — socially, economically, professionally, physically, psychologically. The predator does not need to use overt violence to be dangerous; often the strategy is precisely to stay close to the border where the victim can later be blamed: You wanted it. You tempted me. You misled me. You didn’t say no clearly enough. This is why victim-blaming belongs structurally to sexual predation: it is a technique of retroactive absolution. This logic does not remain abstract in Jinx. It finds a concrete site where authority, legitimacy, and bodily access converge.

Hyenas at the Edge of the Ring

In the fight ecosystem, not every predator hunts. Some wait. This is where the logic of the hyena enters. Significantly, even the champion himself recognizes this dynamic: he explicitly identifies the other fighters as predators, likening them to hyenas. (chapter 29) Rival fighters do not need to engineer the champion’s collapse; they only need to anticipate it. What defines them is not ambition alone, but timing.

Seonho’s confrontation makes this explicit. He does not challenge Joo Jaekyung as an equal seeking fair competition; he frames the conflict around age and decline. (chapter 46) His words are exposing not restraint, but accusation. The implication is clear: the champion’s body is already failing; respect has become optional. Seonho is not trying to overthrow Jaekyung through skill alone. He is announcing that the moment of vulnerability has arrived, and that patience is no longer required.

This explicates why Arnaud Gabriel felt so sure that he would win after the champion’s surgery and recovery. (chapter 87) He thought, he had found his perfect “meal”. To conclude, Arnaud Gabriel articulates the same logic even more coldly. (chapter 87) There is no personal animosity here, only inevitability. The statement is not a threat; it is a forecast. Power, in this worldview, is temporary by nature, and the role of rivals is not to prevent collapse, but to be present when it happens. Like hyenas, they do not waste energy on the kill. They wait for age, injury, scandal, or exhaustion to do the work.

This is why rival fighters do not need to engineer the champion’s downfall. They rely on time, on wear, on the pressures already imposed by institutions like MFC. Their aggression surfaces only once dominance begins to crack. Vulnerability is the signal. From that moment on, restraint is no longer profitable.

What these scenes expose is not rivalry, but opportunism. The fighters circle the champion not as challengers, but as inheritors. They do not imagine a world without him; they imagine a world after him — and they are already positioning themselves inside it. They circle the edges of the ring and watch for the first sign of weakness—an injury, a scandal, a moment of public vulnerability—because collapse creates opportunity.

But the fighters are not the most powerful hyenas in this system. Above them stands MFC, and behind it, its CEO. (chapter 47) Their role is not to wait for blood, but to manage its visibility. When the switched spray incident and the drug-related harm threaten to surface, the response is not investigation, but orchestration. (chapter 69) A new match is organized. An invitation is extended. Noise is generated. Attention is redirected. The spectacle resumes.

This is not damage control; it is reputational predation. The federation feeds on the champion’s body and public image while ensuring that institutional responsibility never coagulates into blame. By pushing the fight forward, the CEO converts injury into productivity and scandal into momentum. The risk is displaced downward—onto the fighter, onto his body—while the institution remains untouched. This displacement becomes even more visible once Joo Jaekyung is no longer treated as an athlete, but as a celebrity (chapter 81) The distinction matters. An athlete is managed for performance and longevity; a celebrity is managed for visibility. Injury is a problem in the first case. Scandal is profitable in the second.

Thus Joo Jaekyung’s status becomes paradoxically more fragile at the very moment his visibility increases. A victory can no longer secure him; it can only be reframed. Once celebrity logic dominates, even success is vulnerable to contamination. A win can be tainted retroactively by narrative—by rumor, insinuation, or moral scandal.

This is why his public mention of Baek Junmin’s trick is so dangerous. (chapter 87) By naming the manipulation in front of an audience, he breaks the tacit agreement of silence that protects institutions. What should have remained backstage is brought into public discourse. From that moment on, the system has an incentive not to clarify the truth, but to reframe the speaker.

In such a configuration, scandal is not a possibility; it is a tool. The more Joo Jaekyung speaks, the more he represents a threat to MFC and its CEO. His credibility becomes the variable to be managed. And this brings me to the following conclusion: while readers saw in Joo Jaekyung the wolf because of Mingwa’s association, the reality is that he is the little red riding hood too! 😮 It is because he still trusts MFC. And who is the grandmother in his life? Naturally Hwang Byungchul who is himself sick. (chapter 78) The latter has always blamed the “boxer Joo Jaewoong”, but not the boxing world, the institution. (chapter 74) He never saw the ties between boxing and mafia. And this raises the following question: how can the Little Red Riding Hood discover the predator in MFC before getting eaten?

The waiting hyenas do not act alone. Their patience is enabled by authority. Again and again, it is the doctors who authorize the risk. (chapter 61) Joo Jaekyung accepts matches while injured (chapter 41), his shoulder still compromised, because he is “cleared” to fight. The phrase is decisive. Clearance does not mean safety; it means permission. The medics approve, the fight proceeds, and responsibility dissolves upward. When the body holds, profit is generated. When it fails, discipline follows.

The same doctors who allow him to fight while injured (chapter 50) later participate in his suspension. In both cases, the logic is identical: the body is usable until it is not. MFC remains intact; the cost is borne by the fighter. (chapter 52) The hyenas wait, the institution schedules, and the risk is displaced downward—onto the athlete, onto his body—while the structure that benefits from him remains untouched.

And this is why we must return our attention to the hospital—not as a place of healing, but as the space where predation receives its most legitimate language.

Predation with a license

The director from Saero-An hospital (chapter 90) is the first figure in Jinx who embodies all three dimensions of predation at once. He is a biological predator in logic, an economic predator in practice, and a sexual predator in effect — yet none of these appear as transgression. They are exercised under license.

Unlike the green-haired man, he does not operate from the margins. Unlike the entertainment industry, he does not rely on contracts alone. His authority is institutional, routinized, and already legitimized. He does not need to seek access; access is built into his position. This nameless man does not merely benefit from power asymmetries; he exploits them methodically. His behavior aligns with what research repeatedly identifies as sexual predation: manipulation, boundary erosion, grooming, sexualization of vulnerability, and retroactive inversion of blame. [for more read Major signs of a sexual predator]

Kim Dan enters a prestigious hospital without the markers that usually signal legitimacy there. No suit, no tailored coat — only a gray sweater. (chapter 80) In this environment, appearance is not superficial. It is a language of rank. To arrive without fluency in that language is already to be classified as provisional. (chapter 90) He has no network, no prior foothold either. Thus it was difficult for him to get hired in such a large hospital. Compare it with the hiring of the previous physical therapist: (chapter 54)

Episode 1 quietly reinforces this position. Kim Dan is not described as having secured a stable post, but as having found a “good gig.” (chapter 1) The expression matters. It implies opportunity rather than integration: freelance labor, paid by hours or shifts, without institutional protection. In such conditions, negotiation is not expected. The contract is accepted, not discussed.

This form of employment produces a very specific visibility. The freelancer must remain present, available, and accommodating, because income depends on accumulation. We have to imagine that Kim Dan works long hours, accepts double shifts, and does not refuse late schedules. Visually, Kim Dan already bears the marks of exhaustion: pale skin, dark circles, a practiced smile (chapter 90) — the same signs previously associated with the hospice. (chapter 57)

From within precarity, this is survival. Besides, the hospital warden has no idea about the debts. From the director’s position of security, it is read differently. (chapter 90) Constant availability is misrecognized as appetite. Endurance becomes ambition. Constraint is translated into desire. Vulnerability is reclassified as greed. This misreading is not accidental; it is functional. If Kim Dan is greedy, then the director is not coercive. If Kim Dan “wants more,” then nothing is being taken from him.

It is only on this basis that the first stage of predation becomes possible: calculated affability. The director does not begin with aggression. Kim Dan’s memory is explicit: (chapter 90) Trust precedes fear, exactly like in the Perrault’s version:

In French, the author presented him even as “acquaintance or friend” (compère le loup). Thus the girl saw no reason to mistrust him. In Jinx, by acting friendly, he singles him out, walks beside him, lingers in his proximity. This is not intimacy, but selection. Grooming here is spatial and temporal: being present, being familiar, being unremarkable.

Intrusion follows gradually. As shown in the corridor panel, the director’s hand appears on Kim Dan’s body while they walk. (chapter 90) The contact is quiet, progressive, and deniable. It blends into routine movement, into institutional normalcy. “After a while, he started getting really handsy… and it only got worse over time.” Each tolerated touch becomes precedent. Boundary erosion is not sudden; it is cumulative.

Then after a while, money is introduced. (chapter 90) In the doctor’s eyes, the predator knew about Kim Dan’s difficult financial situation, then he asked how much he would have to pay to sleep with him. The timing is crucial. The offer does not initiate desire; it tests whether vulnerability can be converted into consent. Payment reframes coercion as transaction, need as availability, and silence as something that can be bought in advance.

Only after this test fails does physical force appear: (chapter 90) Even then, the violence is controlled and incomplete — withdrawn before it can be named unequivocally. The goal is not consummation at all costs, but domination without consequence. What remains is fear, confusion, and isolation rather than proof.

The director’s later language reveals the logic that governs the entire process. (chapter 90) His regret is not moral but tactical — that he did not take Kim Dan “when he had the chance.” Value resides in the moment of breaking resistance, not in the person afterward. Once the prey yields, interest vanishes.

This is why he can later invert the narrative entirely, calling Kim Dan a prostitute,(chapter 90), despite never having paid him, never having offered gifts, dinners, or compensation. The hospital paid Kim Dan’s salary — and the director used his position as a low employee to see himself entitled. Hierarchy replaces money. Shame replaces consent. This is retroactive absolution perfected by institution.

This is also why the animal that best corresponds to him is not the wolf, but the anaconda. The anaconda does not hunt openly or strike once. It selects a vulnerable body, establishes contact that appears harmless, and tightens gradually. Each movement — a smile, a walk, a touch, a question — is small enough to be defended in isolation. Resistance is tested, then reinterpreted. By the time the prey cannot breathe, the struggle already looks self-inflicted. Collapse appears not as violence, but as consequence.

The whole scene makes one thing unmistakable: Kim Dan was not the first. The director’s later language completes the cycle. He speaks of “virgins” (chapter 90) as bodies that are “tough to crack,” with the confidence of repetition. The metaphor is consumptive: a shell broken to reach what is inside, then discarded. Once resistance is broken, interest disappears. This is practiced predation. The hospital is not merely the setting of abuse; it is his hunting territory — a space where authority guarantees access, exhaustion weakens refusal, and legitimacy ensures silence.

The Hospital as a hunting Ground

Predation in Jinx does not occur in isolation. It requires an environment that normalizes asymmetry, absorbs responsibility, and reframes harm as necessity. This environment is not the forest, but the hospital — or more precisely, a network of hospitals that operate as a single ecosystem, organized around different but complementary logics of extraction.

Saero-An Hospital establishes the baseline. (chapter 90) Its name promises renewal (saero) and safety (An), a place where bodies are meant to recover rather than be endangered. This promise is precisely what enables predation to operate without suspicion. The case of exhausted and sexually harassed doc Dan exposes its illusion.

What makes this system particularly dangerous is that Saero-An does not function in isolation. Visual continuity throughout the manhwa strongly implies institutional linkage with Sallim Sacred Heart Hospital. (chapter 21) The juxtaposition of two buildings, the rooftop park, the sterile façade, and above all the near-identical hallways collapse (chapter 90) distance between the spaces. Kim Dan works in corridors that mirror those where his grandmother is treated. (chapter 5) Professional and personal life are folded into the same architectural body. This is not decorative repetition; it signals circulation — of staff, of protocols, of information.

Sallim University Sacred Heart Hospital presents itself as a place of knowledge, care, and moral dedication. Each component of the name performs reassurance. Sallim evokes the household — maintenance, responsibility, everyday care. This would explicate why Shin Okja felt at home there. Sacred Heart invokes devotion and ethical purpose. But it is University that quietly governs the institution’s true orientation. A university hospital is not primarily a space of healing; it is a space of research. Treatment and experimentation coexist, and when they conflict, knowledge production takes precedence.

This semantic structure matters. Patients enter Sallim under the promise of care, yet are absorbed into a research-driven system where their bodies function as material for progress. The divergence is not accidental; it is institutional. What appears as dedication is, in practice, a hierarchy of priorities: data over comfort, results over well-being, advancement over recovery. Harm does not register as cruelty here because it is reframed as contribution.

Kim Miseon embodies this logic. She does not hunt bodies for pleasure, nor does she seek domination openly. Her motives are money and recognition (chapter 5) — professional legitimacy, research success, advancement within a system that rewards results over outcomes. Progress functions as an absolute good, one that authorizes human cost without requiring personal cruelty. Harm is acceptable so long as it produces data.

Her method follows directly from this orientation. Treatment is experimental, protocols are pushed to their limits, and suffering is instrumentalized rather than inflicted. Patients are not targets of desire; they are test cases. Bodies become variables (chapter 21), age and vulnerability become a risk factor, endurance becomes a resource. When the new drug fails and the grandmother deteriorates, the explanation is procedural: side effects, unpredictability, regulatory timelines. Failure is framed as scientific, not ethical. (chapter 47)

Affect is where this becomes most visible. Kim Miseon is repeatedly depicted as cold and eyeless. This is not incidental design. The absence of eyes signals a refusal of relational seeing. She does not look at patients as people, but as files: age, response, tolerance, decline. Emotional labor is therefore displaced onto the family. (chapter 21) Treatment patients “need family support,” she says — a statement that sounds compassionate, but functions as deflection. Psychological care is outsourced; responsibility for deterioration quietly migrates away from the institution (“we”). The setting of her disclosures reinforces this posture. She does not speak in a protected office, but in the hallway — a transitional, impersonal space governed by efficiency rather than care, as if she had nothing to hide. However, by behaving like that, she violated the confidentiality rights. Unlike the Saero-An director, who relies on enclosure and isolation, Kim Miseon operates through openness and institutional flow.

And let’s not forget that as soon as doc Dan had received the terrible news, (chapter 47), shortly after he was suggested a new drug treatment by director Choi Gilseok. (chapter 48) It is no coincidence.

In this sense, Kim Miseon is best understood not as a hunter, but as a poisonous snake. She does not pursue, corner, or constrict. She administers. Her harm is cumulative rather than spectacular, introduced gradually under the guise of treatment. Like venom, it operates through chemistry, delay, and plausibility. By the time consequences appear, causality has blurred. What remains is a weakened body, a revised file, and a new explanation. Painkillers become the narrative alibi: they allow the hospital to downgrade experimental failure into “management,” conceal the existence of an unaffordable authorized drug, and relocate responsibility onto the patient’s non-response (chapter 56)

This is what distinguishes her from the Saero-An director. He acts through proximity and pressure; she operates through protocol. He leaves visible trauma; she leaves deterioration that can always be explained. Poison does not look like violence. It looks like dosage, side effect, tolerance threshold, statistical risk. And when the body finally fails, the snake is already gone.

What emerges is not a monster, but something more dangerous: a practitioner perfectly adapted to a system that rewards distance. She does not violate boundaries spectacularly; she erodes them procedurally. Patients are not assaulted — they are used. And because the harm is administered under the banners of science, care, and progress, it remains difficult to name as violence at all.

The permeability of this ecosystem is confirmed by the circulation of information. Kim Dan’s CV appears on Choi Gilseok’s desk despite the fact that he never sent it. (chapter 46) This is not a coincidence. It is evidence. Personal and professional data move through institutional networks without consent. The same is true of medical information. Choi Gilseok knows about the grandmother’s illness despite having no clinical mandate. (chapter 48) That knowledge could only have reached him through leakage — informal, normalized, unremarked. Bodies are not the only things consumed here; information is too.

Gilseok’s suggestion of an experimental treatment abroad must be read in this context. (chapter 48) He is not the treating physician, nor the researcher, but a relay point within a performance-oriented system where medical knowledge circulates pragmatically. Illness becomes strategy. Vulnerability becomes a problem to be rerouted. Responsibility dissolves across institutions. What links Kim Miseon’s research discourse and Choi Gilseok’s pragmatic suggestions is not coordination, but dependence on the same pharmaceutical horizon. (chapter 48) The oncologist requires industry to produce the drug; the sports director relies on the existence of that drug to gesture toward hope elsewhere. In both cases, treatment is deferred to a system that exists beyond accountability.

And observe that both “main leads” were victims of “drugs”: (chapter 41) (chapter 49) In both cases, harm is delivered chemically, not physically — quietly, indirectly, and in ways that can later be reframed as accident, misuse, or personal failure. This symmetry matters. The same mechanism governs the grandmother’s fate.

Drugs in Jinx do not heal or harm by nature; they transfer responsibility. They allow institutions, predators, and systems to act on bodies while remaining one step removed from blame. What looks like treatment, sabotage, or accident is in fact the same logic at different scales: control without touch, violence without spectacle, predation without teeth.

Light of Hope Hospice completes the ecosystem by revealing its internal fracture. (chapter 56) Unlike Saero-An or Sallim, this space does not extract profit or prestige; it operates under scarcity. Kim Dan works there as a freelancer, not as protected staff. When he collapses, he is advised to take a day off, not sick leave — a telling detail. (chapter 70) It confirms that, even here, labor is contingent, negotiability absent, protection minimal. The vocabulary of care masks the reality of precarity.

The hospice director’s behavior must be read through this constraint. He does blame Kim Dan — but not to preserve power or reputation. His reaction is defensive, not predatory. The institution lacks resources; margins are thin; failure is expensive. (chapter 59) Thus he is happy to let a film crew use his building for a movie. This is why he sometimes works night shifts himself. (chapter 60) His authority does not shield him from exhaustion; it exposes him to it. He enforces discipline because collapse anywhere threatens survival everywhere.

This is where the structure turns back on itself. The director is neither an anaconda nor a poisonous snake. He does not benefit from harm; he absorbs it. (chapter 59) And yet, harm still occurs. Responsibility is displaced not upward, but sideways — onto the most vulnerable worker present. Kim Dan becomes the buffer once again, not because the director is powerful, but because he is trapped. Predation here is no longer driven by appetite, but by attrition.

The ambiguity intensifies with its name. (chapter 56) Light of Hope promises recovery, yet its function is palliative. Even the director refers to it as a hospital (chapter 61), preserving the impression of treatment rather than end-of-life care. This semantic slippage matters. For Joo Jaekyung, who has been treated there himself, the space remains associated with improvement. (chapter 70) He thinks, Hwang Byungchul is treated properly, as he still looks lively and strong. (chapter 71) The champion does not fully register that it is a place at the threshold of death. Care and closure blur. This confusion is not accidental; it mirrors the broader system’s refusal to name limits. By calling a hospice a hospital, death is softened into treatment. By calling resignation progress, responsibility is deferred.

The Grandmother in the woods

Shin Okja’s presence in Jinx initially recalls the grandmother from Little Red Riding Hood. She offers warmth, protection, and reassurance — most visibly through the gray sweater she gives Kim Dan. (chapter 80) But the main resemblance lies elsewhere: she is too trusting. In the fairy tale, the grandmother is eaten because she opens the door to the wolf. She mistakes familiarity for safety, appearance for intent. The danger does not force its way in; it is invited. This logic is crucial, because Shin Okja’s tragedy follows the same pattern — not through a single gesture, but through a lifetime of belief.

Her defining trait is not passivity, but faith in institutions. She believes in research. She believes in doctors. She trusts hospitals as places of knowledge, protection, and moral authority. (chapter 65) For her, medicine is sacred and progress meaningful. (chapter 65) This belief is not naïve in the childish sense; it is aspirational. It is tied to the idea of success, of legitimacy, of having “made it.” And in her mind, that idea has a name: Seoul.

Seoul represents the best life. (chapter 65) It is where competent doctors work, where advanced hospitals stand, where progress happens, where you can earn a lot of money. This belief structures her entire horizon. Corruption, abuse, and institutional predation do not register there, because acknowledging them would mean admitting that the space she has invested with hope is also capable of harm. Within Seoul, institutions are not suspect; they are self-justifying.

This worldview explains the limits of her concern for Kim Dan. She cares for him deeply, but her care is bounded by trust in authority. When he was bullied at school (chapter 57), she did not confront teachers. Her answer was always the same: he still had her. The implication was clear — institutions were there to protect him. To intervene would have meant questioning the very structures she depended on to make sense of the world.

This belief is not naivety; it is survival logic, shaped by poverty, loneliness and dependence. To question institutions would be to remove the last remaining structure she can rely on. This belief explains her blindness better than indifference ever could.

Kim Dan’s exhaustion did not suddenly appear. His pale face, dark circles, and emotional depletion existed long before she names them. (chapter 90) But when she finally does, she frames his condition as something that has been “a bit off lately”, (chapter 65) as if it was recent, temporary, and situational. The wording matters. What has been chronic is compressed into the present. Duration disappears. Suffering becomes recent, temporary, and therefore manageable. This is temporal minimization — not denial of harm, but deferral of its cause.

Crucially, her concern activates only once guilt enters the picture. She explicitly links his suffering to herself: (chapter 57) Only then does his condition become visible. Not because it is new, but because it now implicates her. Before that moment, his endurance could remain unnamed. After it, it must be explained. This is not cruelty; it is belief colliding with responsibility.

This is where money becomes revealing — not as reality, but as interpretation. The grandmother never speaks of debt. The loan is a taboo. This is her biggest fear, thus she raised her voice, when she imagined that doc Dan would pay the new expensive treatment from a loan shark. (chapter 7) This exposes her lack of trust in him, as she views him as too naive and trusting. This is where the irony crystallizes. Financial precarity is erased from discourse because acknowledging it would expose her responsibility. Money resurfaces, when Kim Dan presents an expensive gift. But she doesn’t mind, she is even aware of his lie: (chapter 41) He spends so much for her that he doesn’t have anything left for himself. (chapter 42)

From this emerges a crucial consequence: Kim Dan becomes legible as someone obsessed with money. Not because he is greedy, but because his suffering is interpreted as choice rather than constraint. This is precisely how the sexual predator reads him (chapter 90). It is also how Joo Jaekyung initially misreads him, triggered by the loan and the expensive gift (chapter 51). Different figures arrive at the same conclusion because they are operating within the same interpretive framework — one shaped first and foremost by Shin Okja’s mindset.

Her ignorance and blind trust do not merely endanger her; they shape how Kim Dan is perceived by others. Anyone who approaches her gently, with politeness and authority, passes as safe. (chapter 22)

As long as doctors speak, as long as contracts exist, as long as salaries are paid, the world remains intelligible. Within this logic, danger is not structural — it is personal. Thus she blames doc Dan for his “illness”. Violence comes from people (chapter 5), not systems. And so, she imagines that as long as Kim Dan is working, earning, and paying back what he owes, nothing truly irreversible can happen to either of them. To conclude, what governs Shin Okja’s thinking is a simple equation: payment equals safety. In her mind, debt is a temporary problem with a finite solution. Once money is paid back, danger ends. Order is restored. Life resumes. This belief explains her silence around the loan. To name it would be to admit uncertainty; to erase it is to preserve control.

What she does not know — and cannot imagine — is that the opposite is true. As soon as she left her grandson’s side, payment does not bring protection. It brings exposure. In chapter 1, the reality is immediate: missed interest is answered with physical violence. (chapter 1) Kim Dan is beaten not because he refuses to pay, but because payment structures domination. He accepts the abuse precisely because he believes it is temporary — a punishment that will end once the balance is cleared. Violence is normalized as consequence, not crime. This logic mirrors hers exactly. The more the main lead paid back, the more he was exposed to violence. (chapter 11) Here, he talked back to Heo Manwook, a sign that he was no longer tolerating the loan shark’s intrusion. The result was that he ended up being beaten more violently than before. (chapter 13) This reached its peak, when after sending his whole salary (chapter 16), Heo Manwook intended to rape him. As you can see, the more they got money, the more abusive they became… and all this time, the grandmother has no idea. But the best evidence is when Joo Jaekyung pays the loan in full, the pattern repeats at a higher level. (chapter 17) The debt is erased — and the danger escalates. Kim Dan might become free, but now the target is the champion. He becomes visible. Settling the debt marks him as someone worth targeting, someone who can be extracted from again. (chapter 46) What Shin Okja imagines as closure functions, in reality, as a signal.

This is the crucial inversion she never sees: payment does not end predation; it confirms vulnerability. Her worldview has no space for this possibility. In her mind, systems respond to fairness. Work is rewarded. Debts conclude. Violence belongs to mistakes, not structures. She believes that as long as Kim Dan works, earns, and pays, the world will correct itself.

But while she trusts institutions, she does not recognize that predators often operate through them. In her mental framework, illegitimate violence exists outside the system, not inside it. Even the loan shark is unconsciously processed as a distorted institution — closer to a bank with harsh rules than to a criminal threat. Debt, for her, is governed by terms, repayment, and closure, not by arbitrary violence.

This is why she never considers the police. Not because she condones what happens, but because, in her worldview, the situation does not yet qualify as disorder. As long as payments are made, as long as rules appear to exist, danger remains conceptually containable.

This is why she does not know that the moment she steps away, he is beaten. This is why she cannot imagine that clearing a debt can make things worse. And this is why I am assuming that her faith won’t bend when confronted with reality — it will shatter.

In the end, Shin Okja does believe in money — but not as wealth, and not as power. She believes in money as resolution. As the mechanism through which problems end, dangers recede, and balance is restored. Money, for her, is not corruption; it is order. Payment is imagined as protection. Salary replaces safety. Clearing a debt becomes synonymous with closing a chapter. This is why the loan remains unspeakable: not because it is trivial, but because it threatens her core belief that effort and payment are enough to secure life. What she trusts is not cash, but the promise attached to it: that the world is transactional rather than predatory.

That promise is false.

First Conclusions

What, then, makes a predator in Jinx?

Is it violence or power?
Intent or outcome?
Hunger or indifference?
Necessity or luxury?

The answer is money — not as greed alone, but as an organizing logic. Predation in Jinx is defined by who can extract value while displacing cost: who profits from risk without carrying it, who converts harm into an externality borne by weaker bodies. Violence may or may not occur. Intent can be denied. Hunger can be claimed. None of these are decisive. What is decisive is whether suffering becomes billable, excusable, and transferable.

This is why the three forms of predation constantly overlap. Bodies are consumed for performance, labor is consumed for stability, and vulnerability is consumed for access — and money is what makes each form look “reasonable.” Money turns coercion into transaction, exploitation into opportunity, and bodily damage into career necessity.

Joo Jaekyung’s body generates cash as long as it performs. (chapter 46) Each appearance sustains sponsors, broadcast value, betting volume, and gym economies. This is why he becomes the “biggest target”: not because he is weak, but because he represents the highest return.

Yet his continued success produces a paradox the system cannot tolerate. (chapter 41) A champion who keeps winning cleanly, visibly, and on his own terms becomes difficult to manage. His victories increase his market value, distribute prestige and income to others, and create expectations of legitimacy. At that point, success stops being profitable in a controllable way. It begins to threaten both institutional authority and informal economies that rely on predictability, influence, and narrative control.

This is where illegal gambling logic quietly aligns with institutional logic. Betting markets do not require excellence; they require steerability. (chapter 46) A dominant, credible champion reduces volatility, resists manipulation, and makes engineered outcomes harder to disguise. In such a configuration, continued victory is destabilizing. The problem is no longer his body failing — it is his body refusing to fail on schedule.

The system responds accordingly. Risk is displaced downward, onto the fighter, while control is exercised elsewhere. Medical clearance becomes permission rather than protection. Discipline replaces care. Scandal replaces investigation. When injury can no longer be exploited, reputation becomes the pressure point. The same structure that demanded endurance now demands silence.

This is the contradiction at the heart of Jinx: health was never the priority. Victory was tolerated only as long as it remained manageable. Once success itself threatens control — once it interferes with profit flows, betting structures, or institutional discretion — the champion must be reframed, restrained, or removed.

Predation here is not reactive. It is preventative. In the Korean Manhwa, the most dangerous moment is not collapse — it is independence.

As long as Kim Dan is indebted, he is controllable. As long as Joo Jaekyung fights injured, he is usable. As long as money flows upward, violence remains “contained.” The moment extraction ends, the system reacts.

When Kim Dan pays back the loan, the violence escalates. When he resists, domination intensifies. When the debt disappears entirely, the target does not vanish — it expands. This is the pattern Shin Okja never sees: payment does not end predation; it announces escape. And escape is intolerable to predators.

Revenge does not arise from wounded victims, but from frustrated systems. From loan sharks whose web has been cut.
From institutions whose silence has been broken. From federations whose profit model is threatened. From predators who mistake survival for disobedience.

This is why scandal follows autonomy. This is why credibility is attacked rather than truth clarified. This is why the risk is displaced downward — onto bodies, reputations, careers — while institutions remain intact.

So the final question is not whether Heo Manwook (chapter 46) is violent. The question is: what kind of predator is he?

He does not chase.
He does not roar.
He waits — and retaliates when the web no longer holds.

If the forest of Jinx teaches anything, it is this: collapse is survivable. Independence is not. And once the prey steps outside the web, the predators do not disappear. They reorganize. Revenge, in this landscape, is not the opposite of predation. It is its shadow.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Beginning 🧶 of the End ⛓️‍💥❄️

Sorry for the delay, but I am getting surged soon, thus I was busy preparing lessons for the time during my absence.

The Beginning of the End

The audience sensed it before it could fully articulate why: Jinx is nearing an irreversible threshold. Not an ending yet, not a climax in the conventional sense, but a point beyond which the story cannot return to its original configuration. (chapter 89) Episode 89 does not rely on spectacle, confrontation, or confession. Instead, it performs something far more unsettling. It turns back toward the beginning (chapter 89) and begins to unravel what was once deliberately sealed.

What makes this episode feel decisive is not merely a rearrangement of power, but the return of elements that were present from the very first chapter —elements whose meanings were never in doubt, yet whose consequences were never allowed to surface. (chapter 1) At the start of Jinx, the readers were not ignorant. We knew that Kim Dan had been sexually harassed. (chapter 1) We knew there was a witness. We knew that what happened was not ambiguous in moral terms.

What was ambiguous was power.

A hospital director fired Kim Dan not because the truth was unclear, but precisely because it was clear—and dangerous. Using institutional authority, he covered the scandal, protected himself, and quietly ensured that Kim Dan would never be able to work as physical therapist and even speak again. (chapter 1) The outcome was not accidental, but Kim Dan didn’t experience it as a calculated purge or a conspiracy that must be fought. He accepted the loss of his job almost as a given, even as he recognized the injustice of it. What unsettled him was not the fear that others would disbelieve him, but the realization that responsibility stopped with him. He lost a prestigious hospital position and the professional future attached to it, while the hospital director faced no consequence at all. Kim Dan did not protest or seek redress; instead, he turned his attention inward, wondering what was said about him afterward, in rooms or institutes he was not allowed to enter. The truth was known, yet it changed nothing, because Kim Dan was silenced. No one listened to him or defended him, while the perpetrator alone was given the authority to determine the truth. The witness stayed silent, the institution spoke elsewhere, and Kim Dan was removed from his own story. And that’s how the asymmetry became something he quietly carried as his own burden.

This is why Episode 89 does not feel like escalation—it feels like unsealing.

The return of the perverted hospital director (chapter 1) is not a revelation of new information. It is the resurfacing of a figure who once proved that truth alone was insufficient. His reappearance signals that what was buried at the beginning of the story—harassment, witness, cover-up, professional erasure—is no longer content to remain inert. The silence that once protected the hospital director is beginning to fray, unwinding slowly, like a gift ribbon pulled loose thread by thread. What was known but unspeakable is approaching exposure not through confession, but through loss of insulation.

This return is mirrored by another, quieter but equally significant absence: the grandmother.

In Episode 89, she is no longer shown directly. (chapter 89) Instead, the narrative offers a bird’s-eye view of the hospice Light of Hope as Joo Jaekyung’s car leaves the parking lot. The implication is unmistakable. Her death is imminent. But just as importantly, she is transitioning from presence to spectral force—no longer intervening, no longer negotiating, but lingering over the narrative as memory and obligation.

This, too, echoes the beginning of Jinx. (chapter 1) Readers did not meet the grandmother until Episode 5. (chapter 5) Before that, her existence was inferred rather than seen: through debt, through responsibility, through the ruined house Kim Dan inhabited. Absence structured the story before presence ever did. The grandmother was a force long before she was a character.

Now the movement reverses. Presence recedes back into absence. But unlike in the beginning, Kim Dan’s life is no longer centered on her care. That responsibility has been entrusted elsewhere, and her absence no longer governs his choices. In Episode 89, the hospice is no longer framed as a home, but as a stop along the way. (chapter 89) When Joo Jaekyung speaks of “the way home,” (chapter 89) and Kim Dan repeats the phrase without hesitation, the shift is unmistakable. Home has been reassigned. It is no longer the place where Kim Dan endures obligation or where his grandmother is (chapter 56), but the place where he lives in the present: the penthouse. The grandmother’s influence has not vanished; yet it has been reduced to a short visit, while he spends time with his fated partner a long time on the road. Her absence no longer anchors him to a life of quiet survival. He is now enjoying life, hence he is seen smiling and talking informal to the athlete. (chapter 89)

This mirroring is not cosmetic. It is structural. The story returns to the conditions of its origin—sexual violence handled institutionally, professional precarity (chapter 1), unseen decisions made about Kim Dan without his consent (chapter 1) — but it does so in a transformed landscape. (chapter 89) Debts have been paid. Contracts are finite. A witness exists, though he doesn’t believe in the “angel”. (chapter 89) Kim Dan is no longer isolated in his knowledge, nor alone in bearing its consequences. Joo Jaekyung detected the presence of a “predator”. (chapter 89)

That is why Episode 89 feels like the beginning of the end. Not because everything is resolved, but because the story has reached the point where truth no longer needs to beg for permission to exist. What was once survivable only through silence can now be named, contested, and reclaimed.

By folding the opening of Jinx back into its present, the author signals that the love story between Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung is approaching its final test. No longer a story of endurance under constraint, it is becoming a story about emancipation under scrutiny—about what happens when love, guilt, responsibility, and institutional memory are finally forced into the same frame, by those who were once excluded from it.

The Beginning of the End is not an announcement of tragedy. It is the moment when the story turns back on itself and says: now the truth can move.

Seeing Is Not Knowing

Episode 89 does not introduce this logic; it exposes it by repetition. From the very first chapter, Joo Jaekyung’s relationship with his former physical therapist already functioned as a negative prefiguration of Kim Dan’s own trajectory. (chapter 1) The readers never saw what caused the unknown therapist’s departure. Instead, the incident is relayed second-hand, through Park Namwook’s narration—an account that reduces the event to temperament, friction, and inevitability. The physical therapist is said to have “rubbed him the wrong way.” An incident occurred and the athlete was exposed as the problem. The job was framed as undesirable. The departure was normalized.

Crucially, Joo Jaekyung accepted this explanation without investigation. He was surprised that the therapist quit (chapter 1), but he did not question the narrative offered to him. He never tried to justify his own action either. Park Namwook, as manager, occupied the position of authority: the one who explained, interpreted, and closed the case. He never checked the facts, like for example “rubbing him the wrong way”. He acted as the prosecutor, judge and lawyer at the same time. What happened before remained unseen, and therefore unexamined. The truth did not need to be falsified; it only needed to be summarized.

Crucially, the manager also treated resignation as resolution. Once the physical therapist left, the problem appeared solved. Replacement substituted for accountability, and the consequences of this closure were never considered. The difficulty in filling the position (chapter 1), the reluctance of applicants, and the need to recruit Kim Dan through informal channels all suggested that something else had already been circulating: a reputation formed in absence, not through evidence.

Like Kim Dan after him, Joo Jaekyung is first not confronted with accusations (chapter 9), explanations, and silence. Only after the “hamster’s arrival”, the athlete is gradually exposed to gossip, badmouthing (chapter 47) and exclusion. This reached its peak with the famous slap at the hospital. (chapter 52) It shows that like doc Dan, the celebrity bears the effects of a narrative he did not author, one that no longer requires verification and questioning because it has already been administratively settled.

Episode 89 reactivates this same structure—but from another angle.

Heesung believes he knows the truth because he has seen something. (chapter 89) He witnessed a kiss between Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung, and from that single image, he constructs a complete narrative: a kiss is turned into something raw and sexual. For him, intimacy replaces training, desire replaces discipline, and the explanation Kim Dan gives becomes, in his eyes, a lie. (chapter 89)

Yet this is where the episode quietly undermines Heesung’s certainty. Kim Dan is not just fabricating an alibi. He is not inventing a cover story. They were indeed training. (chapter 88) The kiss does not erase what preceded it; it merely interrupts it. Kim Dan’s explanation is therefore neither wholly true nor wholly false. It is a partial truth, shaped by shyness, by a desire to protect, and by shame. Hence he is sweating, when he explains his presence to Potato. (chapter 89) To know the “whole truth” would require access not only to events, but to intentions, emotional thresholds, and timing—access no single witness ever has. Only gods have such power.

And that’s how Choi Heesung views himself. He considers himself as the “perfect lover”, thus his dream has always been to find his soulmate, another “perfect lover”. (chapter 33) That’s the reason why he was attracted to Kim Dan in the first place. He is an angel (chapter 30), as the latter is quiet, self-effacing. selfless, attentive, humble and absorbs blame instead of projecting it. Kim Dan initially fits the fantasy of the perfect lover — someone who would not disrupt Heesung’s self-image. Hence he doesn’t need to do anything. (chapter 31) By siding with doc Dan and acting as the angel’s advocate (chapter 89), the comedian can appear as a saint.

But the reality is that the “fox” is overestimating himself. He is just a human like Joo Jaekyung and as such a sinner. The actor’s error is not merely that he lies, but that he lies by omission (chapter 89) and generalization. Because he saw one thing, he believes he knows everything. Because he believes he already knows Joo Jaekyung —his temper, his reputation, his past, his belief (chapter 32)— he believes that he can judge the celebrity. However, he does not consider that something else might have happened before the moment he witnessed. The kiss becomes totalizing. Training is retroactively erased.

This is precisely the same epistemic shortcut Park Namwook took in Season 1.

In both cases:

  • authority or proximity substitutes for inquiry,
  • a partial observation becomes a total explanation,
  • and investigation is deemed unnecessary because the observer believes he already understands the subject.
  • Crucially, judgment in these moments is driven not by facts, but by emotion. Resentment, jealousy, fear, and wounded pride shape perception long before evidence is considered. What presents itself as moral clarity is, in reality, affective certainty.

Yet justice—whether institutional or interpersonal—cannot emerge from emotion. It requires distance. It requires restraint. It requires a form of deliberate indifference: not apathy, but neutrality. The refusal to let feeling stand in for truth. Therefore a judge will always listen both sides (defendant, plaintiff). Neither Park Namwook (chapter 52) nor Heesung exercises this control. Both act from positions of perceived authority, and both mistake emotional coherence for factual accuracy. Their confidence does not only arise from what they know, but also from how strongly they feel. The strength of conviction replaces the labor of verification.

This failure becomes especially visible in Heesung’s interpretation of Kim Dan’s departure. (chapter 58) He imagines a simple narrative: Kim Dan must have left because of Joo Jaekyung’s temper, his rudeness, his violence, probably due to the “defeat”. A quarrel, therefore, naturally leads to separation. From this assumption follows a paternalistic conclusion: the “hamster” must be hidden from the athlete for his own good. Protection becomes justification; concealment becomes virtue.

Heesung delivers this judgment (chapter 89) while smoking—a detail the episode insists on repeating, and one that should not be aestheticized. The cigarette does not merely accompany his words; it alters the air in which they are spoken. (chapter 89) Smoke replaces oxygen. What should be a space for clarification becomes a polluted environment where nothing clean can circulate. His speech is not only corrosive; it is toxic, dispersing blame without responsibility and judgment without accountability.

This is not the violence of a raised fist, but of contamination. Heesung does not attack Joo Jaekyung directly; he saturates the space with inevitability. His words do not argue—they suffocate. By framing Jaekyung as fundamentally unlovable (“after everything you’ve done”), he does not describe a reality; he reinscribes a conviction that already haunts the champion: that love is structurally inaccessible to him, that intimacy is something he can only damage, never deserve.

In this sense, Heesung’s intervention is not corrective but punitive. It does not open a future; it seals one. The smoke signals this closure. There is no fresh air, no possibility of reconfiguration—only the quiet assertion that the past defines the present absolutely. And because Heesung speaks from a posture of apparent control, he mistakes pollution for moral clarity. He leaves believing he has spoken the truth, while what he has done is reinforce the most destructive lie Joo Jaekyung already believes about himself.

What Heesung never questions is whether this narrative is complete—or even accurate. He doesn’t know about the incident with the switched spray, about doc Dan’s mental and emotional suffering, he has no idea about doc Dan’s past as well. It was, as if the young man had no past or no trouble before his interaction with the sportsman. He does not ask why Kim Dan stayed as long as he did, why he returned, or how the relationship itself has transformed. He doesn’t look at the physical therapist at all, thus he can see no change. (chapter 89) The possibility that Kim Dan acted with agency, discernment, or desire is excluded in advance. Kim Dan is reduced to a fragile and innocent object of care rather than a subject capable of choice. He doesn’t know what is good for himself. (chapter 89)

What Jinx exposes here is not dishonesty, but epistemic arrogance: the conviction that seeing grants mastery over meaning.

The irony, of course, is that Joo Jaekyung once occupied this very position. (chapter 1) He accepted Park Namwook’s account of the former physical therapist because it aligned with what he believed he knew about himself and others. Now, in Episode 89, he becomes the object of the same logic—reduced, explained, and judged by someone who believes that proximity equals comprehension. This repetition matters.

It shows that truth in Jinx is never neutral. It is filtered through:

  • authority (Park Namwook),
  • jealousy and wounded pride (Heesung),
  • reputation and past violence (Joo Jaekyung),
  • and self-effacing silence (Kim Dan).

To know the full truth is impossible—not because the truth is unknowable, but because every character approaches it already shaped by prior experience. What changes in Episode 89 is not the existence of bias, but the story’s willingness to expose it as bias.

Heesung believes he knows the truth because he has seen something. A kiss. A single image, isolated from its sequence, elevated into certainty. From that moment on, everything else becomes irrelevant. And because he saw this before (chapter 58), he reinterprets the kiss as “fuck” and not as the expression of love and tenderness. In other words, he is witnessing “true love”, but he rejects it. This exposes that he has no true notion of real love. In his mind, Joo Jaekyung abused his position as “employer”. (chapter 89)

Heesung presents himself as morally superior because he does not resort to physical violence. (chapter 89) But this distinction is hollow. Harm does not require raised fists. It can be inflicted through trick, insinuation, through speaking about someone rather than to them, through occupying the role of moral arbiter while denying the other person a voice. (chapter 89) Kim Dan has always disliked this — being spoken for, spoken over, spoken around. Episode 1 and 57 established this clearly. Episode 89 simply mirrors it back.

What makes Heesung especially dangerous is that he uses Kim Dan as a shield. He claims to defend him, but only in his absence. By positioning himself as Kim Dan’s advocate, he grants himself authority while quietly stripping Kim Dan of agency. His concern is not what Kim Dan wants, but what Heesung believes Kim Dan deserves. In doing so, he protects his own wounded pride — the pride of someone who cannot accept that Kim Dan rejected him.

This refusal is key. Heesung cannot bear the idea that Kim Dan would choose Joo Jaekyung, even date him. (chapter 89) His comment “You’re not ….” implies the expectation of a confirmation. Both are not dating. What Joo Jaekyung is actually doing exceeds the category Heesung understands. This is not casual dating. It is not secrecy. It is not consumption. It is preparation. Continuity. A future. Symbolically, Joo Jaekyung is already a step beyond “dating”: he is moving toward marriage — toward public, accountable union. He is closer to commitment than the cursed “Romeo”. That’s the reason why the author included such a reference at the store: (chapter 89).

And this is where the contrast becomes stark. Heesung, who performs moral responsibility, is not dating Potato openly. He keeps relationships provisional, deniable, suspended in ambiguity. He treats the young fighter more like a puppy or servant than as an equal partner. Joo Jaekyung, who is accused of being reckless and violent, does the opposite. He assumes responsibility. He spends time with doc Dan by teaching him swimming and fighting, he pays debts. He limits contracts. He buys a suit not for himself, but for Kim Dan’s future. He does not erase the past; he integrates it into a shared trajectory.

In this sense, Heesung is not the opposite of institutional power — he is its echo. He speaks confidently, withdraws responsibility, and leaves consequences to others. He does not strike, but he silences. He does not coerce, but he defines reality from a position Kim Dan never consented to.

The tragedy is not that Heesung lies consciously. It is that he is convinced he is telling the truth.

Not Seeing but Knowing

Episode 89 ends not with confrontation, but with a visual verdict. (chapter 89)

At one table sits the former hospital director. His presence is quiet, restrained, and deeply uncomfortable. Nothing about him suggests ease. His coat remains on, his tie loosened but not removed — a body prepared to leave rather than settle. He did not come to linger. He did not come to enjoy himself. His posture signals transience, not belonging.

The drink in front of him reinforces this distance. Whisky on the rocks is not a drink of sharing or unfolding; it is a drink of insulation. Cold, undiluted, contained. It is consumed alone, meant to harden rather than open. Even when accompanied, the director remains isolated. The person across from him seems to be talking to him (chapter 89), yet the antagonist does not engage him. Conversation fails to circulate. Responsibility, like dialogue, stops at the rim of the glass.

This matters because the director is not merely observing Kim Dan — he is being corrected by him.

For a long time, the director believed he knew how Kim Dan’s story had ended. Fired, blacklisted, erased — a life quietly ruined by institutional power. That belief allowed him to move on without consequence. Silence had done its work. The trick had succeeded.

What sustained this belief was secrecy. Not ignorance, but managed invisibility. Power, in Jinx, does not primarily operate through open coercion, but through control of circulation (chapter 48): who is seen, who is spoken about, and who is allowed to speak at all. By removing Kim Dan from institutional spaces and ensuring that the story of his dismissal was settled elsewhere, the director did not merely punish him — he rendered him socially invisible. Thus no one knew about doc Dan, when the athlete looked for him. (chapter 56) As long as Kim Dan remained unseen, power could continue to “know” without ever needing to verify.

The episode makes this collapse of power visible through contrast, not moral correction. In the flashbacks, the hospital director appears with controlled dominance (chapter 89) rather than exposed guilt. His posture is upright, leaning in. His hand rests on Kim Dan’s shoulder without hesitation—uninvited yet unchallenged. His face shows satisfaction, not doubt. He smiles while Kim Dan sweats and is attempting to stop him. (chapter 1)

This is not the memory of a man who feared consequences. It is the memory of someone operating comfortably inside a system designed to protect him. (chapter 89) His confidence is instrumental, not emotional: the calm of someone who knows where authority lies and how silence will function afterward. The grayscale of the flashback does not condemn him; it preserves his former certainty. In memory, he is still the predator—not because he is crueler there, but because the environment still belongs to him: the hospital.

What has changed in Episode 89 is not his nature, but the terrain. (chapter 89)

In the restaurant, his stare freezes (chapter 1) not because he feels guilt, but because his old script no longer applies. He is no longer positioned above Kim Dan—neither institutionally, socially, nor visually. He cannot initiate contact without exposing himself. He is no longer buffered by uniforms, corridors, professional hierarchies, or closed rooms where truth can be settled elsewhere. The architecture that once enabled him—white coats, administrative silence, procedural opacity—is gone. And he can not confide to his colleague either, hence he keeps starring the main couple. (chapter 89)

Predators rely on asymmetry and enclosure. Here, both have dissolved. This is why his reaction is not anger. Anger presumes leverage. What we see instead is hesitation: the moment a predator realizes the habitat that sustained him no longer exists. His disorientation is not ethical; it is strategic. He is recalculating risk. There is no redemption here, no moral awakening. He does not look ashamed. He looks uncertain—stripped of guarantees, not conscience. (chapter 89)

This makes the contrast with Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung even sharper. Their interaction is openly intimate, casual, and socially legible. (chapter 89) They do not require shadows, isolation, or ambiguity to touch. Their closeness does not depend on secrecy or hierarchy. Where the director’s former power depended on institutional opacity, hierarchical distance, and Kim Dan’s vulnerability, Joo Jaekyung’s present intimacy depends on none of these. And no one seems to pay attention to the “main couple” at all. (chapter 89)

That is the true reversal the episode stages. Power has not disappeared; it has migrated. The table of the hamster and wolf is placed higher than the one where the perverted director is seated. (chapter 89) It no longer operates through enclosure and silence, but through visibility and mutual presence. What once required corridors and closed doors now unfolds in the open air of a shared table. And this, finally, is what the director is forced to see. (chapter 89)

What unsettles the director is not confrontation, but visibility: the realization that secrecy can no longer protect the knowledge he once mistook for truth. His wrongdoing can now get exposed, for doc Dan is now standing close to the “spotlight”. Joo Jaekyung is not just a face, but also a voice. Thus the latter could sue a hospital. (chapter 42) This raises the following question: was the wolf suing the hospital where doc Dan got his first “gig”,?

What the nameless director sees now contradicts that certainty. (chapter 89) Kim Dan is not diminished. He is not withdrawn, anxious, or broken. He is smiling. Relaxed. Present. He laughs. He blushes. His body no longer carries the posture of someone living under constant threat. And he is not alone. He is sitting with a famous athlete — not as an accessory or subordinate, but as an equal. But more importantly, he is not pushing away the gentle gesture from the famous MMA fighter, while the “old creep” couldn’t forget doc Dan’s rejection. (chapter 89)

This is the shock. (chapter 89)

The director did not anticipate survival. He did not imagine joy. He certainly did not expect visibility.

Across the restaurant, a different table breathes. (chapter 89)

Kim Dan has removed his jacket. His body is at ease in the space. He is not preparing to leave; he is inhabiting the moment. The drink shared here — red wine — is not incidental. (chapter 89) Wine is relational. It opens, breathes, changes with time. It is meant to be shared, discussed, returned to. It presupposes duration. Where whisky seals, wine circulates.

Where the director’s table is suspended in cold certainty, Kim Dan and Joo Jaekyung’s table exists in a shared present. Air moves. Attention moves. When Joo Jaekyung looks at Kim Dan, he does not define him or speak for him. He responds to him. Kim Dan is not summarized. He is addressed. And observe that doc Dan is gradually imposing himself as the senior. He is now the athlete’s hyung. (chapter 89)

The contrast is not moralistic. It is structural.

The director represents a mode of power that knows without seeing. He once decided truth behind closed doors, believing outcomes were sufficient proof. Even now, his presence is shaped by that same logic: observe without engaging, remember without reckoning, drink without sharing. The irony is that he is exactly like Heesung. He thinks, what he sees is the truth. He believes to know. Because he is a hidden homosexual, he can only interpret such a gesture as the expression of love, (chapter 89) but also as commitment. In his eyes, they are dating, they are a couple. The irony is that he is only partially correct. They are not an official couple, but they act like one. Moreover, they are working together. So they are more than just a couple. Finally, this happy moment doesn’t indicate what doc Dan went through in the past, the switched spray, the drugged beverage and a huge depression.

Joo Jaekyung represents something else entirely. Not innocence, not purity, but responsibility. He does not deny the past; he incorporates it. He does not insulate himself from consequence; he assumes it. The space he shares with Kim Dan is not free of history, but it is no longer governed by silence. In fact, now their “history” is full of funny stories. (chapter 89) But more importantly, he doesn’t hide his affection and attraction to doc Dan, while the other did it behind closed doors. Finally, thanks to doc Dan, Joo Jaekyung is learning to pay attention to his surrounding. That’s how he sensed the gaze from the perverted hospital director. (chapter 89)

This is why Episode 89 feels decisive without resolving anything.

The director’s return does not promise immediate punishment or exposure. It signals displacement. The world he once controlled through erasure no longer centers him. The person he believed he had reduced to nothing is not only alive, but visible — and no longer alone. He is even happy.

Power that relied on not seeing has lost its authority. What replaces it is not revenge, but relation.

And this is what marks The Beginning of the End, the final emancipation of Doc Dan. The latter does not arrive through confrontation or declaration, but through legibility. In the fitting room, the suit is not a costume of aspiration or disguise; it is a confirmation that he can now be seen without being reduced. He looks back, not down. He asks, (chapter 89) not as a plea for permission, but as an invitation into a shared future. The pause of the older man watching him echoes a different kind of professionalism: not predatory authority, not performative control, but quiet recognition. Furthermore the doctor’s suit reminded me of the doctor in episode 13, Cheolmin (pattern, colors). (chapter 13) The visual resemblance to Cheolmin is not accidental. It aligns Kim Dan’s future not with power that operates through secrecy, but with practice grounded in fun, care and responsibility. Earlier, suits belonged to those who decided outcomes behind closed doors (chapter 89); here, the suit becomes a sign of re-entry without erasure. (chapter 89) Bought by Joo Jaekyung but chosen by Kim Dan, it marks the return of agency. What was once a symbol of exclusion now signals continuity. Kim Dan is no longer preparing to survive. He is preparing to live. Hence his birthday is approaching.

Not because justice has been delivered, but because those who once “knew” without seeing are finally forced to see—
and discover that their knowledge and power were never secure, only temporarily protected by illusion.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Between A Squeeze🤝 And A Crack ⛓️‍💥 – part 2

Please support the authors by reading Manhwas on the official websites. This is where you can read the ManhwaJinx  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 JinxHere 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  The Secrets Behind The Floors and Between A Squeeze And A Crack – part 1

It would be great if you could make some donations/sponsoring: Ko-fi.com/bebebisous33  That way, you can support me with “coffee” so that I have the energy to keep examining Manhwas. Besides, I need to cover up the expenses for this blog.

The Power of Voice

In the first part of this essay, I lingered on two gestures that never fully entered language: the squeeze of a hand (chapter 87), and the destruction of black glass under Baek Junmin’s foot. (chapter 87) Both moments operate under pressure, yet they belong to radically different economies. One gathers force inward to protect, contain, and care. The other expels force outward to fracture, dominate, and erase. The biggest difference is not intensity, but direction—and whether the other is held, or destroyed.

What remained implicit, however, was something more unsettling. In both cases, movement begins with voice.

In the bed scene, the sequence is precise. The champion whispers first. (chapter 87) He asks for strength and luck (chapter 87). Kim Dan answers with a gesture, the offered hand accompanied with a wish: (chapter 87). Only then does the squeeze occur. Words initiate connection; the body confirms it. Speech and gesture align. Pressure becomes care.

In the other scene, words are also present (chapter 87) —but they are refused. Baek Junmin is denied any possibility of reply—no space to answer, to justify himself, or even to speak back. (chapter 87) The screen interposed between them (chapter 87) functions as both a physical and symbolic barrier: it delivers judgment without permitting response. Deprived of dialogue, Junmin is pushed out of language altogether. What remains available to him is not speech, but the body. His answer therefore does not come in words, but through the hand (chapter 87) and then through the foot. (chapter 87) Not as dialogue, but as rupture.

Read this way, the attack on the television screen becomes fully intelligible. (chapter 87) The violence is not misdirected; it is precisely directed at the medium that silences him. The screen is the site of exclusion, (chapter 87) the object that speaks at him while preventing him from speaking back. Striking it is not an attempt to destroy an image, but to break through a barrier—to replace blocked language with immediate, corporeal force.

And now, my avid readers comprehend the illustration for Between a Squeeze and a Crack The champion’s voice represents a turning point. The title displays this difference. In both moments, the champion’s voice carries weight. What changes is not the force of the words, but the space in which they fall—and whether anyone is willing, or able, to answer them.

Part II begins at the moment when this difference becomes irreversible.

An Invisible Revolution: The Rising of the Dragon

Something changes in episode 87. And that shift does not begin with shouting, provocation, or scandal. It begins with voice seeking alignment.

Before the interview (chapter 87), before the challenge (chapter 87), the champion turns around. (chapter 87) He looks—not at the crowd, not at the institution, but at Kim Dan. The gaze matters. It establishes a circuit. Like a phone call finally answered, it places both on the same wavelength. Only then does the question come. (chapter 87) Here again, language and body are aligned. (chapter 87) Kim Dan answers—first with a nod, then with words. The response is clear, immediate, and embodied. And what follows is decisive: the champion raises his arm. (chapter 87)

He does not wait for the referee. He does not wait for the jury. He does not wait for the organization.

This gesture is easy to overlook. It is not aggressive. It is not loud. Yet it is quietly revolutionary. When contrasted with his previous matches (chapter 15) (chapter 40) (chapter 51), its meaning sharpens. For the first time, Kim Dan no longer occupies the position of fan or witness. He functions as judge and jury. 😮 And the champion acts accordingly. He declares himself the winner. (chapter 87)

Authority shifts before exposure occurs.

This is the missing step. Validation has already taken place. (chapter 87) Legitimacy is no longer awaited; it has been secured within the relationship itself. What follows is not a request for recognition, but its declaration. (chapter 87) Doc Dan is the one turning Joo Jaekyung into a champion, into the Emperor. And I doubt, MFC noticed this revolutionary gesture.

Therefore it is not surprising that shortly after the champion takes the microphone. (chapter 87) Joo Jaekyung is no longer a puppet or zombie, but a man with a heart and voice.

And the microphone is not incidental. By taking it, the dragon deliberately secures visibility, recording, and irreversibility. But more importantly, he seizes narrative control. (chapter 87)

The microphone is the institution’s tool. (chapter 46) It regulates turn-taking, determines who may speak, in what order, and under which framing. As long as it remains in the moderator’s hand, speech is mediated, filtered, and contextualized. Questions lead; answers follow. Meaning circulates vertically.

By removing the microphone from that circuit, the champion disarms the moderator. (chapter 87) The interview collapses. What remains is not dialogue, but unilateral address. This is why the moderator’s only possible response is an apology. (chapter 87) He no longer moderates; he reacts. He cannot redirect the statement, soften it, or translate it into spectacle. He can only acknowledge that something has escaped containment. The apology is not moral—it is procedural. It marks the moment the institution loses authorship.

What was once private and contained now enters public time without mediation. The champion is no longer being narrated (chapter 57); he is narrating. He does not answer a question (chapter 87) —he establishes a position. (chapter 87) And because this occurs live, the statement cannot be re-sequenced, reframed, or quietly absorbed later. In this moment, authority shifts again—not from fighter to organization, but away from the organization entirely. The champion speaks, as if MFC and CSPP were already secondary. The conflict no longer belongs to the apparatus that stages it. Wait a minute… CSPP? What is that?

This logo only caught my attention in the latest episode. However, it was already present in the beginning, but barely visible. (chapter 14) Yet, CSPP appears more and more insistently (chapter 87), even in the cage (chapter 87), contrary to before. (chapter 15) Either you only see the C or the name is placed out of the frame. (chapter 40) Yet it remains unexplained. What does it stand for in the world of Jinx? A sponsor? A broadcaster? The story never defines it explicitly—and that absence matters. What goes unnamed is often what exercises the most power. I will elaborate about it further.

Exposure, then, is not the cause of rupture. It is its consequence. The rupture occurs earlier, at the moment the champion looks for doc Dan’s gaze and opinion. That’s when the narration changes hands. Thus he raised his arm. What was once private and contained now risks exposure. (chapter 87) Hence the behavior of the wolf is filmed. At the same time, doc Dan appears much closer to the spotlight and the camera. Thus I deduce that in the future, doc Dan is about to enter into the spotlight. Some Jinx-philes are already speculating that his face could have been noticed by the cameraman and as such by the institution MFC or the antagonists.

This matters because the system surrounding him—MFC, CSPP, broadcast commentary, and the managerial logic embodied by Park Namwook (chapter 36) —depends on mediation. Delay. Scoring. Interpretation. The quiet redistribution of meaning after the fact. As long as nothing is said outright (chapter 69), control remains possible. Once speech becomes public, control becomes fragile.

The live broadcast sharpens this rupture. (chapter 87) Live means witnessed. And once witnessed, meaning no longer belongs to a single institution. It circulates among viewers: patients at the hospice (chapter 87), people in the seaside town, a public that exists before commentary can shape it.

Even the visuals insist on this distinction. When red, green, and white are mixed (chapter 87), they neutralize one another. The result is a muted, earthy tone—balance achieved through cancellation. That palette dominates the opening of the episode. It signals containment and fragile harmony. (chapter 87)

Baek Junmin’s shoe tells a different story. (chapter 87) The same colors appear, but they do not blend. They exist side by side, unresolved. Rage, greed, jealousy, emptiness—none neutralize the others. In chromatic terms, this is not balance but erosion. Because red and green are complementary opposites, their refusal to merge points not toward power, but toward self-destruction.

So now the question is no longer why Joo Jaekyung spoke. His speech was anticipated. In fact, it was partially scripted. The system expected resentment, accusation, even open hostility toward Baek Junmin—and in that sense, the champion’s words remained within the frame that had been imagined for him. His anger was legible, manageable, and therefore harmless.

The failure lies elsewhere. What happens when speech is anticipated—but its emotional and physical consequences are not? What happens when words fail to remain governable once they enter circulation? When images detach from their managers? When words no longer stabilize power, but instead generate rupture and conflict?

Part II addresses these questions sequentially: first through the fight and its language, then through the broadcast and mediation, and finally through the asymmetry of responses it produces.

Between a squeeze and a crack lies the instant when pressure stops circulating quietly and begins to transform the field itself. This part of the essay is about that instant—and about what happens when containment gives way to exposure.

The Fight as Language: Technique, Tempo, and Control

Before the speech, before the microphone, before the question that pretends to offer a choice, there is the fight itself. (chapter 87) And the fight already answers the questions the system hopes to postpone. What we see in the cage is not merely a contest of strength, but a clash of communicative regimes. How one fights here is inseparable from how one speaks, evades, provokes, or withholds.

Arnaud Gabriel’s strategy is immediately legible. He does not seek resolution; he seeks accumulation. (chapter 87) His movement privileges distance, tempo (chapter 87) and visibility. That way he gives the impression that he is superior to the former champion. The middle kick appears not as a finishing tool (chapter 87), but as an instrument of disruption—enough to score, enough to interrupt rhythm, never enough to end the exchange. The rest of his offense follows the same logic: repeated punches to the face (chapter 87), the hands, the shoulder. Targets chosen not for collapse, but for points. Not to silence the opponent, but to keep him talking through damage. The choice of targets is not arbitrary. The hands and the shoulder are not neutral zones. They are sites of vulnerability that presuppose knowledge. Arnaud Gabriel does not fight, as if he were discovering his opponent in real time; he fights as if he were acting on prior information. (chapter 82) He anticipated a diminished MMA fighter at the end of his career who would train at the hotel gym. His punches repeatedly return to the same areas—not to finish, but to aggravate. Not to silence, but to extract fatigue.

This matters because these are not weaknesses produced inside the cage alone. (chapter 87) The shoulder carries the memory of surgery and recovery. The hands mediate both offense and defense; exhausting them degrades reach, timing, and confidence. And breathlessness (chapter 82)—noticed earlier during training—signals something even more fragile: limits that are physiological, not tactical.

What the fight reveals, then, is a second layer of mediation. Gabriel’s strategy appears reactive, but it is in fact anticipatory. (chapter 87) It aligns disturbingly well with what had already circulated outside the match: commentary about tension, exhaustion, time away from competition. Whether through media narratives, observation, or informal channels of intelligence, the opponent’s body has already been translated into information.

This confirms something the system prefers not to name. In Jinx, fighters do not enter the cage as blank presences. They arrive already annotated. (chapter 47) Already discussed. Already framed. Gabriel’s reliance on point accumulation is inseparable from this logic. (chapter 87) He does not need to dominate the body; he needs to activate its known limits and let the scoring apparatus do the rest.

Seen this way, the fight mirrors the economy of speech that surrounds it. Information circulates before confrontation. Weakness is spoken elsewhere, then reenacted physically. The opponent is not answered directly; he is managed.

Against this backdrop, Joo Jaekyung’s refusal to continue circulating (chapter 87) —his decision to close distance, to counter decisively, to end the exchange rather than prolong it—appears less like impatience than resistance. He does not correct the narrative. He interrupts it.

This is important. Gabriel’s fight is structured around being seen. He “circles”, he lands, he retreats. He performs control without assuming responsibility for outcome. The commentators name it explicitly: (chapter 87) if he sticks to this strategy, he can rack up points and win by decision. Victory here does not come from transformation, but from endurance within the rules. It is a fight designed to be judged, mediated, interpreted later.

Under this logic, victory does not belong to the fighter who transforms the exchange, but to the institution that interprets it. This is not new. In episode 47, Park Namwook (chapter 47) articulates the same principle explicitly: not a knockout, not a decisive end, but a strategy that stretches time, drains energy, and leaves judgment in the hands of referees and juries. (chapter 51) The fight is no longer about what happens between bodies, but about who controls evaluation. And that’s how they could rig the match between Baek Junmin and Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 51) without ever appearing fraudulent.

By encouraging endurance, point accumulation, and delayed resolution, authority shifts away from the fighters and toward referees and juries. Decisiveness becomes a liability. Ambiguity becomes profitable. Read in this light, the director’s remark about young fighters lacking fighting spirit and being arrogant (chapter 70) acquires a different meaning. What he condemns as arrogance is not a moral failure, but a structural adaptation. These fighters have learned that they do not need to finish fights with a knockout. They only need to prolong them—to survive them—because the system will finish the sentence for them. Therefore, the moderator’s commentary during the match introducing the new Korean fighter takes on a clearer function. (chapter 71) He frames the rookie as someone “waiting for the right timing,” subtly suggesting a coming knockout rather than prolonged survival. The language is important: it reassures the audience that decisiveness still exists within the system, that power is merely deferred—not absent.

But this is precisely where the narration fails. The moderator’s interpretation is not an analysis of what is happening in the cage; it is a reassurance directed outward, toward spectators who still expect resolution. (chapter 71) The director is not persuaded. Hwang Byungchul reads the situation differently. He recognizes stiffness, fear, and overreliance on structure—not composure, not strategy. Where the moderator sees patience, the director sees hesitation. Where commentary insists on strategy, experience detects rigidity and lack of instincts.

This discrepancy matters. It exposes the gap between institutional narration and embodied knowledge. Commentary works to preserve belief in the system’s fairness and coherence; the director’s reaction reveals how deeply fighters have been trained to survive judgment rather than risk transformation. The moderator speaks to maintain the illusion of control. The director sees through it because he understands what a fighter looks like when he is no longer fighting to win, but to last.

Read this way, Arnaud Gabriel is not an anomaly but a template. His method externalizes power. By avoiding resolution, he transfers authority away from the cage and into the system that counts, frames, and decides. The longer the match, the greater this discretion becomes.

Under this light, the absence of strategic advisors for the match in Paris is no oversight. (chapter 81) It is an assumption: that the outcome no longer requires athletic intervention. The champion is treated as a finished product, a celebrity whose role is to endure visibility, not to alter the terms of the fight itself.

And this is precisely how Arnaud Gabriel behaves outside (chapter 82) and inside the cage. (chapter 87) Publicly, he is courteous. Measured. Even complimentary. (chapter 82) His mockery arrives only after contact has been broken—after the bell, after the exchange, after safety has been restored. (chapter 82) He remarks, not as confrontation, but as commentary. Like his fighting style, his speech avoids commitment. It is designed to sting without escalating, to destabilize without consequence. Gabriel never needs to raise his voice because the system will finish his sentence for him. His confidence does not announce itself; it is delegated. He hides arrogance and cynicism behind smiles (chapter 82), gentle and polite gestures, and tactical distance— away from the spotlight, away from overt confrontation. His restraint is not humility, but alignment. He performs civility so that judgment, narration, and authority can be outsourced to the institution. That’s why for him, fighting is strongly intertwined with fun and he sees himself more as a star than as an athlete. He is definitely influenced by MFC. Hence we can say that his suit mirrors his mind-set. Gabriel’s suit does not soften his presence; it disciplines it. The patterned fabric signals rigidity rather than elegance—structure over fluidity. It mirrors his fighting style: calibrated, rule-bound, resistant to improvisation. Nothing about his appearance invites rupture. Everything is designed to hold form.

Baek Junmin operates according to the same economy, even if his temperament is different.

Like Gabriel, he relies on intermediaries. (chapter 52) He lets others speak, provoke, circulate images, manage money, create pressure. (chapter 54) His power does not come from direct address, but from displacement. When he does appear, it is rarely to argue. (chapter 49) It is to smirk, to whisper, to apply pressure obliquely. In both cases, the logic is identical: control is preserved by never being fully present.

What distinguishes Joo Jaekyung in this fight is that he refuses this grammar. (chapter 87)

In the first round, his so-called inability to land a hit is not simply frustration or decline. (chapter 87) It is more observation. He allows the opponent to speak first—to reveal the structure of the exchange. (chapter 87) Gabriel runs, scores points, performs mastery. The system recognizes this as competence. (chapter 87) But competence is not the same as authority. The main lead was simply waiting for the right time.

The shift comes with the back kick. (chapter 87)

A back kick is not a display technique. It is a counter. It requires timing, proximity, and commitment. It is thrown not to accumulate points, but to end conversation. (chapter 87) When it lands, it collapses distance. It forces the opponent inward. And crucially, it targets the center of the body—not the face that earns applause, but the core that sustains movement.

What the kick takes away is not balance alone, but breath. (chapter 87) This matters. Breath is what allows speech, rhythm, and continuity. By striking the abdomen, Joo Jaekyung does not silence Arnaud Gabriel symbolically; he silences him physiologically. The cough is not incidental. It is the visible sign of a system failure. The “eagle”—the aerial, circling, point-accumulating fighter—cannot stay aloft once the diaphragm collapses. Flight gives way to gravity.

The follow-up matters even more. After the back kick, Joo Jaekyung closes in (chapter 87) and delivers an uppercut. (chapter 87) This is not escalation; it is completion. Where Gabriel sought to keep the fight open, Joo Jaekyung compresses it. He refuses the long exchange. He refuses circulation. He refuses to wait for judgment. His strategy is not to be evaluated later, but to be undeniable now.

The back kick strips Arnaud Gabriel of breath. (chapter 87) The uppercut strips him of orientation. (chapter 87)

Once the diaphragm collapses, Gabriel is no longer capable of regulating posture or timing. The uppercut intervenes at precisely that moment—not to add force, but to resolve imbalance. It lifts a body that can no longer stabilize itself and interrupts any attempt at recovery. What follows is not resistance, but collapse. The eagle does not land; it falls. Arms and legs fail at once, and with them the capacity to stay airborne. (chapter 87) This is not silence imposed from outside, but silence produced by gravity. Once the body crashes, breath cannot return, and speech has nowhere to perch.

This distinction matters. Gabriel’s entire mode of fighting—and speaking—depends on continuity: light contact (chapter 87), controlled retreat, smiling commentary, damage spread thin enough to remain narratable. From my perspective, pain, for him, has always been something deferred (spread across rounds), translated (into points, commentary, statistics) and mediated (by rules, referees, judges, replay). (chapter 87) But the uppercut ends that translation. Crucially, it is Joo Jaekyung who calls this strike a “tap.” (chapter 87)

The word matters. By naming the uppercut this way, the champion reframes violence from the inside. He is not minimizing the impact; he is exposing a hierarchy of force. What appears decisive to the audience is, for him, secondary. The real rupture has already occurred with the loss of breath, with the back kick (chapter 87). Compared to that, the uppercut is merely punctuation.

This inversion reveals how far he has moved beyond a point-based or spectacle-driven economy of fighting. The strike that looks spectacular is not the one that matters most. The decisive action is the one that interrupts breath, rhythm, and continuity — the one that makes speech, posture, and recovery impossible.

After it lands, Gabriel does not speak. He does not smile. He does not reframe. He remains grounded, silent, and exposed. (chapter 87) This is why the moment feels disproportionate. It is not simply that Gabriel is hurt; it is that he appears unprepared for pain that interrupts language rather than ornamenting it.

The protagonist’s fighting style mirrors his communicative behavior exactly: alignment. (chapter 87)

Where Gabriel and Baek Junmin rely on deferral, Joo Jaekyung insists on alignment. Where they speak around conflict (chapter 74) (chapter 82) (chapter 87), he speaks into it. Where their power depends on systems that can reinterpret outcomes, his depends on moments that resist reinterpretation. It looks as though the athlete has internalized surprise as a mode of operation. (chapter 87) Not surprise as chaos, but as interruption. Each decisive movement arrives before it can be absorbed by the system—before it can be scored, reframed, or deferred to later interpretation. The opponent is caught off-balance, but so is the moderator, whose script assumes predictability. Surprise here is not a tactic for winning exchanges; it is a tactic for breaking mediation.

This is why the moderator’s question is not accidental. It is an attempt to pull the champion back into a familiar structure: (chapter 87) Two options. Two lanes. A controlled fork in the road. The equivalent of Gabriel’s point-scoring strategy translated into language. But the fight has already shown us why this will fail despite the appearances

Joo Jaekyung has no interest in winning by decision—whether athletic or rhetorical. He does not want to be interpreted. He wants to be answered. (chapter 87)

Seen this way, the fight is not a prelude to the speech. It is its proof. The jinx mattered because it did not merely weaken the champion’s body; it rendered him structurally mute. (chapter 2) While the jinx held, action could still occur, but speech could not carry consequence. Words dissipated, were deferred, or were absorbed by systems designed to neutralize them. Powerlessness expressed itself as speechlessness.

What breaks in episode 87 is not luck, but that condition. The jinx no longer governs his relation to outcome. And the clearest sign of that release is not victory, but articulation. (chapter 87) He can now act in ways that resist reinterpretation—and speak in ways that cannot be postponed.

Surprise becomes possible, only once the jinx loses its grip. While cursed, every move was anticipated, rerouted, or explained away. Once uncursed, the champion no longer needs permission, timing, or validation from the system. (chapter 87) His actions arrive before meaning can be reassigned. His words arrive where no answer is prepared. In this sense, episode 87 marks the moment Joo Jaekyung becomes fluent in his own discipline. Not merely competent, not merely dominant, but articulate. His movements surprise (chapter 87) because they are no longer designed to be legible in advance. They are not bids for approval; they are declarations.

Where Arnaud Gabriel’s fighting style depends on being read, scored, and explained—on allowing the system to finish his sentence—Joo Jaekyung’s now depends on interruption. Each movement cuts across expectation. Each decision arrives before mediation can begin. Surprise is no longer an accident; it is his mode of expression. That’s how it dawned on me why he won this match so quickly after his first night with doc Dan (chapter 5) which had surprised his manager Park Namwook. (chapter 5)

The system believes it still governs outcomes because it confuses movement with control. Gabriel moves. Baek Junmin circulates. But neither transforms the field. Joo Jaekyung does. First with his body. Soon with his voice.

And once speech enters the same register as the back kick (chapter 87) —direct, unmediated, irreversible—there will be no neutral ground left to retreat to. (chapter 87)

Commentary as Control: When Mediation Rewrites the Fight

Before the microphone is seized (chapter 87), the fight has already been partially rewritten. Not by the fighters, but by the voice that accompanies them.

The moderator’s narration does not describe the fight; it scripts how the fight should be seen. (chapter 87) Here, the man praises the French sportsman while omitting the action from the Korean athlete. This distinction matters. Commentary during the fight in Paris is not a neutral layer added after the fact. It intervenes in real time, assigning meaning, value, and legitimacy to movements as they occur. What counts as action, what counts as damage, and what counts as dominance are not decided solely by bodies in motion, but by the language that frames them.

A telling discrepancy appears early. Joo Jaekyung advances and throws a punch. (chapter 87) Visually, contact is registered: the onomatopoeia “TAP” marks the moment. Something happens. And yet the moderator declares, unequivocally: “Joo can’t land a single hit.” The issue is not that the blow lacks force; it is that it is rendered nonexistent. Contact is reclassified as absence.

By contrast, when Arnaud Gabriel touches (chapter 87) — repeatedly, often against guard or shoulder— those same gestures are narrated as accumulation. (chapter 87) Circling becomes “control.” Light strikes become “points.” Endurance becomes strategy. The same physical economy is not evaluated differently; it is counted differently. (chapter 87)

This asymmetry is systematic. Gabriel’s movements are framed as strong and intelligent, even when they produce no decisive effect. The thing is that Joo Jaekyung can withstand such punches. He has long internalized to use his body as shield. Besides, his movements, when they do not immediately collapse the opponent, are either omitted or framed as failure. (chapter 87) The moderator does not ask whether Joo is absorbing damage; he announces that Joo is being outmaneuvered. He does not note that Joo remains squared, grounded, and facing his opponent; he insists that Gabriel is “running circles around him.” (chapter 87)

What emerges is not analysis, but instruction. The commentary teaches the audience what to recognize as skill and what to dismiss as noise. It does not reflect the fight; it pre-interprets it, guiding perception toward a point-based, decision-oriented outcome. Victory, under this narration, is not something seized—it is something awarded later.

This is why the strategy attributed to Gabriel fits so cleanly within the system. His fight is designed to be judged. He circles, touches, retreats. He avoids moments that resist reinterpretation. He never needs to raise his voice or force a conclusion, because the system will finish his sentence for him. Commentary, jury, and scoring will translate minimal impact into legitimacy. Joo Jaekyung, by contrast, does not fight to be translated. He absorbs, advances, closes distance. His guard is not praised as strength and resilience but dismissed as passivity. (chapter 87) His contact is not evaluated but erased. The narration does not merely favor Gabriel; it prepares the conditions under which Gabriel’s approach can win without ever having to end the fight.

Seen this way, the fight is not merely athletic. It is already political. The moderator’s voice functions as an invisible hand on the scale, redefining what counts as action before the judges ever speak. It was already palpable during the match between the main lead and the Shotgun, but now it becomes more obvious.

This is the context in which the later intervention must be read. When Joo Jaekyung takes the microphone (chapter 87), he is not interrupting a fair narrative. He is reclaiming authorship from a system that has already begun to speak over his body.

Moderation as Deflection: The Interview as a Managed Choice

By the time the microphone appears, the fight is already over—but control over its meaning is not. (chapter 87) This is where the moderator enters the cage and becomes visible. His intervention is not neutral, and it is not merely journalistic. It is managerial.

The structure of his question reveals this immediately. He does not ask one question, then wait. He asks two at once: how the champion feels and whether he has words for Baek Junmin. This is not conversational clumsiness; it is a framing device. The champion is placed in front of a forced alternative: personal affect or rivalry hype. Either answer keeps the discourse safely within the register of sport. Both options redirect attention forward—toward the next match—rather than backward, toward responsibility.

This is a classic diversionary tactic. By introducing Baek Junmin at this precise moment, the moderator collapses multiple narratives into one convenient axis: fighter versus fighter. Institutional involvement disappears. The CEO of MFC disappears. Any irregularity becomes merely interpersonal tension. The interview is designed not to elicit truth, but to channel attention.

That this is happening on a live broadcast matters. The moderator is not improvising; he is containing risk in real time.

Who Is Watching—and Why That Matters

But what the moderator miscalculates is not the champion’s temperament, but his audience.

This match is not being watched only by fans or analysts. It is being watched by patients at the hospice. (chapter 87) It is being watched by staff. It is being watched by Hwang Byungchul—someone who knows the champion not as a brand, but as a body, a history, and a visitor and former patient of that very place. These viewers are not consuming spectacle; they are witnessing continuity. They know the fighter as a person, and I suppose, it is the same for the inhabitants of the seaside town.

For them, Joo Jaekyung’s presence is not abstract. It is personal. They are watching because of him, not because of the event itself. The dragon is not just a celebrity for them, but someone who once occupied the same space they do now. This shifts the interpretive frame entirely. They are not primed to receive hype or promotional narrative. They are primed to notice discontinuity—moments where what is said no longer matches what they know of the body, the risk, and the cost.

The moderator speaks as if he is guiding interpretation. (chapter 87) But live broadcast does not guarantee interpretive obedience. It only guarantees exposure. For the inhabitants and patients of the hospice, authority does not circulate through the microphone. It circulates through familiarity. They have no relationship with the moderator—no shared past, no shared vulnerability. With the champion, they do. His words carry weight precisely because they are grounded in recognition, not mediation. When he speaks, he is not framing the event for them; he is interrupting the frame itself. That’s why I believe not “motherfucker” will catch their attention, rather the other statement “playing dirty”. (chapter 87)

The Champion’s Speech as Refusal of Explanation

This is where the champion’s response becomes decisive—not because of what it clarifies, but because of what it refuses to clarify. (chapter 87) Contrary to the moderator’s method, Joo Jaekyung does not explain. He does not narrate. He does not contextualize. He speaks about a stunt. A trick. He names the existence of manipulation without supplying its mechanism.

This is not accidental. It is the inverse of commentary logic. Where the moderator’s role is to tell viewers how to see what just happened, the champion’s declaration does the opposite: it destabilizes perception. It introduces doubt without closure. It forces questions instead of answers. The speech functions less as accusation than as riddle. Let’s not forget that for that tie which was turned into a defeat, many people were involved: the MFC security guards, the intervention of doctors, the corruption of the jury, referee and moderator and the switched spray (its fabrication…).

This is precisely what the moderator and MFC did not anticipate.

Had the champion named the trick explicitly—had he described the spray (chapter 69) , the switching, the method—the institution could have responded. Clarifications could be issued. Liability could be managed. But by speaking elliptically, by pointing to manipulation without anatomizing it, the champion places the burden of interpretation onto the audience. And MFC can not deny the existence of an incident in the locker room.

And that audience includes people who already trust the main lead, his strength and his selflessness. (chapter 62) They are not close enough to trust the system blindly.

Why This Speech Is Dangerous to the System

For viewers in the seaside town, the declaration invites curiosity. For hospice patients, it resonates with lived vulnerability. For Hwang Byungchul, it can also activate memory (chapter 87) — of past matches, past compromises, past blindness. He is not being told what to think. He is being prompted to remember the suspension which he thought, his pupil deserved. (chapter 57)

This is the opposite of what moderation is designed to do. The moderator attempts to redirect attention toward Baek Junmin and the future. (chapter 87) There will be a match soon. The champion pulls it backward, toward unresolved causality. The moderator offers a spectacle that can be consumed. The champion offers a fracture that must be examined.

This is why the subsequent apology for profanity is so revealing. It is the only response available. Language has slipped beyond containment, so the institution retreats to formality. Civility replaces substance. That way, the athlete can be criticized for his language. He doesn’t appear as refined or proper. The reality is that he portrayed Baek Junmin as a cheater.

The Larger Diversion at Work

Seen in this light, the behavior of the CEO and the woman in red becomes legible. By foregrounding the incident in the States (chapter 69), by allowing attention to cluster around foreign misconduct (chapter 69) and public embarrassment (chapter 69), they redirect scrutiny away from the quieter, more actionable crime: the switched spray and the rigging of the game. Scandal abroad is survivable. Manipulation at home is not.

The champion’s speech threatens this balance. Not because it exposes everything, but because it exposes enough. (chapter 87) It disrupts the economy of managed ignorance. It creates a situation in which silence no longer stabilizes meaning. The incident is no longer buried, it is gradually coming to the surface,

The moderator was not asking two harmless questions. In reality, he was offering a script. And for the first time, the champion declined to read from it. Hence he insulted the actual champion.(chapter 87)

The Most Dangerous Word

The danger is not the profanity. It is what the profanity makes available.

When Joo Jaekyung says (chapter 87), he is not losing control. He is actually speaking on doc Dan’s behalf, as he has long recognized how the incident with the switched spray affected his lover. Hence he had pushed for further investigation later. He is more than just refusing the moderator’s script and naming his opponent directly, outside institutional mediation. The word does not function as an insult alone; it functions as a key.

Once spoken on live broadcast, it authorizes a shift in narrative terrain—from the fight to the past.

In a system that already treats Joo Jaekyung as a celebrity rather than an athlete (for more read my analysis “The Secrets Behind The Floors “], language is no longer evaluated for meaning but for usability. The insult “motherfucker” becomes extractable evidence. It invites biography. Not training history, but origins.

Raised by a single father who was not only violent, but also a drug-addict, a gambler and a mobster. Police records. (chapter 74) Early incidents reframed as character. Let’s not forget that he was stigmatized as a thug by the members from Team Black too. (chapter 47) Nothing new needs to be invented. Only reassembled. They know about the dragon’s past, because they brought Baek Junmin, someone who resented the celebrity for his wealth and fame.

This is how reputations are dismantled without contradiction. A scandal could finish his career, thus the manager silenced the incident with Choi Heesung’s fake injury. (chapter 31) The system does not deny the champion’s words ; it reclassifies them. What was a refusal of manipulation becomes “anger issues.” What was naming becomes “acting out.”

The word “motherfucker” is especially volatile because it summons the mother into the narrative. Her return—whether literal or discursive—does not need to accuse the champion. (chapter 72) It only needs to repeat an already accepted story: abandonment as necessity, violence as justification, disappearance as victimhood. A story the system knows how to circulate. And Hwang Byungchul never questioned her decision so far.

In that configuration, the champion’s speech is no longer debated. It is overwritten.

This is why the insult matters. Not because it is crude, but because it cannot be neutralized without reopening the past. The curse does not expose Joo Jaekyung. It gives the system permission to try. And this is the cost of refusing the script. However, what the schemers fail to recognize is that the champion is no longer influenced by the past and his origins. He received his absolution from the director Hwang Byungchul: (chapter 78) Secondly, Kim Dan is now able to distinguish the past from the present. Finally, thanks to doc Dan (chapter 62), he did so many good deeds in the seaside town that the inhabitants and the patients from the hospice won’t accept such accusations. I believe that such people won’t see “motherfucker” as a problem at all, they will rather see it as a part of his role after the match. What will remain in their mind is rather the accusation and riddle he voiced: the stunt Baek Junmin played.

CSPP and the Economy of Broadcast

What ultimately exposes the fragility of the system in episode 87 is not the champion’s aggression, but the infrastructure that was supposed to absorb it. The live broadcast does not merely transmit the fight; it reorganizes responsibility. And this is where CSPP becomes impossible to ignore. (chapter

CSPP is not presented as a television channel. The fight in the States was explicitly sold on PPV (chapter 87), which already tells us that CSPP does not function as a simple broadcaster. My idea is that CSPP operates as an intermediary apparatus: a company that packages events, sells broadcasting rights, coordinates visibility, and transforms violence into consumable spectacle. In other words, CSPP does not show fights; it produces events. This explicates why CSPP was present right from the start (chapter 14), but barely visible. But the moment it caught my attention in Paris, I realized that its increasing visibility displays the success of MFC as company. Observe that when the champion faced Randy Booker, the weight-in took place on the same day than the fight and in the arena, not at a prestigious hotel like in Paris. Here, the champion held a conference many days before the weight-in, and the latter took place the night before the match with Arnaud Gabriel. Secondly, you can observe the success of MFC through the banners. In Busan, the website of MFC was posed in the background next to CSPP. (chapter 14) In Seoul, when the star faced his old rival, there is no website on the banner (chapter 50), only MFC and CSPP. But in Paris, it is now totally different. (chapter 87) Thanks to CSPP, I noticed Joo Jaekyung’s true role. He is the one who made MMA fighting and MFC so popular! He is a trendsetter. He is indeed making history! And since CSPP and MFC are strongly connected to each other, it implies that CSPP as an organization is earning more and more money as well.

This is consistent with how the logo appears gradually in the narrative. In Paris, CSPP is omnipresent in the cage (chapter 87), on the banner, and on the stage and probably in promotional material , yet remains narratively undefined. That absence is not accidental. CSPP functions precisely where definition would impose accountability. It sits between MFC, sponsors, pharmaceutical interests (chapter 48), and distribution platforms, insulating each layer from direct responsibility. If something goes wrong, blame can always be displaced sideways.

CSPP and the Architecture of Visibility

CSPP enters the narrative quietly, but never innocently. Its function is not to comment on fights, nor to judge them. According to my observations and deductions, CSPP controls something more fundamental: when, how, and for whom events become visible. It is not a television channel. It does not merely broadcast. It packages, licenses, and distributes attention. And this becomes clear once we follow the timing.

Early revelations about Joo Jaekyung—his injury (chapter 35), his suspension (chapter 52), the causes for his defeat —usually surface in the evening or late at night (chapter 54). They circulate when attention is thin, fragmented, and easily exhausted. These disclosures are technically public, yet functionally muted. They exist without witnesses who can gather, discuss, or respond collectively.

As MMA gains popularity within the story, this pattern shifts. News about Joo Jaekyung begins to appear during the day. (chapter 57) (chapter 70) His matches are scheduled at hours accessible even to a Korean hospital (chapter 41) or hospice patients. (chapter 87) This is not coincidence. The schedule itself signals that Joo Jaekyung has become a ratings anchor—a figure around whom time is organized. He is no longer merely an athlete; he structures attention. Seen in this light, the late-night scheduling of the Korean rookie’s fight (chapter 71) becomes intelligible. It is not a mark of anticipation, but of expendability. The match is placed where attention is thinnest, where failure or success carries minimal consequence. By contrast, Joo Jaekyung’s fights are positioned to be seen. The asymmetry exposes how dependent MFC’s visibility economy is on him—not as a competitor, but as the primary organizer of audience attention.

This is precisely when CSPP becomes more visible.

CSPP’s logos multiply as control becomes more precarious. Its presence in the cage, on banners, and in broadcast framing (stage) increases not because it is expanding, but because it needs to be seen owning the frame. Visibility here is defensive. The more unstable meaning becomes, the more insistently CSPP marks the space as regulated, licensed, and sanctioned.

The contrast with Baek Junmin is instructive. His early fights are difficult to trace. Kim Dan cannot find information online. (chapter 47) His presence circulates through curated highlights and controlled conference footage rather than open broadcast. (chapter 47) His rise is engineered through selective visibility. (chapter 47) Weak opponents are chosen. (chapter 47) His image is inflated before he ever faces Joo Jaekyung. CSPP does not need to expose him fully; it needs only to prepare recognition. However, CSPP is an official company, they can not control rumors among fighters. (chapter 47) Thus the manager suggested this to his boss just before: (chapter 46) By mentioning the existence of spies, he incited the main lead to keep his distance from the doctor and the members so that the rumors about the underground fighting wouldn’t reach his ears.

This explains the asymmetry in scheduling as well. When defeat is anticipated for Joo Jaekyung—Busan (chapter 14), the United States, Paris—the fights are placed in high-visibility slots. Loss must be witnessed. Decline must be shared. By contrast, the fight between Baek Junmin and Joo Jaekyung takes place in the morning (chapter 49), a time of dispersed attention, private viewing, and reduced collective response. Visibility is not maximized; it is managed. (chapter 49) CSPP’s role, then, is not neutral mediation. It is temporal governance. It decides when exposure becomes dangerous and when it becomes profitable. It does not silence events; it times them.

This also clarifies why Baek Junmin’s championship appears so late, almost as an afterthought. (chapter 77) Once Joo Jaekyung does not contest the loss of his title—once he does not sue, demand more investigation, or interrupt the administrative process— MFC and CSPP no longer need to justify anything. Delay becomes normalization. Silence becomes confirmation.

What CSPP ultimately sells is not fights, but legitimacy through circulation. As long as conflicts remain within the frame of scheduled events (chapter 87), licensed images, and mediated commentary, the system holds. But the moment violence spills into spaces CSPP cannot package—off-camera, unsanctioned, criminal—the entire structure becomes vulnerable.

This is why Baek Junmin’s trajectory (chapter 87) is dangerous not only for MFC, but for CSPP itself. If his connections to the underworld surface, CSPP is no longer a distributor of sport, but a conduit for illicit spectacle. Contracts dissolve not because violence occurred, but because violence escaped framing.

CSPP thrives on controlled exposure. What it cannot survive is uncontrollable visibility. And by focusing on this aspect, it dawned on me that CSPP could have footage of the fight in Seoul. This distinction clarifies an earlier anomaly that otherwise remains unresolved: the Seoul fight.

Joo Jaekyung was injured, when he entered the scene. (chapter 49) Under normal medical protocol, this should have stopped the fight immediately. (chapter 41) No athlete should perform when injured. Yet MFC Medical remains silent, the staff simply treats the wound. The bout proceeds. Only later—after attention has shifted, after consequences have begun to circulate—does the same medical authority step forward to issue disciplinary sanctions and a suspension (chapter 52).

The reversal is telling. Medical authority here does not operate preventively, but retroactively. It does not protect the athlete at the moment of risk; it activates only once visibility becomes dangerous. This explains why a trick was played at the health center. It was to divert attention from their own complicity.

Seen through the logic of CSPP, this makes sense. If CSPP governs circulation, then footage of the Seoul fight does not disappear—it is archived. The problem is not the absence of evidence, but its containment. (chapter 52) There were cameras in the arena. What cannot be allowed to surface is proof of foreknowledge: that an injured athlete was permitted to fight under institutional supervision. Thus it raises the question if the match in the morning was broadcast on TV.

This explains the sudden relocation of scandal to the health center. By staging conflict there, the system launders responsibility. (chapter 52) Structural complicity is translated into an individualized incident. What occurred in the cage is no longer the issue; what occurred afterward becomes the narrative.

In this light, the suspension is not punishment. (chapter 52) It is a containment mechanism. It freezes exposure, recenters authority in bureaucratic procedure, and prevents uncontrolled questions from forming. CSPP’s role is not to deny visibility, but to delay and reroute it until meaning can be safely absorbed.

What emerges is not a conspiracy, but a pattern: intervention follows visibility, not injury. Authority responds to exposure, not to risk. CSPP is the mechanism that makes this inversion sustainable—until visibility escapes its frame.

What the system fails to recognize at this point is that the champion’s speech (chapter 87) and Baek Junmin’s reaction belong to the same event, even though they unfold in different spaces. (chapter 87) Joo Jaekyung speaks publicly, but sparingly. He does not explain. He does not accuse in detail. He names only enough to destabilize the frame: a “stunt,” “playing dirty,” a past match that no longer sits quietly in memory. His words are not designed to persuade; they are designed to unanswered. Joo Jaekyung doesn’t care about his rival’s opinion or innocence. The words remain unresolved. They enter broadcast time without closure.

CSPP and MFC attempt to absorb this rupture by doing what it always does: redirecting attention, normalizing tone, apologizing for profanity, and re-centering the narrative on rivalry and future spectacle. (chapter 87) From the perspective of the institution, the danger has been defused. The spotlight has been shifted back to Baek Junmin. The next fight is already being imagined.

But this is precisely where the miscalculation occurs. First, Baek Junmin hears something entirely different. What reaches him is not the insult, but the accusation. Not “motherfucker,” but “stunt.” (chapter 87) Not provocation, but exposure. This explains his reaction at the office. He destroys the television. And he does not prepare for a rematch, but for retaliation. But why is he so angry? He receives the words as theft. What reaches him is not the insult, but the suggestion that his victory—already fragile, already mediated—has been publicly reclassified. The words “stunt” and “playing dirty” do not accuse him in detail; they do something worse. They strip legitimacy. In his mind, he had finally achieved his goal: prove his superiority to Joo Jaekyung and live in the spotlight. (chapter 87) In a single sentence, the match is no longer remembered as a win, but as something tainted. He understands that the spotlight is no longer safe. Like mentioned before, he chooses to show his true self: a criminal. If the logic of broadcast begins to question tricks rather than celebrate rivalry, then CSPP becomes vulnerable. An underworld connection, once exposed, does not merely threaten a fighter; it threatens contracts, rights deals, and legitimacy.

This logic is not unprecedented. It echoes the historical trajectory of PRIDE Fighting Championships [which I had mentioned in a different essay Unsung Hero : Rescues in the Shadow], whose spectacular rise was inseparable from television exposure—and whose collapse followed once the connection between broadcast, organized crime, and event production could no longer be contained. In that case as well, violence was not the problem. What proved fatal was uncontrollable visibility. Once media circulation exposed what had previously been managed behind the scenes, legitimacy evaporated faster than contracts could protect it.

The parallel sharpens what is at stake in Jinx. MFC’s vulnerability does not lie in brutality, nor even in corruption, but in its dependence on televised containment. As long as speech, images, and outcomes remain governable, the system holds. Once television ceases to stabilize meaning—once it begins to expose rather than frame—power unravels from the inside.

Seen in this light, the danger is not that combat sports are violent, but that they are visible. And visibility, once it escapes its managers, has a history of collapsing institutions that believed spectacle would always protect them.

This is why CSPP and MFC become powerless in that moment. Thus the TV screen gets destroyed. CSPP and MFC can apologize for profanity, but it cannot erase the doubt now attached to Baek Junmin’s title, as the incident with the switched spray has been recognized by MFC and even treated by MFC medical. To conclude, the damage is semantic, not procedural.

The destruction of the television is therefore not rage at insult, but rage at loss of ownership over meaning. (chapter 87) Baek Junmin understands that what was taken from him is not a belt, but the story that made the belt matter. He has been repositioned—from winner to suspected cheater—without trial, without rebuttal, and without recourse.

From his perspective, the system has failed him. The apparatus that once guaranteed controlled visibility has allowed a sentence to circulate that cannot be neutralized. He has followed the rules of managed ascent, only to discover that a single, unscripted utterance can undo it.

This is the precise moment where institutional miscalculation becomes personal. And it is this perceived injustice—being robbed in full view—that makes Choi Gilseok’s permissive “by all means” possible. (chapter 87)

This is where CSPP’s position becomes the most precarious of all. If Baek Junmin’s ties to illegal fighting or organized crime surface publicly, CSPP is the first entity that cannot claim ignorance. It is the company that sold the event, packaged the narrative, and guaranteed its legitimacy. Unlike MFC, which can hide behind sport governance, or individual managers who can be scapegoated, CSPP’s value depends entirely on credibility. Once that credibility collapses, so do its partnerships.

Seen this way, Baek Junmin is not the mastermind of the schemes. He is their residual container. He absorbs the consequences of financial losses (chapter 46) that began elsewhere—losses already acknowledged when Choi Gilseok brought him into the system in the first place.

This is the deeper irony. The live broadcast was meant to neutralize confrontation by redirecting it. Instead, it amplifies instability. Words that were supposed to fuel hype begin to corrode trust. Visibility, once an asset, becomes a threat.

Conclusion: When Speech Breaks the Frame

The failure examined in this part does not lie in miscommunication, provocation, or loss of discipline. It lies in miscalculation. The system anticipates speech—but only as performance. It anticipates words that can be framed, apologized for, redirected, or folded back into rivalry and spectacle. What it does not anticipate are the consequences of speech once it escapes those circuits. The patients of Light of Hope and the inhabitants from the seaside town will definitely side with the athlete.

What happens, then, when speech is anticipated but not governable?

The fight provides the first answer. (chapter 87) Technique becomes language. Point accumulation, endurance, and delay reflect a world in which outcomes are meant to be evaluated rather than decided. Within this economy, decisiveness is a liability, and ambiguity is profitable. Joo Jaekyung’s refusal to prolong exchange—his choice to interrupt rather than circulate—marks the first rupture. The fight is no longer a prelude to speech; it becomes its proof. (chapter 87) The jinx that once rendered him powerless and speechless dissolves as he finds a language that cannot be scored.

The broadcast provides the second answer. (chapter 87) CSPP does not fail because it broadcasts the moment, but because it cannot contain what follows. Live transmission turns control into exposure. Apologies manage tone, not meaning. Scheduling governs attention, not interpretation. Once words enter circulation without mediation, images detach from their managers. Visibility ceases to stabilize power and begins to redistribute it.

The responses provide the final answer. Institutional calm persists. Procedures continue. But elsewhere, the effects are immediate and bodily. Baek Junmin experiences not insult, but dispossession. (chapter 87) His reaction reveals the asymmetry at the heart of the system: speech that appears harmless within spectacle can devastate outside it. A single unresolved sentence is enough to fracture legitimacy that took years to assemble. Neither MFC nor CSPP witness his outburst. Secondly, by grabbing the microphone, Joo Jaekyung is little by little taking control of the narrative, but more importantly he is choosing the timing! (chapter 87) So far, he only spoke in front of people during a conference or after a match. He could never choose the topic either. (chapter 30) This implies that he won’t remain passive and silent like in the past, relying on structure and institutions (Entertainment agency…) and accepting to become a scapegoat. (chapter 54)

Taken together, these moments show that power in Jinx does not collapse because truth is revealed. It destabilizes because meaning can no longer be timed, framed, or absorbed. (chapter 87) Once speech escapes governance, it does not clarify—it unsettles. It does not resolve conflict—it displaces it.

Part II has traced this shift step by step: from fight to broadcast, from mediation to rupture. What emerges is not the triumph of a voice, but the exposure of a system that depended on voices remaining manageable. Between a squeeze and a crack lies the instant when pressure stops circulating quietly and begins to alter the field itself. This is the moment when containment gives way to consequence—and when power, finally, has to reckon with what it can no longer control.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Hot 🔥Sparks ⚡, Feverish 🌡️Reality (part 2) (second version)

After the Spark: What Changes Once the Circuit Is Closed?

When episode 86 ends (chapter 86), it does not close the night through narrative resolution. There is no statement, no promise, no verbal seal. And yet, for many Jinx-philes, the final panel refuses to let the scene dissolve. What remains is not heat, not tension, not even tenderness — but circulation.

What caught my attention, on rereading the episode with some distance, is precisely this ending. In the final embrace and kiss, bodies are not merely touching; they are aligned. Kim Dan is neither collapsed nor clinging. Joo Jaekyung is neither looming nor enclosing. Their torsos meet without compression, their heads incline toward each other, and the kiss does not interrupt movement — it completes it. The image does not suggest release, but continuity. Not dispersal, but return. In other words, the final embrace functions as a closed electric circuit, while the kiss operates as the activating spark — not a release, but the moment the current begins to flow.

This detail matters because it reframes the entire night. Earlier nights in Jinx burned intensely and then vanished. This one does not. Heat exhausts itself. Electricity does not. It remains as potential — stored, latent, waiting to be activated. When readers feel that “something has shifted,” they are not sensing emotional climax, but a closed circuit. The night ends, yet nothing needs to be said, because something has already been set.

Under this new light, my perception of relationships in Jinx changed. What had long been read through the language of excess — desire, domination, sacrifice, endurance — began to appear instead through the logic of current: circulation, interruption (chapter 21), overload (chapter 33), short circuit (chapter 51), (chapter 53) reset. And once that lens is adopted, it becomes impossible to limit the consequences of episode 86 to the couple alone. Because a closed circuit does not only affect those directly connected to it. It alters the surrounding system.

In the first part of Hot Sparks, Feverish Reality, the focus lay on how this night functions in itself: how electricity replaces fire, how illusion gives way to continuity, how silence becomes embodied communication. That analysis allowed us to rethink the nature of the moment. But once the circuit is closed, another question inevitably arises — quieter, but far more consequential: What changes once the night is over?

If the Paris night is not a dream, not a relapse, and not a miracle, then it must be understood as a reconfiguration of conditions. Memory begins to behave differently. Surprise no longer carries the same meaning. The past can no longer be invoked automatically as justification. And responsibility — long deferred — becomes unavoidable.

This second part of the essay therefore turns toward repercussions. To approach them, the analysis will move through four interlinked angles. First, it will examine surprise, returning to the sudden kiss in episode 86. By placing this gesture alongside earlier moments where surprise meant threat or emotional risk, the essay will show how the same structure acquires a different meaning once agency is restored — and why this matters. Second, it will address recognition without erasure, focusing on the line (chapter 86). This section will explore how acknowledging change without denying past harm opens a new ethical position — one that prevents memory from being weaponized, while still preserving responsibility. Third, the analysis will turn to conversion, revisiting earlier nights marked by failure, asymmetry, and isolation. Rather than cancelling them, episode 86 absorbs and transforms them. This is where forgiveness, reflection, and the first true encounter with consequence quietly enter the narrative. Finally, a new section will widen the lens further by examining shared experience and memory (chapter 53), particularly through Kim Dan’s relationship with his grandmother. Here, the focus will not be accusation, but contrast: between memories carried alone and memories held together; between cycles of repetition and moments of presence; between a worldview structured around endurance and one shaped by circulation. The Paris night does not only affect how Kim Dan sees Joo Jaekyung (chapter 86) — it changes how he may begin to situate himself within inherited bonds and unspoken expectations.

The Paris night did not resolve the story. It changed the system in which the story must now continue. And like electricity itself, its importance will only become fully visible when something — or someone — can no longer function as before.

Surprise Reversed: From Threat to Agency

To understand why the kiss in episode 86 (chapter 86) carries such weight, we must return to the origin of kissing itself in Jinx. Because surprise, in this story, is not an abstract theme. It has a history. And that history begins with a body being caught off guard.

The first time Kim Dan is kissed by Joo Jaekyung, it is sudden. (chapter 14) There is no warning, no verbal cue, no time to prepare. The kiss arrives as interruption. It is not negotiated; it is imposed. Hence the author focused on the champion’s hand just before the smooch. This moment matters far more than it initially appears, because it establishes the template through which Kim Dan first encounters intimacy. (chapter 15) Affection does not emerge gradually. It breaks in.

Kim Dan reacts accordingly. Shortly afterward, he articulates a need that is easy to overlook but fundamentally revealing: he asks Joo Jaekyung to tell him before kissing him. (chapter 15) He needs preparation. He needs time to brace himself emotionally. This request reveals two aspects. First, he connects a kiss with love. On the other hand, the request is not really about romance; it is rather about survival. Surprise, for Kim Dan, has already been coded as something that overwhelms the body before the mind can intervene.

And yet, what follows is one of the most striking contradictions in the narrative. Every time Kim Dan initiates a kiss himself (chapter 39), he violates his own request.

His kisses arrive suddenly. (chapter 39) They are unannounced, often landing on unusual places (cheek or ear) (chapter 39) (chapter 44). They often take place under asymmetrical conditions — when one of them is intoxicated, confused, or emotionally exposed. Sometimes they occur without full consent, sometimes without clarity. In chapters 39 and 44, kisses surface precisely when language fails or consciousness fractures. It is as if Kim Dan has internalized a rule he never chose: a kiss must be sudden. Observe how the champion replies to the doctor’s smile and laugh: he kissed him, as if he was jealous of his happiness. (chapter 44) That’s how I came to realize that the kiss in the Manhwa is strongly intertwined with “surprise”. This is the missing link.

Kim Dan does not merely endure surprise; he learns it. Because intimacy entered his life through interruption (chapter 2), he comes to reproduce interruption as intimacy. He knows that surprise destabilizes him — that is why he asked for warning — but he has no other model. What overwhelms him also becomes what he reaches for. Surprise is both threat and language.

This paradox explains much of Season 1. Surprise is repeatedly associated with danger (chapter 3): the sudden call from the athlete, (chapter 1), the offer of sex in exchange for money (chapter 3), the contract that turns availability into obligation (chapter 6), the switched spray (chapter 49), the sudden changes in rules. These moments strip Kim Dan of anticipation and agency. His body reacts before his will can engage. Surprise equals exposure.

And yet — this is where the narrative becomes uncomfortable — these same surprises also pull him out of ghosthood.

Before Joo Jaekyung, Kim Dan lives in a state defined by repetition and duty. (chapter 1) His life is governed by “always”: always working, always returning, always responsible. He lives for his grandmother. Nothing unexpected is allowed to happen, because nothing unexpected can be afforded. This is safety through stasis. Presence without experience.

But this does not mean that surprise was absent from his past. On the contrary, when unpredictability did enter Kim Dan’s life earlier, it came in its most destructive form: through the loan shark, Heo Manwook and his minions. His appearances were sudden, intrusive, violent. (chapter 5) (chapter 1) They shattered routine rather than enriching it. Surprise, in that context, did not open possibility; it threatened survival. It meant debt, coercion, fear. And precisely because of that, it could not be integrated into memory as experience — only repressed as trauma.

This distinction matters. When Kim Dan’s grandmother is hospitalized and removed from the house, the loan shark also disappears from daily life. His violence becomes something that can be pushed aside, denied, or avoided (chapter 1), if he doesn’t return home. Surprise, in its earlier form, is excised from the household. What remains is a world of repetition and endurance — safer, but lifeless.

Seen from this angle, Joo Jaekyung does not introduce unpredictability into Kim Dan’s life from nothing. He replaces it. (chapter 2) but in a fundamentally different form.

The loan shark embodies surprise without negotiation. (chapter 11) (chapter 11) His appearances are sudden, his demands non-discussable, his violence immediate. He does not ask; he enforces. Surprise, under his rule, eliminates speech. It leaves no space for argument, no room for clarification, no possibility of consent. One endures, or one is punished.

Joo Jaekyung, by contrast, introduces unpredictability through contracts and negotiation. (chapter 6) Even when power is asymmetrical, even when the terms are coercive, speech is required. Conditions are stated. Rules are articulated. Kim Dan is forced to listen, to answer, to argue, to object. He must speak.

This difference is decisive. Surprise no longer arrives solely as terror; it arrives as confrontation. Kim Dan is not merely acted upon — he is compelled into dialogue. The body is still exposed, but language re-enters the scene. Where the loan shark silenced, the athlete imposes discussion.

This is why Joo Jaekyung can occupy the same structural position as the loan shark — and yet not replicate him. Both disrupt repetition. Both break the closed circuit of endurance. But only one does so in a way that keeps Kim Dan within the realm of human interaction. Even coercive negotiation presupposes a subject who can respond.

This also explains the later confrontation in the house. (chapter 17) The two figures cannot coexist because they represent mutually exclusive regimes of surprise: one that annihilates speech, and one that forces it into being. In other words, only one allows experience to be lived rather than survived.

Surprise enters Kim Dan’s life violently, but it does not remain mere rupture. (chapter 2) It functions as negative charge — an abrupt influx of energy into a system that had been closed for too long. Fear, anger, desire, attachment appear not as orderly developments, but as shocks. These experiences are unstable, often painful, sometimes destructive (chapter 51) — yet they are unmistakably his. They mark the moment when something begins to circulate. (chapter 51)

This distinction is crucial. Before Joo Jaekyung, Kim Dan’s life operated in a static loop, governed by repetition, sacrifice, and gratitude. Energy was expended, but never transformed. Surprise, in its first incarnation, is therefore pure threat: uncontained, overwhelming, incapable of integration. It breaks the system without yet allowing current to flow.

What changes with Joo Jaekyung is not the presence of danger, but its conductivity. Surprise becomes ambivalent — still risky, still destabilizing — but now capable of generating movement and as such meditation. Negative charge no longer annihilates the circuit; it begins to activate it. (chapter 27) Experiences accumulate instead of disappearing. They demand response, speech, negotiation. Life no longer consists in enduring impact, but in processing it.

This is why these experiences cannot be shared with Kim Dan’s grandmother. Her moral economy is built on infantilization (chapter 65) and as such neutralization: suffering must be absorbed, pain must be justified, disruption must be folded back into endurance. There is no place for charge there — only for dissipation. What Kim Dan lives through with Joo Jaekyung follows a different logic altogether: not sacrifice, but circulation; not repetition, but conversion.

Surprise thus becomes the hinge not between danger and safety, but between static survival (–) and relational movement (+). And once that conversion begins, the past can no longer be returned unchanged — nor can it be shared without transformation.

This is why Kim Dan falls in love (chapter 41) not despite surprise, but through it. Not because dominance is romanticized, but because surprise is the first force that treats him as someone to whom things can happen. And don’t forget that for him, a kiss symbolizes affection. Even negative experiences generate subjectivity. They prove that he exists beyond function.

Seen through this lens, Kim Dan’s habit of surprising Joo Jaekyung with kisses (chapter 39) — on the ear or the cheek — is no longer random or contradictory. It is learned behavior. He has absorbed surprise as a mode of relation. What was once done to him becomes something he does, imperfectly and often prematurely. These kisses are not about dominance. They do not corner or silence. They test connection. They ask, without words: Are you still here?

But until episode 86, this structure remains unresolved. Surprise exists, but it is never fully safe. (chapter 85) Kim Dan either endures it or reproduces it under unstable conditions. Agency is partial. Meaning collapses afterward.

This is what makes the doctor’s kiss in Paris categorically different. (chapter 86)

Formally, it is still sudden. Kim Dan does not announce it. He does not negotiate it verbally. But structurally, everything has changed. For the first time, surprise is not imposed on him — and it is not enacted from confusion or imbalance. It is chosen. Kim Dan is clear-minded enough to recognize both his desire and his uncertainty. He is not dissociating. He is not reacting. He is deciding to remain present despite risk. And the response confirms the shift.

Joo Jaekyung does not neutralize the kiss with passivity (chapter 39), irony (chapter 41) or rejection (chapter 55). He does not retreat into his habitual “it’s nothing” or “never mind.” He does not reinterpret the gesture as convenience or reflex. (chapter 86) He kisses back while looking tenderly at his partner. He holds Kim Dan’s head gently. He can only see such a gesture as a positive answer to his request: acceptance and even desire. Surprise is not punished. It is received.

This is the moment where the meaning of surprise reverses. Surprise no longer equals threat. Surprise becomes agency. And that’s how I could discover a link between the kiss and the doctor’s birthday present, the key chain. (Chapter 45) This time, the athlete not only accepts the present (the kiss), but but also expresses “gratitude” by kissing back actively. (Chapter 86) This means that the athlete is recognizing the existence of feelings.

The kiss does not erase the past. (Chapter 86) It does not retroactively justify earlier violations. But it establishes a new condition: surprise can now occur without annihilation. Intimacy can arrive without silencing reflection. Experience no longer collapses into shame or disappearance. IT symbolizes a positive and enjoyable moment.

This is why the kiss matters more than any spoken line in the episode. It is not simply romantic. It is structural evidence that the logic governing their interactions has changed. Surprise now operates within a closed circuit of consent and presence.

Kim Dan is no longer a ghost enduring interruptions. He is a subject capable of initiating them. He has learned surprise — and now, for the first time, he reclaims it. Under this new condition, the question is no longer whether surprise will hurt. It is whether life can proceed without it. And once that question is raised, the story cannot return to repetition or silence.

Recognition Without Erasure: When Memory Changes Function

What struck me next was how subtly episode 86 reorganizes the role of the past. Once surprise ceases to function purely as threat and begins to circulate, memory itself starts behaving differently. Electricity does not only move bodies; it redistributes charge. And it is precisely at this level — the level of memory and recognition — that something decisive occurs.

The line is brief, almost casual: (chapter 86) And yet it performs an extraordinary operation. Kim Dan does not deny the past. He does not soften it. He does not excuse it. Instead, he repositions it. For the first time, the past is no longer invoked as an absolute reference point, but as a differentiated state — one phase among others. Such a confession contradicts the grandmother’s philosophy: ALWAYS (chapter 65) In her eyes, she has never changed, just like her grandson. (chapter 65) If there were changes, they were associated with trouble and worries.

This distinction is crucial, because in Jinx, the past has long functioned like a blunt instrument. It has been used to fix identities (chapter 52), justify behavior (chapter 57), and foreclose change. The champion’s violence is explained through reputation. (chapter 1) Kim Dan’s endurance is explained through obedience and debt. The grandmother’s authority is explained through sacrifice. In every case, the same logic applies: this is how it has always been; therefore this is how it must remain.

That logic is static. Electrically speaking, it is a circuit without polarity — no – and +, no tension, no movement. The past becomes a dead weight, not a source of information. It does not inform the present; it dominates it.

What episode 86 introduces is not forgiveness in the sentimental sense, but recognition without erasure. (chapter 86) Recognition means the charge of the past remains. Erasure would mean grounding it, neutralizing it, pretending it never existed. Kim Dan does neither. He keeps the – while allowing the + to emerge.

A World Without Polarity: When the Past Becomes a Weapon

This is where the electrical metaphor becomes indispensable. In a functioning circuit, negative and positive do not cancel each other out. They coexist. They create potential difference. And it is that difference — not harmony — that allows current to flow. (chapter 86) In the final panels, Kim Dan does not embrace an idealized version of the champion, nor a redeemed figure cleansed of history. He embraces Joo Jaekyung as he is now, with the knowledge of who he was before. This distinction matters. Acceptance here is not absolution. It is contact without denial.

Electric current does not pass between identical charges. It requires tension. Polarity. Resistance. The − and the + must remain distinct, or nothing moves. In this sense, Kim Dan’s embrace is not a gesture of harmony but of recognition. He acknowledges the champion’s flaws and mistakes — not to excuse them, but to stop pretending they never existed or to stop pretending to be better. What he accepts is not the past itself, but the reality that the past does not exhaust the present. That’s why he is able to stop ruminating and to follow his heart.

Furthermore when Kim Dan recognizes that “the old him” (chapter 86) existed, he does not collapse the timeline. He does not say: he was never that person. Nor does he say: he is forever that person. Instead, he introduces temporal polarity. Then and now. Before and after. – and +.

This move has immediate consequences. First, it disarms the past as a weapon. (chapter 65) If the past is absolute, it can be endlessly invoked to invalidate the present. We have a perfect example on the beach. (chapter 65) Kim Dan is here compared to the past. (chapter 65) When Shin Okja speaks of Kim Dan as a heavy smoker, she is not recounting a neutral habit. She is anchoring him to a past version of himself — one defined through worry, decline, and deviation from the “good boy” image.

What follows is telling. She does not ask why he smoked. She does not ask what changed. She does not ask how he lived. The only question that matters to her is: “Does he still smoke?” (chapter 65)

The present is interrogated exclusively through the past. In this logic, the past functions as a fixed reference point. If the habit persists, the present confirms her narrative. If it does not, the absence is not read as growth but as an anomaly — something provisional, something that could always return. This is not concern. It is classification.

Shin Okja does not relate to Kim Dan as someone moving through phases, but as someone who must remain legible within a stable moral category. Change is not interpreted as development, but as risk. When Shin Okja repeatedly frames Kim Dan’s smoking and drinking as failures (chapter 65), she is not simply expressing concern about health. She is doing something more consequential: she is disqualifying the legitimacy of his decisions. In her discourse, Kim Dan’s actions are never treated as choices made under pressure, pain, or circumstance. (chapter 65) They are evaluated exclusively through a moral lens. Smoking and drinking are not responses; they are flaws. And because they are framed as flaws, they retroactively define his character rather than his situation. This is where agency collapses.

Care and Choice

If every decision Kim Dan makes is already interpreted as “bad,” then decision-making itself becomes suspect. Choice is no longer a neutral capacity; it is something he is assumed to misuse. In other words, he is not someone who chooses poorly — he is someone who should not be choosing at all. Under this new light, my avid readers can grasp why the grandmother approached the champion and asked for this favor: (chapter 65) Her behavior does not contradict her claim that she wants Kim Dan to “live his own life.” (chapter 65) It reveals how she understands such a life should be arranged. She sees herself as superior, as if she had never done any mistake, as if she had lived as a saint.

If she had truly accepted Kim Dan as a subject capable of self-direction, she would have spoken to him directly. Conversation presupposes agency; it allows disagreement, hesitation, and refusal. Instead, she chose a different route: influencing his fate behind his back. This move preserves her moral position while bypassing the risk of confrontation. It allows her to believe she is acting in his interest without ever having to acknowledge his will. That’s why she is entrusting her grandson to the athlete. (chapter 78)

In other words, she does not imagine Kim Dan living freely through his own choices, but being placed into a better configuration by others — preferably by someone stronger, more decisive, and more visible than himself. The request to the champion thus follows the same logic that governs her judgment of Kim Dan’s habits: she does not trust him to choose, only to comply.

And this is precisely why her worldview stands in quiet opposition to what unfolds in episode 86. The physical therapist’s desires are not only acknowledged, but also respected. (chapter 86) Once again, the “hamster” is given the opportunity not only to decide, but also to follow his heart. Where the Paris night allows difference to coexist with memory, Shin Okja’s framework collapses difference back into judgment. Where electricity requires polarity, her logic insists on sameness. Under this new light, it becomes comprehensible how doc Dan came to neglect himself. Self-care is inseparable from choice — from the belief that one’s decisions can meaningfully alter the present. If change is denied, care loses its purpose. Attending to oneself becomes optional, even suspect, because it implies a future different from the one already prescribed.

Recognition without erasure breaks that pattern. It allows Kim Dan to say, implicitly: what happened matters — but it does not get to decide everything.

Second, this recognition introduces responsibility where there was previously only fatalism. If change is possible, then it can be acknowledged. And if it can be acknowledged, it can be responded to. The past no longer excuses inaction. It no longer absolves neglect. It becomes a reference, not a refuge.

Two Versions, One Person: Temporal Polarity and Ethical Clarity

By acknowledging that there is an “old him” (chapter 86) and a present one, Kim Dan implicitly accepts that change has causes. And this is where his position shifts in a way that is easy to miss. If Joo Jaekyung has changed, then Kim Dan is not obligated to assume that he is the reason. He does not interpret the change as something he must earn or preserve through obedience.

Instead, a question becomes possible: what happened in between? And this question matters, because Kim Dan does not know. He does not know about the incident at the health center. He does not know about the slap at the hospital (chapter 52). He does not know that no one stood by the champion afterward — not even Potato.

By recognizing two versions of Joo Jaekyung, Kim Dan opens a space for inquiry rather than self-accusation. The change no longer needs to be attributed to his own sacrifice. It can be understood as something that also happened to the champion. This is not naivety. It is ethical clarity. Consequently, I perceive the night in Paris as the end of doc Dan’s low self-esteem and shame.

It also means that if anyone were to invoke the champion’s past against him — a manager, a coach (chapter 57), the system — Kim Dan can now side with him without denying what came before. The past stops being a weapon. It becomes context. This move has immediate consequences.

This shift is subtle, but it radiates outward.

Until now, Kim Dan has often carried memory alone. He remembers nights that others forget. He remembers moments that were dismissed. This asymmetry has turned memory into burden. (chapter 44) The one who remembers bears the – alone, while the other continues forward unmarked. That imbalance is corrosive. It distorts perception. It turns even good memories sour.

Episode 86 begins to redistribute that charge. Not by forcing confession, but by establishing shared presence. Once current circulates between two points, no single node carries the full load. Recognition does not mean recounting every wound; it means no longer isolating the wound in silence.

This is why the line about “the old him” matters more than it appears. It is not merely observational. It is infrastructural. It signals that memory is no longer trapped in a single body.

And this logic does not stop with the champion. It extends, inevitably, to Kim Dan’s relationship with his grandmother, like mentioned above.

Her worldview has long been organized around moral continuity. She remembers suffering (chapter 65), but she remembers it in a way that flattens time. Pain becomes proof of virtue. Sacrifice becomes identity. (chapter 65) Change is allowed only insofar as it returns to the same point. Electrically speaking, her system is grounded — all charge dissipates into endurance. There is no polarity, only repetition.

This is why the past, in her discourse, often appears as reproach. Not necessarily spoken harshly, but structurally unavoidable. You used to drink. You used to smoke. You used to be helpless. The past is not cited to understand, but to fix position. It anchors Kim Dan to a role: the one who must be protected, managed, or sent away “for his own good.”

Recognition without erasure offers Kim Dan a way out of this bind. If the past is no longer absolute, then it can be questioned. Not denied — questioned. The statement “you don’t know me and my life” becomes thinkable. Not as rebellion, but as differentiation. Kim Dan can hold the memory of his past while refusing to let it define his present. He can acknowledge the grandmother’s suffering without allowing it to dictate his future.

This is where forgiveness enters the narrative — quietly, without ceremony. (chapter 86) Forgiveness here is not reconciliation. It is not forgetting. It is not moral absolution. It is the decision not to collapse polarity. To allow – and + to coexist without forcing resolution. Forgiveness becomes a form of electrical insulation: it prevents overload, not by cutting the circuit, but by stabilizing it.

Seen this way, forgiveness is not weakness. It is structural maturity. And it has consequences. For Kim Dan, it means the past no longer monopolizes his self-understanding. He is not bound to prove gratitude through self-erasure. He can recognize care without submitting to control. He can accept gifts and help without dissolving into debt.

From Spark to Current: Why the Jinx Loses Its Power

For Joo Jaekyung, it means the jinx can no longer function as fatal explanation. (chapter 65) Even though the word jinx is never spoken during the Paris night, its logic quietly collapses there. (chapter 86)

Until now, sex operated as discharge. (chapter 75) In chapter 75, it is explicitly framed as a way to “clear the head”: an act designed to release pressure and return the system to zero. Partners were interchangeable. Feelings were excluded. Electricity existed only as a spark — brief, violent, and self-extinguishing. Energy was expelled, not circulated. That is the true mechanics of the jinx: power without continuity, intensity without consequence.

Paris introduces a different configuration. Sex is no longer oriented toward erasure or reset. It is no longer about escaping thought or silencing memory. Instead, it becomes a mode of presence. (chapter 85) Desires matter, not the match the next morning. Besides, the identity of the partner matters — not just romantically, but also structurally. Current requires two poles. It requires response. It cannot flow through an object, only between 2 subjects.

This is why the jinx does not need to be confronted explicitly to be undone. A system built on discharge cannot survive circulation. Once energy is no longer expelled but sustained, once tension is held rather than neutralized, fatalism loses its grip. The spark does not burn out; it becomes current.

And with current comes consequence. Sex no longer clears the mind; it sharpens awareness. It no longer abolishes the future; it implies one. What happens in Paris does not redeem the past — it renders repetition impossible. Reflection becomes unavoidable, not because someone demands it, but because the system no longer resets cleanly.

The jinx dissolves not through force, but through continuity. Recognition without erasure thus prepares the ground for the final transformation: conversion. Thus the story can move forward.

– and – = + : Conversion and the End of Ghosthood

Two nights once marked by failure — chapter 39 (chapter 39) and chapter 44 (chapter 44) — converge in episode 86. This convergence is not coincidental, nor is it nostalgic. It is a conversion.

Both earlier nights shared the same fatal structure: only one person remembered. In chapter 39, Kim Dan’s confession existed without continuity; his body spoke, but his memory did not follow. In chapter 44, the reverse occurred: Kim Dan remembered everything, while Joo Jaekyung attempted to forget. In both cases, memory became asymmetrical. One carried meaning; the other escaped it. And meaning, when carried alone, curdles. What might have been tenderness transformed into obsession, shame, or bitterness. Memory became burden.

Episode 86 breaks this curse through a gesture that is deceptively simple: both remember. (chapter 86) Both made surprising experiences: dry orgasm and a gentle and caring sex partner.

This is why simultaneity matters so profoundly. Sparks appear on both bodies. Confusion is mutual. Questions circulate rather than collapse inward. Neither consciousness outruns the other. Time, which had previously fractured under intoxication, coercion, or denial, resumes its flow. Not because the past is resolved, but because it is finally shared. Shared experience.

Here, memory begins to function differently — no longer as fixation or haunting, but as integration.

This shift allows us to recognize a much older pattern in Kim Dan’s inner life. His relationship to memory has always been selective, but not arbitrarily so. When it comes to his grandmother, Kim Dan remembers each interaction with his grandmother in a positive light: the warmth (chapter 11), the care – even if he had hurt himself – (chapter 47), the shared smiles (chapter 47). Thus this photograph (chapter 65) becomes a talisman — not a record of reality, but a distilled image of safety. Painful dimensions are filtered out. Conflict, coercion, and silent pressure recede into the background. Memory protects him by idealizing. Because of this picture, he projected himself in the future, making unrealistic plans. (chapter 47) It was, as if he only had good times with his grandmother.

Shin Okja, by contrast, remembers the same past through a radically different lens. (chapter 65) Her recollection is saturated with pity, loss, fear (chapter 65), and blame (chapter 65). The vanishing of the parents becomes the gravitational center around which all other memories orbit. Where Kim Dan remembers warmth, she remembers danger. Where he remembers protection, she remembers failure. One memory soothes; the other hardens. One preserves life; the other polices it. Kim Dan must remain the “good boy,” unchanged, because acknowledging his growth would mean acknowledging that the past did not remain intact.

The graduation photos make this painfully clear. They immortalize achievements, (chapter 47) not shared experiences. They resemble press photos of the champion more than lived moments. The work, the strain, the cost are absent. And tellingly, Kim Dan does not keep these pictures. They do not anchor memory; they flatten it. They freeze time rather than allowing it to move.

This asymmetry is crucial. It reveals that the relationship between Kim Dan and his grandmother has always mirrored the structure of those failed nights: one person remembers in a way that helps to keep working, the other remembers in a way that poisons (infantilizing doc Dan). One idealizes; the other condemns. And because the tragedy at the center of their past was never fully spoken, memory could not be synchronized. Kim Dan was pushed — silently, indirectly — to carry an idealized version of their shared life, while Shin Okja carried the unresolved catastrophe alone. (chapter 65) Toxic positivity emerges precisely here: not as cheerfulness, but as enforced idealization that denies the legitimacy of pain, anger, or differentiation.

And it is precisely here that the connection with the grandmother crystallizes. The latter is often connected to sleep (chapter 21) (chapter 47) and memories. (chapter 21) (chapter 65). While sleeping, memories come to the surface.

Only at this point did something else catch my attention — something that, retrospectively, had been present all along. The painting in the living room: (chapter 85) I believe that its appearance does not function as decoration. Its imagery — figures suspended among clouds, bodies neither falling nor grounded — introduces a different register of time. Not urgency. Not performance. Not spectacle. Stillness. Interval. A space where movement pauses without collapsing. Under this new light, the reference is Morpheus.

Morpheus is not the god of illusion. He is the one who allows rest, who brings form to dreams so the body can sleep. His presence signals not escape from reality, but the possibility of restorative sleep. This matters, because insomnia has haunted Joo Jaekyung from the beginning. (chapter 75) Until now, rest had been replaced by discharge: sex as erasure, violence as exhaustion, ritual as compulsion. The Paris night does not abolish wakefulness through collapse; it introduces the conditions under which sleep might finally be possible.

Episode 86 introduces a third possibility: the kiss of Morpheus or the famous goodnight kiss. (Chapter 86) What caught my attention is that the athlete was irritated, when the doctor simply wished him a good night. (Chapter 78) Here, he reduced it to the absence of sex, but I am sure that deep down, he would have been satisfied, if the “hamster” had given him a good night kiss.

The Paris night does not ask either character to idealize or to condemn. (chapter 86) It does not demand that the past be redeemed, nor that it be endlessly rehearsed. (chapter 86) Instead, it contextualizes. Memory is no longer absolute; it becomes temporal. Then and now. (chapter 86) Before and after. – and +.

This is why the electrical metaphor reaches its full force here. Two negatives do not annihilate each other. They convert. The shared remembering of two previously failed nights produces not cancellation, but potential. (chapter 86) The charge redistributes. Memory ceases to isolate and begins to circulate. Hence it creates a new memory.

It is at this point that Prometheus quietly enters the scene — not as explicit mythological references, but as symbolic functions. Electricity, like fire stolen from the gods, marks a return to humanity. It is the end of purely divine punishment and purely mechanical survival. At the same time, illusion dissolves. Sleep, dream, and dissociation lose their grip. The characters are no longer ghosts moving through each other’s lives, nor zombies repeating ritualized behaviors. They become human again — vulnerable, reflective, embodied. And once human, reflection becomes inevitable.

The night itself remains carpe diem. It is presence without calculation, sensation without projection, intimacy without bargaining. For those hours, the future does not intrude. But this does not mean consequence is erased. On the contrary: because the night is no longer an illusion, its aftermath must be faced. The jinx has not disappeared because its existence was not mentioned or danger is gone. Corruption, rigged matches, replacement, and blacklisting still await. What has changed is not the external threat, but the internal configuration.

The Paris night did not save the protagonists. It returned them to themselves. And this return has consequences beyond the couple. It destabilizes the grandmother’s moral economy. This new observation reinforces my previous interpretation: this position (chapter 86) was a reflection of the picture. (chapter 65) Shin Okja is no longer doc Dan’s center of gravitation. That’s the real revolution. There is no longer interruption or triangulation. I am even inclined to think, that’s the night where the main leads became a true team.

Moreover, if memory can be shared without collapsing into blame, then her version of the past can no longer function as unquestionable authority. (chapter 65) If Kim Dan no longer needs to idealize in order to survive, then he can finally see the cost of that idealization — for himself and for her. The tragedy she alone has been carrying can surface, but without demanding that he sacrifices his present to it. The past stops being a sealed vault and becomes a shared, albeit painful, terrain.

This is the true end of ghosthood. That’s why doc Dan is feeling feverish during that night. (chapter 86) No one is erased or reduced to an object. Nothing is overlooked or forgotten. But repetition loses its hold. And from here, the story can no longer proceed as before.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Hot 🌶️ Sparks 🎇, Feverish 🌡️ Reality (part 1)

Introduction — Dream, Magic, or Something Else?

Many Jinx-lovers were genuinely happy watching how the champion interacted with Doc Dan during that night. He was caring (chapter 86), gentle, attentive (chapter 86) — asking questions instead of imposing answers (chapter 64). For Joo Jaekyung’s unconditional stans (and I count myself among them), such an attitude (chapter 86) can easily be read as proof that the protagonist’s good heart has always been existent, but it was barely visible. Compared to earlier chapters, the contrast is now undeniable. And yet, I would like to pause you right there.

Because focusing solely on the champion’s behavior risks missing the most decisive movement of this night. Joo Jaekyung’s transformation did not begin in episode 86. Long before that, he had already started changing — sometimes suddenly (chapter 61), sometimes awkwardly (chapter 80), sometimes inconsistently (chapter 79), but unmistakably . (chapter 83) Tenderness, concern, even a certain form of devotion had appeared earlier (chapter 40), albeit in ways that were often overlooked, (chapter 18) misunderstood or poorly timed. This night (chapter 86) does not initiate his metamorphosis.

So what, then, makes it feel so different?

When confronted with a night filled with stars (chapter 86), sparks (chapter 86), and softness, many Jinx-philes might instinctively describe it as magical. The imagery invites such a reading. After all, we have seen similar nights before. The night in the States shimmered with illusion (chapter 39); words were spoken, confessions made — only to dissolve with memory. (chapter 41) The penthouse night echoed A Midsummer Night’s Dream (chapter 44), suspended between intoxication and desire, intense yet fragile. Both nights felt unreal, and both were later reframed as mistakes (chapter 41) — moments to be erased rather than carried forward. (chapter 45). This raises an essential question. Is episode 86 (chapter 86) a renewal of those nights? Another dream layered over the past? A repetition disguised as healing? Or, on the contrary, is this the first night that resists enchantment altogether?

This question matters because in Jinx, nights are never judged by themselves. Their true meaning is revealed afterward — in the morning (chapter 4), in the return of light (chapter 66), in what remains once the sparks fade. A dream dissolves with daylight. Reality does not.

This is why it would be misleading to read episode 86 primarily as evidence of the champion’s improved behavior. Such a perspective encloses the night within its warmth and risks mistaking tenderness (chapter 86) for final transformation. The real shift occurs elsewhere — more quietly, and perhaps more unsettlingly. To grasp the nature of this night, we must follow more importantly the doctor and his interaction with his fated partner.

What changes here is not only what Joo Jaekyung does, but how Kim Dan perceives (chapter 86), processes, and responds to it. How he hesitates (chapter 86), reflects, and allows himself to reconsider what this moment can mean — and what it can lead to. (chapter 86) It is through this inner recalibration that we can begin to determine whether this night belongs to the realm of dream, repetition, or reality. Only by tracing the doctor’s perception can we understand what truly starts flowing here.

To approach this question, the analysis will move through several successive angles. It will begin with the symbolic and mythological references that frame episode 86, before turning to earlier nights that echo visually or emotionally within it. From there, attention will shift to forms of communication, considering how speech, silence, and gesture are arranged across these scenes. The analysis will then examine repeated actions and how their placement within the narrative differs from one moment to another. Only with such a progression can the nature of this night be reconsidered.

From Solar Heat to Electric Current

Many Jinx-lovers instinctively read episode 86 as a romantic turning point because the night looks “magical”: stars (chapter 86), sparks, that strange shimmer that seems to hang in the air (chapter 86). Why? It was, as if their dream had come true. However, is it correct? Is it not wishful thinking? What if this night is not magical at all? What if its true signature is not enchantment, but electricity—a current that interrupts, tests, and resets? 😮

To grasp this, we must first return to the symbolic regime that used to govern the champion’s presence. In earlier chapters (think of the awe and distance around chapters 40–41 and again later), Joo Jaekyung often appears as a solar figure (chapter 40) in Kim Dan’s perception: overwhelming, radiant, dominant, a heat-source that does not negotiate. (chapter 41) The sun can be admired, feared, and endured—but it cannot be questioned. (chapter 58) It simply shines, and the one who stands in its light adapts. This explicates why the physical therapist would choose silence and submission over communication. (chapter 48)

The Invisible Energy

Nevertheless, the excursion in episode 83 and 84 begins to dismantle this solar grammar, though at the time, its meaning is easy to miss. (chapter 83)

The shift away from solar symbolism does not announce itself loudly. It is embedded in the setting itself, almost too obvious to be noticed. An amusement park functions entirely on electricity. (chapter 83) Every ride, every light, every scream suspended in midair depends on current: motors accelerating and braking, circuits opening and closing, energy stored, released, and cut off. (chapter 83) Roller coasters do not move by heat, charisma, or sheer physical force; they move because electricity flows through them. The Viking ship swings (chapter 83) because current allows it to swing. The Ferris wheel ascends (chapter 83) because circuits hold — and descends because they release.

And yet, precisely because this energy is expected, it becomes invisible.

Neither the characters nor most Jinx-philes initially register electricity as a symbol. It is too familiar, too infrastructural. Electricity does all the work, but it remains background noise. This invisibility is not accidental. Unlike the sun — which imposes itself visually, hierarchically, almost tyrannically — electricity operates silently, relationally, conditionally. It does not dominate the scene; it enables it. It exists only as long as connections hold.

When Electricity Fails

This distinction matters, because electricity only becomes perceptible when it fails. (chapter 84)

The Ferris wheel breakdown in episode 84 is therefore not a minor technical inconvenience but a crucial narrative rupture. The moment the current cuts out, movement stops. Height becomes dangerous. Time suspends. Panic enters the frame. The announcement that “the earlier technical issues have been resolved” (chapter 84) explicitly names what had previously gone unspoken: the rides function only because current flows. When it disappears, the illusion of effortless motion collapses.

And it is precisely at this moment — when artificial motion halts — that Joo Jaekyung becomes active in an unexpected way. (chapter 84) The Ferris wheel has stopped. The current is gone. The carefully regulated system that lifted, rotated, and sustained them is no longer in control. Yet movement does not disappear entirely. It mutates. When the champion shifts his weight, grips the structure, reacts instinctively, the cabin begins to shake. Panels emphasize instability: creak, swish, ack. The motion is no longer generated by electricity but by the body itself.

This moment is crucial. The shaking exposes a hierarchy reversal. Human strength now surpasses mechanical control. The ride no longer dictates sensation; the occupant does. And this excess of physical force — uncontrolled, unmediated — becomes unsettling rather than triumphant. Kim Dan immediately responds by asking him to sit down, to stop moving, to restore balance. Stillness, not action, becomes the condition for safety.

From Motion to Speech

What follows is telling. Deprived of the park’s mechanical rhythm, Joo Jaekyung does not compensate by acting more. He compensates by speaking. (chapter 84) Stranded above ground, stripped of the park’s mechanical rhythm, he apologizes. (chapter 84) Not theatrically, not performatively, but awkwardly, haltingly. His body exposes his discomfort (chapter 84) and fears. He avoids the doctor’s gaze, crosses his arms (chapter 84) or squeezes his arm (chapter 84). The cessation of electrical motion coincides with a shift in his own mode of action. Where the park depended on current to keep things moving, he now moves without it. The absence of electricity forces something else to surface: responsibility, attention, presence. Additionally, this sequence anticipates what will later unfold more fully. Proactivity is no longer expressed through force or motion, but through articulation. Words stand for action and have weight. The champion’s future action is announced here, quietly: he will no longer push forward by shaking the structure. He will move by sharing thought, by naming feeling, by allowing himself to be affected.

The interruption of electricity does not merely stop the ride. It forces a change in how agency is exercised. Under this new light, my avid readers can grasp the true life lesson the athlete received at the amusement park, the importance of communication and attentiveness.

As a first conclusion, the amusement park juxtaposes two forms of energy: mechanical electricity and human vitality. The first is regulated, automated, predictable — until it fails. The second is volatile, embodied, responsive. When the Ferris wheel stops, the mechanical system collapses, and a different kind of current emerges: emotional, relational, biological.

Yet, only in retrospect does this moment reveal its deeper logic. I am quite certain my followers are wondering how I came to pay attention to electricity which led to new observations and interpretations. It is related to the “electrical night” in the hotel!

Electricity and Sex

What strikes immediately in episode 86 is not tenderness, nor explicit care, nor even novelty of behavior — but density. The night is saturated with sparks (chapter 86), (chapter 86) jolts, sudden contractions of the body (chapter 86). Kim Dan is repeatedly shown convulsing, gasping, losing linear thought, and it is the same for the MMA fighter. Panels insist on interruption: jolt, tingle, broken breath, aborted sentences. The doctor’s body behaves as if struck, especially in this image. (chapter 86) It is at this point that a phrase surfaced in my mind — instinctively, almost involuntarily. A phrase we use in French when something intangible yet decisive occurs between two people: Le courant passe. Literally, the current passes. Idiomatic meaning: they are on the same wavelength, something connects, communication flows. However, here, the current is not the product of civilization, but of nature. Two people interacting with each other. And it is precisely because of the unusually high frequency of sparks and jolts in the illustrations that a belated realization imposes itself: nature, too, produces electricity — through storms, through thunder.

Joo Jaekyung’s Day and the Thunder

This raises a necessary question: where was the thunder before, as Jinx is working like a kaleidoscope?

One might be tempted to point to episode 69. (chapter 69) A storm was announced back then. And yet, upon closer inspection, no thunder was ever shown there. There was tension, there was excess, there were dark clouds (chapter 69) — but there was no strike, no discharge, no interruption. The imagery remained continuous, fluid, enclosed within the logic of escalation rather than rupture.

The thunder appears in the amusement park. 😮 One detail initially seems insignificant, almost too mundane to merit attention: the day itself.

The excursion in episodes 83–84 takes place on a Thursday. At first glance, this appears to be nothing more than a scheduling detail. And yet, Thursday is not a neutral day. Linguistically and mythologically, it carries a charge. Thursday is Thor’s day. This latent mythology quietly materializes through two objects, the drakkar (Viking boat) (chapter 83) and the hammer (chapter 83). In Roman terms, Thursday corresponds to dies Iovis — Jupiter’s day — the god of thunder. Both gods are strongly connected to thunder and as such current.

The narrative does not underline this fact. It does not name the god, invoke mythology, or frame the excursion as symbolic. The reference remains dormant. But dormancy is not absence. It is latency. This is where the symbolism stops being latent and becomes functional.

The reference to Thor and Jupiter (which was already palpable in earlier episodes -chapter 67-; for more read my analysis Star-crossed lovers 🌕) is not decorative mythology; it introduces a dual model of power that the narrative begins to test on Joo Jaekyung himself. Thor (chapter 83) is the son: impulsive, embodied, excessive, a god who discharges energy through impact. Jupiter, by contrast, is the father (chapter 83): regulating, sovereign, stabilizing, the god who governs the sky rather than striking it. Thunder belongs to both, but it manifests differently depending on position in the lineage. What matters is not which god the champion “is,” but that he oscillates between them. This oscillation becomes legible through the hammer.

The hammer game appears after the champion’s moment of physical discomfort and jealousy. (chapter 83). Before striking anything, he is already unwell: angry overstimulated and complaining, visually reduced to a childlike register. This matters. The hammer does not create excess — it receives it. (chapter 83) It offers a sanctioned outlet for surplus energy that has nowhere else to go. However, contrary to the past, the physical therapist becomes the beneficiary of the athlete’s greed and jealousy. He receives a teddy bear. The hamster doesn’t witness the punching incident, he only sees the result: care and affection. (chapter 83)

Unlike boxing, unlike punching a sandbag (chapter 34), the hammer gesture is not confrontational, for the machine is immobile. There is no opponent. (chapter 83) The arm rises and comes down. The movement is vertical, not horizontal. It does not engage another body; it obliterates resistance. This is not combat but discharge.

In that moment, Joo Jaekyung performs Thor. Not metaphorically, but structurally. He channels excess into a single, downward strike. The absurd score — 999 — is not triumph; it is overload. (chapter 83) Too much energy released at once. The system registers it, but cannot contain it. This means, the record won’t be registered and as such “remembered”. In fact what mattered here was the prize, the teddy bear, and restored self-esteem of the athlete. He could offer a present to doc Dan which the latter accepted without any resistance. (chapter 83) The pink heart indicates the presence of affection and gratitude. And crucially, this act restores balance. After the hammer, the champion is no longer visibly overwhelmed. He has expelled what needed to leave. This shows that the champion is learning to manage his jealousy differently.

This prepares the next transition. Once the excess is discharged, he can shift position. The childlike Thor-state gives way to something else: regulation, provision, containment. This is where Jupiter enters — not as domination, but as adaptive authority. The same character who was dazed now intervenes calmly, mediates interaction, hands over the teddy bear, anticipates need. Son and father coexist not as contradiction, but as sequence.

This duality is essential for what follows. Because thunder is not continuous like the sun. It interrupts. It breaks a state, resets a system, and allows a new configuration to emerge. That is its narrative function here. This means that the athlete’s attitude can no longer be generalized, as such reproaches or description wouldn’t reflect reality. But let’s return our attention to the thunder causing a short circuit and reset.

The Ferris wheel breakdown completes the logic. When electricity fails, mechanical motion stops. When motion stops, the champion’s bodily excess becomes dangerous. When excess becomes dangerous, restraint is required. And when restraint is required, speech replaces force. The apology does not come despite the breakdown, but because of it. The system has been reset. This is why the amusement park is not merely foreshadowing but training.

The champion learns, physically and symbolically, that energy must circulate differently depending on context. Sometimes it must be discharged. Sometimes it must be restrained. (chapter 86) Sometimes it must be transmitted through words rather than bodies. This is not moral growth; it is adaptive intelligence.

Doc Dan and the Thunder

And this is precisely what reappears in episode 86. (chapter 86)

There, thunder returns — no longer as mechanical failure, but as biological event. The sparks and jolts saturating the panels are not just erotic embellishment. They reproduce the same logic of interruption and reset as well. Kim Dan’s body reacts as if struck by current. Thought fragments. Linear continuity breaks. “I can’t think straight” is not poetic confusion; it is systemic overload. I would even say, we are witnessing a short circuit which can only lead to a reset.

A thunderstorm does not persuade. It forces a reboot. In other words, this night stands under the sign of reality despite the sparks. Electricity is real and even natural.

The crucial difference is that this time, the current does not come from machines, nor from spectacle, nor from a game. It emerges between two bodies. This is why le courant passe becomes more than metaphor. The current does not dominate; it circulates. It requires two terminals. It only exists because both are present and conductive. And now, you comprehend why the champion was attentive (chapter 86) and asked questions to his sex partner. The current stands for communication. (chapter 86) Therefore it is not surprising that doc Dan starts looking at his fated lover. Imagine what it means for the athlete, when the “hamster” is staring at him, though he is a little embarrassed. Finally, he is truly looking at him. The champion loves his gaze. And now, you comprehend why the “wolf” listened to the “cute hamster” and stopped leaving marks.

In this sense, the hammer returns one last time — transformed. (chapter 86)

What struck metal in the amusement park now strikes the psyche. Not as violence, not as domination, but as reset. The phallus functions here exactly as the hammer did earlier: a tool of discharge that interrupts an old state and makes a new configuration possible. The result is not surrender, not illusion, but recalibration. Joo Jaekyung is once again releasing his “energy” (chapter 85), but this time, its nature has changed. It is no longer jealousy or anger, but love and desire. Hence the current is not colored in red, but white and pink. (chapter 86) It is not a flame like here , but a thunder and as such it is still restrained and regulated.

This is why episode 86 does not feel “magical”, once the structure is visible. Magic enchants without consequence. Thunder alters systems. After a strike, nothing resumes exactly as before.

And that is the point.

The champion is no longer a sun that burns from a distance. He has become a figure capable of switching modes — son and father, Thor and Jupiter, discharge and containment. And Kim Dan, having undergone the reset, is no longer operating on inherited assumptions (chapter 86) or second-hand data. New information must now be gathered. New meanings must be negotiated. Because Joo Jaekyung acts differently (son-father), the doctor is incited to discuss with his fated lover and not to generalize. He is pushed to become curious about the main lead and even adapt himself in the end.

The system has rebooted. What follows will not be repetition — because the thunder forced a reset. What follows will be movement and reciprocity — because current has begun to pass from one side to the other and the reverse. A new circle has been created.

Dream Nights and Drugged Time: Why Chapters 39 and 44 Could Not Last

If episode 86 confronts us with electricity as reset, then we must return to the earlier nights that failed — not because desire was absent, but because time itself was compromised.

Many Jinx-lovers remember the night in the States (chapter 39) and the penthouse night (chapter 44) as emotionally charged, intense, even pivotal. Confessions were made. Bodies responded. Vulnerability appeared to surface. And yet, both nights collapsed almost immediately afterward. What was felt (chapter 44) did not endure. What was said did not bind. What was shared did not accumulate into change.

Why?

The simplest answer would be to blame the champion’s behavior. But this explanation is insufficient — and, in fact, misleading. The deeper issue is not ethical failure alone, but structural impossibility. These nights were built on illusion. And illusion, by definition, cannot sustain time.

Let us begin with the night in the States.

In chapter 39, Kim Dan experiences desire (chapter 39), arousal, and emotional exposure under the influence of a drugged beverage. His body reacts strongly, almost violently. His speech loosens. He confesses. (chapter 39) He voices feelings that he has never dared to articulate consciously. Many readers interpreted this moment as a breakthrough — the first time the doctor allowed himself to want.

And yet, the morning after reveals the fatal flaw: he does not remember. (chapter 40)

Memory loss is not a narrative convenience here. It is the core of the scene’s meaning. Without memory, desire cannot transform into intention. Without intention, intimacy cannot become choice. What remains is sensation without authorship.

In other words, the confession existed — but outside time.

The body spoke, but the self could not claim it. The night produced intensity, not continuity. More importantly, it denied Kim Dan the possibility of return. Because he did not remember, he could not revisit the moment, reinterpret it, or choose it anew. Desire occurred — but never became decision. The night passed through him without granting him authorship. At the same time, Joo Jaekyung made sure with his joke (chapter 41) that doc Dan shouldn’t remember that night. This remark left a deep wound on doc Dan’s soul and mind, thus he hoped not to look like a fool in episode 86. (chapter 86) In this panel, we should glimpse a reference to the night in the States as well, and not just to the night in the penthouse.

The intensity of that night is why the champion’s later obsession with recreating that night is so telling. (chapter 64) Deep down, he hoped that such a night had been real. That’s why he asked shortly after their return about this particular night. (chapter 41) The event floats, unmoored, like a dream recalled only by one participant. I would even add, the amnesia from the doctor even afflicted a wound on the main lead. This explains why in Paris, he keeps asking doc Dan if the later is well and is not suffering from a fever. (chapter 86) He wants to ensure that his fated lover won’t forget this night. He is doing everything to avoid a repetition from that “dream or fake night”, where the physical therapist acted as the perfect lover, but forgot it. However, observe that here, the champion is touching doc Dan’s forehead, a sign that he is making sure that doc Dan is not “lying” by coercion or submission. At the same time, such a gesture reinforces my interpretation: thanks to the “thunder”, heat is generated. “Le courant passe” (the current passes) through physical contact, that’s how they create intimacy and understanding.

The penthouse night in chapter 44 follows a similar structure, though its emotional register differs.

Here, it is Joo Jaekyung who is intoxicated. (chapter 44) The setting is elevated, luxurious, almost theatrical. The doctor is brought into a space of power that is not his own. (chapter 44) By acting that way, the athlete created a false impression of himself, as if he was still rational and clear-minded. Again, desire unfolds. (chapter 44) (chapter 44) Again, closeness occurs. And again, the aftermath reveals the same fracture.

The champion does not remember fully (chapter 45) and later wants to even forget it. (chapter 45) Why? It is because contrary to the night in the States, the MMA fighter left traces on doc Dan’s body (chapter 45) and he can not deny his own involvement and actions. Hence the doctor is left alone. Only he can recall this “dream”. (chapter 44) But memory alone is not power. Remembering without the other’s participation transforms recollection into isolation. Kim Dan cannot confront, confirm, or renegotiate what happened, exactly like the champion did in the past. Meaning freezes instead of evolving. Striking is that he came to associate feelings with addiction. (chapter 46) No wonder why later doc Dan had no problem to reject the athlete. And for him, the next morning became a cruel reality, even a nightmare. It wounded doc Dan’s heart and soul so much that he learned the following lesson: to not get deceived by impressions. Hence in Paris, Doc Dan tries to explain the change of the champion’s attitude with drunkenness. (chapter 86)

What matters is not simply abandonment, but asymmetry of consciousness. While Joo Jaekyung remembers the night in the States, the other remembers the night in the penthouse: (chapter 44) One participant is altered. The other must carry the weight of meaning alone. The night does not end in shared reflection, but in silence and absence.

In both cases, the problem is not sex. It is not even exploitation or ignorance— though both are present. The problem is that time cannot flow forward from these nights.

Why? Because drugs suspend causality.

Under intoxication, actions do not generate obligation. Words do not demand response. Feelings do not require follow-up. The night becomes sealed — intense within itself, but cut off from before and after. This is why these encounters feel dreamlike in retrospect. Not romantic dreams, but dissociative ones.

And Jinx insists on this reading visually.

In both chapters, speech is unstable. (chapter 44) Words blur, vanish, or are forgotten. Even gestures go unnoticed: a kiss, an embrace or a patting. Memory fractures. The morning after is defined not by continuity but by confusion. The body has moved forward, but the narrative has not.

This logic culminates in the fireworks scene of chapter 84 (chapter 84)

Fireworks are often read as romance. But here, they function as warning. Fireworks illuminate the sky briefly, brilliantly — and then disappear. They leave no trace. And crucially, during this display, words are literally blurred. (chapter 84) Speech bubbles lose clarity. Confessions are obscured. The reader is denied access to meaning. Fireworks, like drugs, produce intensity without duration.

This is the crucial distinction that Part I prepared us for: heat versus current. Heat lingers. It can smother. It can burn. But it does not require connection. Current, by contrast, only exists if two points remain linked.

Chapters 39 and 44 are nights of heat. Bodies respond. Desire flares. But no circuit closes. No loop remains intact long enough for time to resume. This is why these nights are doomed — not morally, but structurally.

And this brings us to a crucial observation that many readers overlook.

In both of these earlier nights, questions are absent.

No one asks: “Are you okay?” (chapter 39) (chapter 44) It was as if these nights could only exist under altered states — as if clarity on either side would have made them impossible.
No one asks: “Do you remember?”
No one asks: “Why are you doing it?” “What does that mean to you?”

Speech exists, but it is not dialogic. It does not seek the other’s subjectivity. It spills, confesses, demands, judges or disappears. But it does not circulate. This is why, despite their intensity, these nights do not move the story forward. They collapse inward.

Episode 86, by contrast, will confront us with something radically different: a night that asks questions. (chapter 86)

But before we get there, we must acknowledge what these dream-nights leave behind.

They teach Kim Dan that desire is dangerous when it appears without agency. That closeness can dissolve overnight. That bodily truth does not guarantee recognition or even knowledge. And perhaps most importantly: that remembering alone is a burden. (chapter 86) This is why, when electricity returns in episode 86, it does not revive heat. It interrupts it. (chapter 86) That’s the reason why the athlete stops for a moment and asks doc Dan, if he needs a break. (chapter 86) This question is important because doc Dan admits his confusion and ignorance. He confesses to himself that he “knows nothing” not only about himself, but also about his fated lover. (chapter 86) The night is no longer sealed. It is permeable. Time resumes. (chapter 86) This signifies that thanks to the “champion’s thunder”, doc Dan was able to leave the vicious circle of “depression”. At the same time, such a confession implies that doc Dan’s present is no longer determined by the past and prejudices. And that is precisely why it matters.

From Drugged Time to Embodied Presence

If the earlier nights failed because time itself was compromised, then the question that naturally follows is this: what allows time to resume?

Chapters 39 and 44 taught us that intensity alone is not enough. Desire flared, bodies responded, confessions surfaced — and yet nothing endured. Not because feeling was false, but because consciousness was fractured. Words existed, but they did not circulate. Memory existed, but it was asymmetrical. Each night collapsed into silence the moment it ended.

Episode 86 emerges precisely at this fault line.

At first glance, it might seem quieter. Less dramatic. Less overtly confessional. And yet, this apparent restraint is deceptive. What changes here is not the presence of desire, but the medium through which meaning passes. What circulates between them in this night is not nostalgia, not projection, not even hope — but presence.

The sparks that punctuate episode 86 are not metaphorical excess. (chapter 86) They function as temporal markers. A spark exists only now. It has no duration. It cannot be stored, recalled, or anticipated. It appears — and vanishes. In this sense, electricity becomes the perfect visual language for the present moment itself.

Unlike heat, which lingers and can smother, current demands simultaneity. It requires two points to be active at the same time. The moment one withdraws, the circuit breaks. Sparks therefore signify not passion remembered or desired, but attention shared. This is why the night in episode 86 feels radically different from earlier encounters. At the end of episode 86, Kim Dan is no longer trapped in the past — replaying humiliation, abandonment or knowledge (as such arrogance). Nor is he projecting into the future at the end — fearing consequences, punishment, or loss. (chapter 86) For once, his thought does not spiral backward or forward. It halts. He decides to follow his heart again. (chapter 86)

The phrase carpe diem applies here not as romantic indulgence, but as psychological fact. To seize the day is not to ignore reality; it is to suspend temporal distortion. (chapter 86) In this night, neither character is reliving an old wound nor rehearsing a future defense. They are not remembering a dream. They are not trying to recreate one. They are simply there.

Electricity makes this visible. The body jolts. Thought fragments. Linear narration breaks. But unlike the drugged nights, this fragmentation does not produce amnesia. It produces grounding. Kim Dan’s repeated confusion — “I can’t think straight” — is not dissociation. (chapter 86) It is the absence of rumination.

This is what distinguishes presence from illusion. Illusion detaches the body from time. Presence anchors the body in time.

The sparks, then, do not represent chaos, rather emancipation and liberation. (chapter 86) Therefore the “hamster” can not control his voice and body. The sparks represent contact without temporal displacement. Both characters inhabit the same instant, without substitution, without rehearsal, without erasure. The present is no longer something to escape or survive. It becomes something that can be shared. That’s the reason why the two main leads are talking to each other.

And this is precisely why meaning finally begins to circulate.

If the first part (From Solar Heat to Electric Current) and second part ( Dream Nights and drugged time) traced how electricity replaces heat, and how illusion breaks time, then the next part turns to the most unsettling shift of all: the disappearance of words — and the emergence of the kiss as language.

No Words, But a Kiss: When Communication Changes Form

One of the most striking features of my illustration for episode 86 is the near absence of visible speech bubbles — even when Joo Jaekyung is clearly speaking. His mouth is open, his body leans in, his posture is attentive, and yet language is visually de-emphasized. Words are present, but they no longer dominate the frame.

By contrast, the star with the cut-off speech bubble appears elsewhere — suspended, incomplete. Language has not disappeared; it has lost its authority. It exists, but it is no longer imposed, no longer unilateral, no longer protected by distance.

This visual shift matters. (chapter 86) In earlier chapters, words often preceded erasure: confessions spoken under intoxication (chapter 10), statements blurred by drugs (chapter 43), sentences remembered by only one side. (chapter 39) Language functioned as exposure without continuity. Here, the narrative refuses that pattern. (chapter 86) It withholds verbal dominance so that something else can emerge. Kim Dan’s answer does not come in words. It comes as a kiss. (chapter 86) This gesture must not be misread as avoidance (silencing) or impulsivity. It is neither silence born of fear nor surrender to sensation. It is embodied communication — a mode forged by a history in which words were unsafe, unreliable, or followed by disappearance. The kiss articulates what cannot yet be stabilized in language without being lost again.

It says: I am here. And more importantly: I accept this moment. Not the future. Not the consequences. The present. But this action catches the MMA fighter by surprise, as in the athlete’s mind, Doc Dan has never initiated a kiss before except in the States, but the doctor doesn’t remember it. At the same time, it is clear that the athlete has not been confronted by his own amnesia concerning the night of his birthday: doc Dan had kissed him there too, thus the celebrity had been able to make doc Dan smile (chapter 44) and even laugh…. if only he could remember that night…

Crucially, this act in episode 86 (chapter 86) cannot be neutralized by Joo Jaekyung’s habitual reflexes — the “it’s nothing” (chapter 79), the “never mind”, (chapter 84) or it is a mistake, the easy erasure that once dissolved meaning after the fact. The kiss interrupts that mechanism. It produces a pause that cannot be talked over. It forces reflection. (chapter 86) Joo Jaekyung will have to ponder on the signification of such a kiss.

For the first time, meaning does not vanish once contact is made.

The kiss therefore marks a decisive transformation in how communication functions between them. Words are not rejected; they are postponed. Language is no longer the condition for intimacy, but its consequence. What circulates first is presence.

And this is why the kiss belongs structurally to the logic of current introduced earlier. Current does not explain itself. It passes — or it does not. It requires proximity, consent, and mutual contact. Once established, it cannot be undone by denial. Hence the champion reciprocates the gesture. (chapter 86) He is even kissing with open eyes, as though he desired not forget this wonderful night. In episode 86, communication no longer seeks to protect itself through speech. It risks itself through embodiment. And that risk, precisely because it is accepted rather than anticipated, changes everything.

First Conclusion — When Conditions Change

With the symbolic framework established, the earlier nights revisited, and the forms of communication closely examined, the analysis has already progressed far enough to reconsider the nature of the night in episode 86.

By moving through these successive angles — from mythological and elemental references, to nights compromised by illusion, to the transformation of how meaning is exchanged — one point becomes clear: this night is not just defined by intensity, tenderness, or redemption. It is also defined by changed conditions.

When electricity replaces heat (chapter 86), power ceases to be unilateral and becomes relational (sky and earth). Thunder does not linger or dominate; it strikes, interrupts, and resets. The champion is no longer read as a solar figure imposing force from above, but as a conductor within a circuit that requires reciprocity.

When the earlier nights are reexamined, their failure appears not as emotional insufficiency but as structural impossibility. Desire existed, but time could not flow. Drugs suspended causality, fractured memory, and sealed each encounter inside itself. What remained were dream-nights — vivid, intense, and ultimately unsustainable. Yet, they left wounds. (chapter 86) At the same time, it becomes clear that this moment in Paris embodies the convergence of two memories and two nights which helps them to recreate a new night marked by desires and communication. So this night will generate new memories and push them to redefine their relationship.

Finally, when attention shifts to communication itself, episode 86 reveals a decisive reconfiguration. (chapter 86) Meaning no longer relies on speech that can be blurred, forgotten, or denied. It circulates through presence. The kiss interrupts fear without abolishing clarity. Kim Dan does not forget the future; he accepts the risk of setting it aside. For the first time, current passes while both remain conscious, present, and aware.

One image quietly condenses this transformation. (chapter 86)

Kim Dan almost sits on Joo Jaekyung’s lap. (chapter 86) Earlier in the narrative, this posture belonged to another body. (chapter 19) The grandmother’s lap structured Kim Dan’s understanding of safety, endurance, and knowledge. Sitting there meant being held — but also being taught how to survive through sacrifice, silence, and self-effacement. That worldview sustained him, but it also confined him.

In episode 86, the posture is almost repeated — but the figure has changed.

This is not a romantic substitution. It is a symbolic shift. The body that now supports Kim Dan does not transmit inherited rules or fixed certainties. It asks questions. It pauses. It waits for response. He is actually more sitting between his legs or on his arms. In this moment, Kim Dan is no longer receiving knowledge about how to endure the world; he is participating in how to inhabit it.

From this point, a first answer to the guiding question emerges.

Episode 86 is neither illusion nor culmination. It does not redeem the past, nor does it erase it. It alters the framework within which meaning can circulate. Time resumes not because wounds have healed, but because they are no longer governing the present by default.

What remains unresolved — and what now demands further attention — is what follows from this shift.

If communication has changed form, how does unpredictability change meaning? If presence has been established, how does recognition operate without erasing the past? And if two nights once marked by failure now converge within the same moment, what does that convergence produce?

These questions open the next stage of the analysis.

The following sections will therefore turn away from possibility and toward consequence: how agency is reclaimed, how repetition acquires new ethical weight, and how two previously incompatible trajectories finally begin to add rather than cancel each other out.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Sweetest 🍭 Downfall 🧴🪮Ever

Notice: Right now, I am quite overwhelmed with work (grading papers, staff meetings etc), hence I can only write one essay after each episode.

Introduction – Where it begins

I have to admit that I had not anticipated a smut-scene in episode 85. On the other hand, it makes sense, for it is the night before the match, it is jinx-time. At the same time, their physical reunion (chapter 85) represents the positive reflection of this night (chapter 58) (chapter 58) (chapter 58), when the physical therapist chose to give up on the athlete and stop listening to his heart. Here, I am not only referring to the numerical symmetry but also to the doctor’s shifting vision of Joo Jaekyung.

In both episodes 58 and 85 (chapter 85), Jaekyung appears with a towel around his neck. This simple object evokes water and sweat, but in Jinx, these elements are never neutral. They are tied to one of the champion’s earliest traumas: the humiliation of being called “dirty” (chapter 75) and “smelly” as a child. This is why Jaekyung learned to perfuse his body with cologne after every shower (chapter 75) and why physical proximity has always carried the risk of shame. Hence he kept people at arms length. In chapter 40, when he rescued Kim Dan from the security guards, he kept his distance (chapter 40) — he had not yet showered, for the towel on his shoulders was stained with blood. Mingwa was indirectly referring to the champion’s psychological wounds. (chapter 40) It was, as if the fear of smelling “wrong,” of being perceived as contaminated, was still dictating his movements. Hence he could only claim doc Dan as one of his own, but not as his “physical therapist” or even “family”. And interesting is that doc Dan copied his attitude. In the hallway, he maintained a certain distance from the athlete. (chapter 40)

But in Paris, the presence of that same towel (chapter 85) suggests something very different. He has just stepped out of the shower, which means he is clean, his hair hanging down, still wet. (chapter 85) This striking detail is that he clearly left in a hurry: contrary to all earlier scenes where he sprayed himself with cologne (chapter 40) the moment he dried off (chapter 75), here he has not perfumed himself at all. (chapter 85) His hair is unstyled, his scent unmasked — and yet he approaches Dan without hesitation. He even kisses him. The item that once symbolized rejection now signifies trust: without fragrance, he is certain that doc Dan will not call him “dirty,” will not recoil, will not shame him. What once provoked distance becomes an unexpected bridge, revealing that Jaekyung is finally letting someone remain close, when he feels most vulnerable. The night in Paris does not simply suggest a return of desire; it announces the return of hope (chapter 85) and trust — and perhaps even the moment when Dan chooses, for the first time, to be honest with his own body and heart.

And yet — hidden beneath the sensual reunion and the echo of that earlier night — something else begins to unravel. Something softer, sweeter, far more dangerous for a man who once prided himself on standing above everyone else. For the first time, we witness the champion’s downfall — not a collapse of strength or dignity, but the collapse of the walls he spent years building. A downfall so gentle that it goes almost unnoticed, except by the one person who has always watched him closely: Doc Dan. (chapter 85)

After all, it takes a certain kind of irony for a man called “the Emperor” to experience his most significant fall at the very moment he carries someone else to bed (chapter 85) — fulfilling, without knowing it, a secret wish the physical therapist has harbored since childhood (chapter 61) [I will elaborate it further later]. And perhaps this is why the moment feels so disarming: because the downfall is not tragic but tender, not humiliating but intimate. Sweet, even.

But to understand why this ‘downfall’ is the sweetest one Joo Jaekyung has ever lived, we must first return to the moment it truly began — not in the bedroom, but hours earlier at the dinner table (chapter 85), when a single careless comment shattered the champion’s composure and revealed just how fragile his newfound hope really was.

The First Tremors

What caught my notice is that the physical therapist is the only one wearing the jacket with Joo Jaekyung on it! (chapter 85) In contrast, both Park Namwook and coach Jeong Yosep wear generic MFC T-shirts. (chapter 85) Mingwa is not simply dressing characters — she is revealing loyalties. The manager and coach are aligned with the institution MFC; Dan alone is aligned with the man, Joo Jaekyung. This quiet visual contrast already hints at the emotional imbalance that will unfold in the next few panels.

The first tremor begins at the dinner table, where the manager suddenly brings the physical therapist back to reality. (chapter 85) Dan is lost in his thoughts — anticipating the night ahead with the champion — and has barely touched his food. Park Namwook notices this. One might think, such a remark displays the manager’s concern for the main lead’s well-being. However, the manager adds that the other members of the team are all almost finished. With such a remark, it becomes clear that the manager is urging the protagonist to finish his plate. Although Park Namwook addresses Dan as if showing concern, the content of his remark betrays his true priority: not Dan’s well-being, but the team’s schedule. By pointing out that ‘the rest of us are almost finished,’ he urges Dan to keep pace, treating him as staff who had to follow the group rather than someone with personal needs. As you can sense, schedule is essential for the manager. However, because doc Dan couldn’t reveal the true reason behind his behavior, he gives an excuse for his lack of appetite. (chapter 85) He merely says he feels “a little queasy.” The irony is striking. In English, queasy is not a neutral word: it suggests nausea, a churning stomach, a sensation often associated with disgust or repulsion. And although Dan’s discomfort has nothing to do with Jaekyung, the word itself carries an emotional weight the champion is highly sensitive to. It brushes against an old, unhealed wound — the childhood humiliation of being called “dirty,” “smelly,” or somehow “wrong.” But doc Dan was not telling the truth, this explains why the main lead refused the medication from the manager right away. (chapter 85) As you can see, the first disturbance comes from Park Namwook. But this doesn’t end here.
He questions the physical therapist — not the fighter — and asks whether he is nervous about tomorrow’s match. The question is innocent, but its implications are not. By speaking to Dan rather than to Jaekyung, Park is unconsciously revealing his neglect toward his boss and champion. Secondly, with this remark “That’s understandable, since it’s been a while for you”, he reminds the champion of two things which have been tormenting him: not only the last match with Baek Junmin and Doc Dan’s vanishing, but also their night together before the Baek Junmin match, when Dan left after sex without looking back. (chapter 53) The manager’s words bring Joo Jaekyung back to reality and its uncomfortable truth that Dan’s presence now is still bound to a contract — temporary, contingent, never fully his. In other words, with his remarks, Park Namwook is reopening old wounds which shows his total blindness and lack of finesse and of empathy. He treats the last match, as if nothing bad had happened. The incident with the switched spray is simply erased.

Thus Jaekyung’s reaction is immediate: his mouth tightens in visible dissatisfaction. (chapter 85) It is a controlled expression, not a loss of composure, but it reveals irritation and intense gaze — the kind that arises when a sensitive subject is touched too directly. Park’s comment awakens a memory whose meaning has changed: back then, he accepted Dan (chapter 53) leaving without thinking; now, after Dan vanished from his life entirely, that earlier departure feels like a sign he failed to read. Park’s question brushes against this bruise, and Jaekyung’s lips reflect the discomfort.

As for the second tremor, it does not come from Park Namwook. It comes from Potato. (chapter 85) The younger fighter suddenly bursts into panic, declaring how nervous he would be in Jaekyung’s place, how his heart would be pounding out of his chest. His outburst is sincere, naïve, and completely focused on the champion — he never once considers Dan’s feelings. Yet these words strike deeper than he intends. At the mention of a pounding heart, Jaekyung’s eyes lift upward in a brief, involuntary movement. It is the smallest gesture, but it exposes everything he wishes to hide. Because his heart is pounding — but not for the match. It is because of doc Dan!

Potato unknowingly names the very thing Jaekyung is trying to keep steady: the nervousness and anticipation of the night ahead, the fear that history might repeat itself, and the desire that has been building for a long time. Unlike Park’s comment, which triggered irritation, Potato’s words hit the emotional center. This upward glance is the second tremor, the moment the façade slips just a little too far. Surrounded by people who see everything except the truth, Jaekyung reaches for the one thing he can control. He taps his phone and, in full view of the table, sends a message to Dan: (chapter 85) “Come to my room at 11.”

It looks like dominance, but it is driven by something far more fragile: (chapter 85) the need for reassurance, the wish to rewrite the pattern of the past, the quiet hope that Dan will not leave him again — not tonight and not afterwards.

This is where the Emperor’s downfall begins: with a tightened mouth, an upward glance, and a message sent to steady a heart that refuses to stay calm.

The Long Wait

If the dinner scene revealed the cracks in the champion’s composure, it also exposed something equally revealing about the manager. For Park Namwook, the real opponent is not Arnaud Gabriel — it is time. This explicates why the manager announces their departure at 7.00 am sharp, though the Emperor’s match is at noon. (chapter 85) Schedules are his armor, punctuality his hiding place. Whenever something threatens to slip beyond control, he retreats behind procedure.

This is why he suddenly takes an interest in Dan’s appetite. (chapter 85) His comment about the untouched plate is not born of concern; it is born of urgency. The faster Dan finishes, the sooner the table can be dismissed, and the sooner Park Namwook can send the champion to his room under the comfortable pretext of “rest.” (chapter 85) For him, “rest” is not a recommendation —
it is a containment strategy. This explains why the manager is not looking at the Emperor, when he tells him: “Jaekyung, go to bed early tonight, okay?”. Why? Because he doesn’t want a discussion. If he avoids eye contact, Jaekyung cannot object — the instruction is meant to be received, not answered. He is expecting obedience, nothing more. Therefore it is not surprising that the manager smiles (chapter 85), as soon as the athlete stands up right after his recommendation and announces he is now returning to his room.

Once Jaekyung is hidden behind a hotel door, quiet and unmonitored, nothing can be blamed on the manager anymore. If the champion sleeps poorly? Not his fault. If he feels sick? Not his fault. If emotions become volatile? Certainly not his fault. He will always be able to say: “I told him to go to bed early.”

What he wants is not Jaekyung’s well-being. What he wants is a clean conscience. But we have another example for his flaw. (chapter 85) A day and night without complications. A scenario in which no one can accuse him of negligence, if something goes wrong tomorrow. And Mingwa already exposed this flaw only seconds earlier. When Dan finally gives an excuse for his lack of appetite — “I’m feeling a bit queasy…” — the manager immediately reframes it as Dan’s recurring personal weakness: “It’s too bad you have trouble eating whenever we go abroad…” (chapter 85) With this single sentence, he erases the actual causes of Dan’s digestive problems — the fact that the therapist had been mistreated, overworked, stressed, ignored, even drugged during their last trip to the States. None of that exists in Park Namwook’s mind. In his version of reality, Dan’s discomfort is an inconvenience, not a symptom of mistreatment.

And here, his solution reveals everything: he immediately offers medication. Not help. Not care. Not attention. He treats doc Dan the same way than Joo Jaekyung. (chapter 54)

A pill — the fastest way to silence discomfort without having to see it. “Too bad” is not sympathy (chapter 85); it is avoidance. It exposes a man who does not want to be burdened by emotions, who cannot hold another person’s vulnerability without trying to shut it down. To him, Dan’s nausea is a logistical issue, not a sign of human distress.

Park Namwook’s flaw is not malice. His flaw is cowardice toward feelings — his own and those of others.
And this flaw will matter the next morning, when the Emperor and/or the doctor do not appear at 7:00 a.m. sharp, and the manager finally discovers that schedules offer no protection against the consequences of neglect.

But let’s return our attention to the manager’s recommendation to the champion: (chapter 85) He reacts with almost visible relief, when the champion stands up from the table. (chapter 85) He has no idea about the text message — no suspicion of anything planned for later. He sees only what benefits him: Jaekyung leaving on his own. Perfect. The fighter is out of sight, out of reach, and most importantly, out of his responsibility.

He doesn’t ask where Jaekyung is going. He doesn’t check if he’s alright. He doesn’t wonder whether something is wrong. He simply lets him go.

But this is exactly where the real question begins — a question the manager can never ask, only Jinx-philes: If Jaekyung returns to his room so early… what does he actually do until 11 pm?

What makes the evening in Paris so striking is the contradiction between time and behavior.
From the moment Joo Jaekyung sends the text at 7:02 p.m (chapter 85) and leaves the table shortly after, until the doctor knocks on his door at 11:00 p.m (if we assume that he went there at 11 pm)., almost four hours pass. (chapter 85) In theory, this is the perfect window to do what he used to do in the States (chapter 38) and Korea (chapter 48) before a big fight: watch his opponent’s videos, study their habits, rehearse counters. If we only looked at the clock, we might assume he spent the evening thinking about Arnaud Gabriel.

But the narrative context says the opposite.

Just before he leaves the table, Jaekyung has been hit by two painful reminders (chapter 85) linked to doc Dan, not Arnaud Gabriel. First, through Park Namwook’s question and tone, he is dragged back to the night before the Baek Junmin match — the night when sex with Dan was followed by distance, and then by disappearance after the fight. Second, Dan’s “queasy” excuse scratches an old wound: the fear of being perceived as disgusting or unwanted. Both moments are about abandonment and rejection, not competition. It is right after this double sting that he sends the message. In that instant, his thoughts are circling only one point: will Dan come to accept me, or will he pull away again?

That is the emotional seed of the long wait. This explains why they are on the bed, the athlete complained: (chapter 85) He had to restrain himself due to doc Dan. (chapter 85) From 7:02 onward, the question is no longer “How do I beat Gabriel?” but “How do I win doc Dan’s heart?” The clock from 7:02 to 11:00 p.m. stops being a “training window” and becomes an emotional countdown. He is no longer the champion preparing for an opponent—he is the man hoping not to be abandoned again. This is why the later scene at the door feels so contradictory: when Dan finally arrives, Jaekyung behaves like someone who couldn’t wait. (chapter 85) He opens the door and immediately grabs him inside (chapter 85), cutting off any possibility of hesitation. The way he drags him over the threshold, presses him against the wall (chapter 85), kisses him, lifts him (chapter 85) and carries him to the bed — all of that oozes urgency. Hence he doesn’t place his lover delicately on the bed, he rather pushes him down, thus we have the sound PLOP: (chapter 85) This is not the controlled, casual emperor of old; it is someone who has been holding back for hours and refuses to risk even a second in which Dan might change his mind.

And yet, visually, we know he has just finished showering. (chapter 85) His hair is still down and wet; the towel is still around his neck. That detail destroys the idea of a carefully structured pre-match evening. If he truly wanted a calm, professional night, he had four hours to shower, dry his hair, apply cologne, and settle. Instead, he postpones the shower so long that he is still damp when he opens the door.

In other words, he waited until the very last minute to get ready. This creates a striking contrast: he had four hours, yet he looks as though he prepared in a hurry. So what exactly did he do during this lapse of time? 😮

This is what every Jinx-lover should wonder. And given Jaekyung’s personality — his directness, his physicality, his awkwardness with emotional communication — a new hypothesis imposes itself. He did not study Gabriel. He studied how to please doc Dan. I am suspecting that he might have watched porno for that matter. Don’t forget this scene on the beach: (chapter 65) and the comment of the champion in front of this movie: (chapter 29) Moreover, I consider this scene (chapter 85) as a new version of Choi Heesung’s advice: Doc Dan just needs to sit back and enjoy!! (chapter 31) Joo Jaekyung is now doing everything, as deep down he wants to become the perfect lover! And how had I described the night in the States? Back then, the hamster Dan had become the champion’s perfect lover, especially because he had kissed his face, hugged him and confessed to him. (chapter 39) But if his fear to lose doc Dan was so huge, why did he ask him to come so late then? (chapter 85) It is the same hour than in the States. (chapter 38) One might reply that the athlete desired to maintain appearances and as such to hide his suffering and anxiety. In other words, he was hiding his emotions behind routine, Jinx-sex would always start at 11 pm. However, this idea is not entirely satisfying because once doc Dan was in his room, the fighter was no longer hiding his emotions and desires. (chapter 85) That’s the reason why I am suspecting another cause for this time 11 pm. In my opinion, it is related to the athlete’s traumas: the physical abuse from his father (chapter 72), when the latter would return late from his “work” and the death of his father (chapter 73).

After the painful reminders at the table — the allusion to the Junmin night and Dan’s “queasy” excuse that scratched an old wound — his entire focus shifted. He could no longer risk repeating the dynamics of the past. In his mind, the only way to ensure that Dan would not disappear again was to do better, physically, in the one domain where he feels competent. So it is not far-fetched to imagine him watching tutorials or videos, searching for techniques, guidance, or advice he never received from anyone. He has one mentor in intimacy, Cheolmin, but the latter has only appeared once. No model to imitate. No words for tenderness. But he can learn through action, through practice, through imitation. And suddenly, this would explain everything that happens later.

It explains why, once doc Dan stands at his door, he behaves with such urgency. He grabs him immediately, pulls him inside, presses him against the wall while holding his face tenderly (chapter 85), kisses him with a force that has been building for hours. He had been so absorbed — so busy learning, rehearsing, imagining — that he realized only late that it was almost time for Dan to arrive. The rushed shower is not laziness; it is evidence that his preparation was of another kind altogether.

And then Dan appears. And this alone must have boosted Jaekyung’s ego in a way nothing else could. (chapter 85) Because doc Dan could have refused. He could have used his queasiness as an excuse, could have stayed in his room, could have claimed exhaustion. Instead, he obeyed the request — a request sent by someone who had hurt him deeply in the past. Doc Dan’s arrival is proof that he is not rejecting him. Proof that the night is real. Proof that the attempt to do better might actually matter. At the same time, doc Dan couldn’t miss the true meaning behind this text sent in front of others: the athlete’s anxiety and suffering. (chapter 85) This explains why his worried gaze followed his fated partner. (chapter 85) In other words, the text had a different meaning. It was not an order, but rather a wish…and it had nothing to do with his match against Arnaud Gabriel. During that night, Joo Jaekyung is not seeing a surrogate fighter in front of him or a sex toy, but his real partner, his future boyfriend. This means, this night stands in opposition to the one in the penthouse: (chapter 53) He is gradually moving on from his belief and jinx, he is even now prioritizing his love life over work!! If Park Namwook knew, he would get so shocked and scared… he would yell at him for causing a mess, for neglecting his “work”.

Under this light, it becomes comprehensible why Jaekyung takes his time for the first time. (chapter 85) This is why he touches Dan’s face instead of flipping him over.
This is why he kisses slowly, repeatedly, almost reverently. He knows that doc Dan likes nipple foreplay.
This is why he carries him in his arms (chapter 85) instead of carrying him over his shoulder. And this is why he suddenly engages in a new kind of foreplay — licking Dan’s leg (chapter 85) and anus (chapter 85) — something he has never done before. This does not come from instinct. It comes from intention. It comes from effort. It comes from learning. He is indeed showering doc Dan with love and tenderness, therefore it is not surprising that the “hamster” is moved sensually and emotionally. Exactly like during the Summer Night’s Dream, he is reaching nirvana, hence Jinx-philes are constantly seeing stars,. (chapter 85)

In short, the four hours did not shape his body for the match. They shaped his behavior for doc Dan.

The long lapse of time reveals a man who was not preparing for Arnaud Gabriel at all — but preparing for the one person whose opinion governs his heart. And when that person actually stands at his door, the tension of those hours condenses into the urgency of his welcome, the care of his touch, and the new tenderness of his actions. Everything in that moment — from the haste of his shower to the way he drags Dan inside — points toward a single truth: something fundamental in Joo Jaekyung has shifted.

And this brings us to the real meaning of the essay’s title.

The Truth Behind The Title

Many readers, seeing The Sweetest Downfall Ever , might assume that the downfall refers to Joo Jaekyung’s current behavior: his neglect of sleep in favor of desire, his single-minded focus on sex the night before the match, his impulsive decision to carry doc Dan to bed (chapter 85), or even the looming risk of professional failure. Others might think the downfall describes Dan’s new physical position — head lowered, body lifted (chapter 85) — or the emotional slip that comes with resurfacing feelings: the therapist losing distance, falling back into intimacy. All of these readings sound plausible at first glance. (chapter 85) But the truth behind the title is far simpler, far more literal, and yet far more symbolic.

The downfall begins with his hair. For the first time, he is letting his hair down. (chapter 85) This visual shift, subtle yet radical, is the origin of the title.

And under this light, the meaning behind my illustration becomes clearer. This is why I chose pink “hair” for the background — not merely as decoration, but as a visual clue. The color evokes warmth, softness, and vulnerability: the emotional terrain Jaekyung steps into the moment gravity pulls his hair out of its rigid form. But why is this detail meaningful?

Because the idiom “to let your hair down” carries centuries of emotional and cultural weight.

When we read this historical meaning through the lens of Mingwa’s imagery, Jaekyung’s hair becomes more than a style choice. It becomes a confession. (chapter 85)

Letting his hair down means dropping the persona. Letting his hair down means allowing himself freedom.
Letting his hair down means entering intimacy — not performance.

It is the visual act of stepping away from the rigid social restraints imposed by MFC, public expectations, masculinity, and even trauma. And with this understanding, the transition becomes effortless:

For years, Joo Jaekyung’s hair has signified his status. (chapter 85) Styled up, hardened with gel (chapter 30) , perfectly arranged — it is the crown of the Emperor, the symbol of his control, his discipline, and the myth that MFC sells:
Joo Jaekyung, the untouchable. Joo Jaekyung, the brand. Joo Jaekyung, the man who never bends. (chapter 82) When the hair stands, the image stands.

But in Paris, for the first time, the hair falls. (chapter 85)

Even before chapter 85, Mingwa prepares the audience for this silent rebellion. Two days before the match, he wears a cap (chapter 85) — but not the way adults or professionals usually do.
He tilts it up, exposing his entire face. Teenagers wear their caps like this: loose, careless, unguarded, more concerned with comfort than appearance. And suddenly, Jaekyung looks younger — not in age, but in spirit. His gaze is no longer shadowed by the bill. It is fully visible, open, almost soft.

Then comes the wolf-ear headband at the amusement park (chapte 85), a gesture that would have been unthinkable for the Emperor of MFC. It is ridiculous, childish, playful — and he wears it anyway. Not for the crowd, not for the cameras, but because Dan asked him to wear one too. So he placed it on his head. It is the second stage of the downfall: the moment where he stops caring about the star image that has governed him for years. The moment where he allows himself to be seen as something other than a fighter. The wolf ears, like the tilted cap, signal a shift toward youthfulness, toward softness, toward an identity unshaped by branding. And yet, both items share something important: they still control the hair.

The cap hides it. The headband frames it. In both cases, the hair remains managed, held in place, contained.
This means that the “rejuvenation” we observe in these scenes is still superficial — a flirtation with freedom rather than freedom itself. (chapter 85) The cap and wolf ears make him look younger, even boyish, but they do not dismantle the structure around him. They soften the edges of the Emperor, but they do not dissolve the crown.

He looks more approachable, but not yet vulnerable. He looks less like a weapon, but not yet like a man. He looks playful, but not yet liberated. However, when he is seen with his hair down (chapter 85), he looks exactly like the little boy in the picture: (chapter 71) So doc Dan could recognize the little boy in the athlete, the more he sees the protagonist with his hair down. Furthermore, I noticed that contrary to season 1, Doc Dan has now more memories of the “wolf” facing him. (chapter 85) In the past, he would more look at him from behind: (chapter 35) (chapter 35) Seeing his face reflects not only the increasing care for each other, but also the improving communication between them.

And this is also the moment where the narrative contrast becomes striking. While Joo Jaekyung’s appearance is drifting backward toward youth, Arnaud Gabriel’s beard makes him look older, (chapter 85) more mature, more “masculine” in the traditional sense. This explicates why the stylists had to dress him up. (chapter 82) Yet such an intervention did more than prepare him for the cameras — it tightened the restrictions around his own image, reducing the fighter’s rights over how he appears to the world. With the suit, he appeared older and more powerful. The French fighter leans into age, while the Korean champion leans into youth — a symbolic inversion that reinforces the central tension in the Paris arc: Gabriel performs adulthood; Jaekyung rediscovers the adolescence he never lived. (chapter 85) But just as Jaekyung begins to slip into these youthful, softer identities, MFC reasserts control.

But MFC has its own ritual of restoration. At the photo shoot, the stylists immediately return him to form: (chapter 85) hair up, face polished, a look engineered for posters and rankings. He becomes once again the Emperor — the man who must appear older, sharper, more intimidating, more manufactured.

And this is exactly why the next transformation hits so hard. When Dan arrives at 11 p.m., Joo Jaekyung opens the door with his hair down, still dripping slightly from a rushed shower. This is not the Emperor. This is not the brand. This is not the legend presented in MFC 317. (chapter 79) This is the boy from the childhood photograph.

The hair-down Jaekyung is younger, wilder, softer (chapter 85) — someone who belongs not to MFC but to himself. Someone capable of affection. Someone whose emotions sit close to the skin. Someone who has stopped pretending. He is able to smile genuinely.

“Letting one’s hair down” is an idiom meaning to stop performing, to stop controlling oneself, to finally relax into authenticity. As you can see, Mingwa uses the concept (letting one’s hair down”) literally and metaphorically at once. The physical gesture (his hair falling) expresses the emotional one (his defenses lowering).

And suddenly, the birthday illustration released earlier this year makes sense. In the rain, with his hair heavy and unstyled, his gaze dark and sensual, Jaekyung appears nothing like the commanding emperor. He looks free — freed by weather, freed by desire, freed from roles. It was foreshadowing, not just fanservice. It announces the end of the « jinx » in reality.

Which brings us to the second reason “downfall” is the perfect word. “Downfall” often describes the collapse of status — the fall of kings, the ruin of reputations. And here, too, the meaning applies. Because by letting his hair down, Joo Jaekyung risks the downfall of the very myth that protects him.

He is neglecting his work. He is prioritizing Dan over rest. He is engaging in a long, indulgent foreplay the night before his comeback match — a foreplay so attentive and sensual that Dan wonders what changed. This is not the Emperor. This is a man who is slowly abandoning the throne.

And Mingwa multiplies the symbolic echoes:

  • Downfall as rain:
    Heavy rain makes hair fall, obscures vision, exposes vulnerability.
    It is no coincidence that the birthday art shows him wet — nature brings him down to earth.
  • Downfall as emotional collapse:
    His confrontation with memories at dinner destabilizes him.
    His desire for Dan overwhelms him.
    His anxiety about losing Dan drives him.
  • Downfall as public risk:
    If he wins and hugs Dan in front of cameras out of gratitude and affection — a real possibility given his new softness — he could expose their bond publicly.
    This would be the ultimate downfall of the Emperor image:
    the revelation that he is not a remote titan but a man in love.
  • Downfall as liberation:
    The fall from the Emperor’s pedestal is not a tragedy.
    It is freedom.

And this is where the meaning circles back to sweetness. However, this also signifies that he is escaping the control of MFC and as such he represents a source of danger for the organization.

When Jaekyung whispers, “Why the fuck do you taste so sweet today?” he is not describing Dan. (chapter 85) He is describing himself. His sweetness is the taste of freedom — freedom from performance, freedom from control, freedom from MFC, freedom from fear. He is enjoying this moment. Dan tastes sweet because Jaekyung is finally tasting the life he never allowed himself to want.

So the “downfall” of the title is not the fall of a champion.

It is the fall of a mask. A downfall so soft that it feels like surrender, so intimate that it feels like seduction, and so liberating that it becomes — unmistakably — sweet. Because the moment Jaekyung lets his hair down, he becomes someone who can fall in love. And perhaps someone who can finally be loved in return.

And now, you are probably thinking, this is it! But no… because we have the long wait the next morning!

Room 1704: The Number of Unscheduled Freedom

While the night in Paris reveals how quietly the Emperor has begun to fall, the true test of his transformation arrives the next morning. If letting his hair down marks the softening of his identity, what happens next exposes something even more subversive: Joo Jaekyung begins to let go of time itself. Because in Paris, time belongs not to MFC, not to Park Namwook, and not to the match — but to room 1704, (chapter 85) the one place where schedules dissolve, rituals are forgotten, and the fighter finally sleeps like someone who no longer needs to brace for survival.

Room 1704 is not just a hotel room; it is the numerical mirror of Jaekyung’s internal shift. It reduces to the number 12, and this detail offers a far deeper layer of meaning than coincidence. Twelve is the number of completeness. It marks the end of one cycle and the threshold of another. In numerology, it unites the energy of new beginnings (1) with the harmony of partnership (2) to form the creative expansion of 3. This blending transforms 12 into a symbol of spiritual awakening and divine order — a moment where the earthly and the transcendent briefly touch. It is no accident that the number appears in so many foundational structures: twelve months shaping the year, twelve zodiac signs forming the cosmic wheel, twelve tribes anchoring a nation, twelve apostles guiding the birth of a new faith. Across cultures, twelve signifies not closure, but transition: the release of what binds and the emergence of a new form.

Seen through this lens, room 1704 becomes the perfect setting for the champion’s inner shift. He does not simply enter a hotel room; he steps into a symbolic space where an old identity completes itself and a new one quietly begins. Twelve encourages letting go, surrendering rigidity, and allowing transformation to unfold. And this is precisely what happens that night. In room 1704, Joo Jaekyung lets his hair down, lets his guard fall, lets Dan remain close, and lets go — without yet realizing it — of the rituals and defenses that once defined him. The number that governs the room marks the moment where the Emperor’s earthly order dissolves, making space for an awakening shaped not by hierarchy or discipline, but by intimacy and partnership.

And the room itself reinforces this symbolism. Above the couch hangs a painting (chapter 85) The image is dreamlike: there are white horses with wings, a Pegasus-like creatures and angels. Their outlines are soft, almost blurred, as if painted in the air rather than on canvas. This is no random hotel decoration. A Pegasus traditionally symbolizes deliverance from earthly burdens, escape from oppression, and ascension into a higher realm; angels, of course, signify protection, guidance, and spiritual renewal. Together they transform the couch area into a symbolic threshold: the boundary between the profane world (MFC, schedules, fear, trauma) and a space touched by something gentler, freer, almost sacred.

The Pegasus-and-angel painting above the couch does more than sanctify room 1704—it also illuminates something that has quietly shaped Dan’s entire emotional life: his relationship to the couch itself. (chapter 21) The image of winged rescue and divine protection hangs over the very piece of furniture that, throughout the series, has functioned as Dan’s private sanctuary. This is not incidental. In Jinx, the couch is tied to his deepest memories of care and abandonment, and Mingwa activates this symbolism each time Dan gravitates to it.

Why did Dan’s nightmare of abandonment strike precisely, when he fell asleep on the couch? (chapter 21) Why does he consistently feel safer on the couch than in a bed? (chapter 29) Why, after the second swimming lesson, did he refuse to return to the bed (chapter 81), even though he was exhausted? Why does he place the teddy bear (chapter 84) —his last substitute for lost parental affection—on the couch and not on the bed? And finally, why has he always harbored the secret wish to be carried to bed, as confessed through his memory in chapter 61? (chapter 61)

The answers converge: the couch is Dan’s liminal space, the threshold between being left behind and being held, between cold reality and the remnants of tenderness he once knew. Note that there is no couch in the halmoni’s house. (chapter 10) Secondly, at no moment, we ever witness the grandmother carrying the little boy to bed. Either she is rocking him to sleep outside the house (chapter 47) or he is already in the bed. We never see her bringing him to bed.

Thus I came to develop the following theory. In childhood, before everything collapsed, the couch was the place where doc Dan waited for his parents to return from work—the place where he sometimes fell asleep with his teddy bear, only to be lifted and carried to bed by someone who loved him. It was brief, fragile, but it became etched into him as the last ritual of genuine care, before the world turned harsh. This would explain why he has internalized such gestures: (chapter 44), (chapter 44) traces from parents. And now, you comprehend why the hamster could never truly rest in the bed. The couch is therefore not an adult preference; it is a trauma imprint. Resting there feels safe because beds—large, empty, abandoned spaces—became reminders of whoever no longer carried him. Hence it is no longer surprising that he woke up, when he sensed the vanishing of warmth. (chapter 21)

This is why Dan puts the teddy bear on the couch (chapter 84): the bear stands in for a lost comforting presence. It also represents the main lead, Joo Jaekyung. The latter is gradually reentering in the physical therapist’s heart and life. Therefore it is not surprising that there, he squeezes the hand of the toy. It is also why Doc Dan curls around it like a child who deep down hopes to be chosen, lifted, and held. And it is why, even as an adult, his body still whispers the same yearning: someone, please carry me to bed again.

Placed in this context, the painting above the couch in room 1704 becomes profound. The winged horses represent rescue; the angels represent guardianship. They hover above the very place where Dan’s old wound meets the possibility of healing. And on this particular night, the symbolism is fulfilled: the man he once feared, the man who once hurt him, becomes the one who finally lifts him —not to discard him, not to dominate him, but to carry him to bed with the gentleness he has been unconsciously longing for since childhood. Under this new perspective, it becomes comprehensible why doc Dan often never realized that the athlete had often fulfilled his wish (chapter 29, chapter 40, chapter 65, chapter 68, chapter 79)

The couch, the painting, the number 1704—all align to mark this night as a turning point. A moment where old scripts collapse, where Dan’s abandonment narrative begins to loosen, and where Joo Jaekyung unknowingly steps into the role that no one has fulfilled since Dan was small: the one who does not leave him sleeping alone, but brings him into warmth.

And this is precisely what the number 1704 suggests. Reduced to 12, it carries the connotations of completion, awakening, divine order, the closing of one cycle and the opening of another. The Pegasus and angels above the couch echo that meaning visually: a silent promise that something in this room will lift rather than trap, heal rather than wound.

It is striking, too, that the imagery concerns flight—wings, ascension, rising above earthly weight. (chapter 85) For Joo Jaekyung, whose entire identity has been built on gravity, discipline, and the hardness of the body, this painting becomes an unconscious prelude to what he is about to do emotionally: let go, descend from the Emperor’s pedestal, and allow himself to be vulnerable. For Dan, the angels evoke the comfort and innocence he lost in childhood, the tenderness he has been deprived of for years. The painting therefore mirrors both men: the fighter who needs freedom, and the healer who needs protection.

Placed above the couch, it becomes the room’s spiritual anchor. It blesses the space without the characters realizing it. It reframes the night not as moral failure but as transformation. In this light, the “downfall” in the title is not the collapse of a champion — it is the completion of a cycle. A descent that is also a rising. A falling-away that creates room for renewal. Twelve crowns the night not with the end of something, but with the birth of something sweeter. Observe that around the painting, the pattern on the wall looks similar to snow flakes. It’s no coincidence… a synonym for “home”. A visual whisper that what happens here is not corruption but ascension and even “Nirvana”. That’s why I have the feeling that both or one of them might not wake up on time.

The first sign that room 1704 operates under new rules appears through a small but powerful object: the Do Not Disturb sign. (chapter 85)

For years, nothing in Jaekyung’s life has been allowed to interrupt the routine designed to keep him winning. His schedule is a fortress — wake up early, drink milk, shower and perfume, style hair, prepare body, prepare mind. Every minute is accounted for. Every ritual restores the Emperor identity. No step can be skipped.

But the moment Dan enters room 1704, the fortress cracks. The DND sign goes up. This implies that Joo Jaekyung might be able to sleep better and longer after this “hot night”.

And this tiny act holds enormous consequences. Park Namwook’s entire identity as manager is built on timing. He hides behind schedules the way Jaekyung once hid behind performance. (chapter 85) His mantra — 7:00 AM sharp — is not about concern. It is about control. If he arrives very early with his star, he believes that he has done his job. It is now MFC and Joo Jaekyung’s responsibility to decide about the match. Striking is that in the States, doc Dan woke up at 10. 26 am (chapter 85) and he was still able to arrive on time in the arena. (chapter 40) For me, it is a clue that the manager would always request to meet around 7.00 am, when the match was at noon. But what should do the athlete do during all this time? He can only get nervous and feel pressured.

This is where the true problem begins. A fighter scheduled to rise at dawn for a noon match is being set up to fail. The human body performs best roughly four or five hours after waking; having a good breakfast, for a match at midday, the ideal waking time would be closer to 8:30 or 9:00. Yet Park Namwook forces the entire team into a rhythm that has nothing to do with physiology and everything to do with his own fear of unpredictability. In other words, he is not managing an athlete — he is managing his anxiety.

The timing is disastrous for someone like Joo Jaekyung, whose insomnia is a recurring wound in the story. Sleep is the one ressource the Emperor chronically lacks, and the one thing he finally has a chance to experience now that doc Dan is beside him. (chapter 81) I noticed that in different scenes from season 2, the athlete started waking up later and even after doc Dan. (chapter 66) But the manager’s rigid schedule threatens even that. An early morning summons drains the fighter’s cortisol reserves before the match has even begun, creating a long, empty corridor of waiting — a period where tension, anxiety, fatigue, and irritation ferment in the body. Instead of resting, centering, and preparing, the champion would spend hours fighting against the clock imposed on him.

And this, ironically, is precisely what Park Namwook wants: a day without surprises, without emotional complications, without having to shoulder responsibility if something goes wrong. By bringing the team down to the lobby at a painfully early hour (chapter 85), he can tell himself that he has done everything correctly. From the moment they arrive, the rest is “not his problem.” His scheduling is a shield — not for Jaekyung, but for himself.

This reveals a harsh truth about his management style. He values predictability over performance, procedure over well-being, optics over actual athletic needs. And because he interprets punctuality as competence, he assumes that an early arrival protects him from blame. Whether the star sleeps well, eats well, or preserves his mental focus does not matter. What matters is that the boxes are checked, the appearance of order is maintained, and the responsibility is successfully transferred upward.

But what happens if the Emperor does not appear at 7:00 AM? (chapter 85) What happens if the room 1704 — with its quietly glowing DND sign — refuses to open?

Suddenly the carefully constructed ritual collapses. The manager may be standing in front of the door early in the morning, but the DND sign renders him powerless. He cannot knock insistently, he cannot demand entry or yell, and he certainly cannot ask hotel staff to open the door or to call the athlete. Any attempt to violate a guest’s privacy would not only break hotel policy — it could lead to a lawsuit, a breach-of-contract scandal, or even an international incident involving their star athlete. One angry complaint from Joo Jaekyung could cost the hotel its reputation, and one misstep from Park Namwook could cost him his career. And because he knows the champion had been drinking after the “loss” (chapter 54) , he might even jump to the wrong conclusion: that Jaekyung drank again — this time behind his back. (chapter 82) The irony is striking. Two days before the match, it was Park Namwook who overindulged with the others, yet he may now project that same carelessness onto the athlete. In his mind, the DND sign does not simply mean “rest”; it becomes a warning signal, a possible confirmation of the irresponsibility he fears but has never actually witnessed. Thus I can already imagine him panicking.

And this is exactly what terrifies him: there is no legal or professional ground on which he can force the champion to obey the schedule he imposed. For once, he cannot hide behind authority. He cannot produce documents or procedures to justify intervention. He cannot shift responsibility to MFC.

He is trapped in a situation where doing nothing is dangerous, and acting is even worse. One might object and say that he can still call the two protagonists. However, the doctor didn’t bring his cellphone to the room. (chapter 85) Secondly, it is possible that the athlete’s cellphone runs out of battery, especially if he watched so many videos the night before. However, if the staff knows about the DND, the manager can not ask the desk to call Joo Jaekyung either.

But the most destabilizing element of all is that he cannot even determine whom to blame — the physical therapist who may have encouraged the fighter to rest longer, or the champion who dared to let doc Dan sleep past the artificial boundaries the manager set in place or even slept longer by inadvertence. Another important aspect is the text from the champion. (chapter 85) Here, it is not written 11.00 pm, so the message could be read as 11.00 am. So this message could be read like this. He wanted to rest till 11.00 am. This could represent an evidence that champion chose to act behind Park Namwook’s back and trust Doc Dan more than Park Namwook.

The hierarchy reverses itself in an instant: the Emperor is untouchable, and the manager is the one who risks punishment.

For the first time, Park Namwook may have to confront the truth he has avoided for years: that his role as manager is ornamental, that he has never truly controlled the Emperor’s time, and that his authority dissolves the moment the athlete chooses to prioritize his own needs or his lover’s needs.

In that paralysis, old coping strategies return. He may blame Dan for keeping the champion awake. He may blame the champion for irresponsibility. He may fear that the match will suffer and that this failure, unlike all the others, will reflect poorly on him. One thing is sure: the manager can not leave the hotel without the wolf, and the latter will refuse to leave doc Dan behind either. As you can see, this night stands under the sign of “partnership” and the manager is now excluded.

However, inside room 1704, none of this external pressure exists. Because of the painting, I deduce that this room stands for intemporality. It was, as if time had stopped flowing. For the first time in years, Joo Jaekyung sleeps without fear. Without nightmares. Without counting breaths. Without bracing for violence. Without packing his trauma into the muscles of his back. Why? Because Dan is there. Not touching him — simply present. The presence alone rewrites the body’s memory.

And here lies the narrative genius: if Dan wakes first, he will instinctively protect that peace. He knows how vital rest is. He knows how Jaekyung has struggled to breathe, to sleep, to function. He knows the psychological cost of insomnia. He may silence alarms, block the manager from entering, or simply remain beside him until Jaekyung wakes naturally.

Which sets up the coming conflict:

If Jaekyung wakes late — later than the 7:00 AM schedule —he will not have enough time for his rituals.

  • No milk to ground him
  • No cold shower to reset his body
  • No perfume to cover the phantom scent of childhood shame
  • No hair styling to reinstall the Emperor crown

But none of this would matter, as long as doc Dan accepts him like that. However, it is clear that the fight will take place no matter what, as this match will be shown on TV! How do I know this? A match scheduled at noon on a Saturday is not designed for a French television audience — it is one of the least convenient viewing times for locals. But it aligns perfectly with broadcast windows in Korea and the United States, which means the bout is already plugged into international programming. In other words, the machinery is running. Cameras will roll, sponsors will expect coverage, and the event cannot be canceled simply because the champion oversleeps. The celebrity can arrive late, for he brings money. Joo Jaekyung will walk into the arena not as the branded champion, but as the man from room 1704 (chapter 85), a man who slept deeply, whose hair still remembers being down, whose body still carries Dan’s warmth. And this is the true downfall: He risks entering a match not as the Emperor, but as himself. And such a transformation could make people realize how young the “MMA fighter” is in the end. At the same time, his late arrival could create the illusion that the Emperor is not mentally and physically ready for a fight so that Arnaud Gabriel underestimates his opponent.

But here’s the irony — this may be the very thing that makes him stronger. Room 1704 becomes the space where the champion’s trauma evaporates, where instinct replaces ritual, where softness replaces armor. If he oversleeps, it means he felt safe — an emotional victory far more significant than a title defense.

For Park Namwook, however, oversleeping is a managerial nightmare. It is disorder. It is unpredictability. It is autonomy — the one thing he cannot manage. And when he stands before the DND sign, powerless, he may finally realize that his control and authority were always an illusion. He is not the boss or the owner of the gym. The Emperor no longer belongs to schedules, rituals, or institutions. He belongs to the one person behind that door. And that would be doc Dan who overlooked everything in Paris: his food (chapter 82), his look (chapter 82), his free time and took care of the champion’s emotional needs. In Paris, the « hamster » became the champion’s manager de facto, the unofficial right-hand. That’s why if they are late and they need a scapegoat, the manager can blame the physical therapist for the « delay », he would always come late to appointments (chapter 17: meeting the doctor) and to the fights (Busan, in the States).

Room 1704 is not the site of a downfall. It is the site of awakening.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: The Words 🎆The Firework 🎆 Stole 🥷 (second version)

Finally a Love Confession?

Among all the scenes in Jinx, none has ignited more speculation than the moment inside the Ferris wheel cabin—those few seconds when Joo Jaekyung’s 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 좋아해 김단 (jo-a-hae Kim Dan)—“I like you, Kim Dan.”

And truthfully, the scene encourages such a reading. Fireworks often accompany love confessions in East Asian media (chapter 84) —especially 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 champion’s refusal to repeat himself (chapter 84) would make perfect narrative sense—confession lost, moment gone, courage spent.

But before we accept the romantic surface, we must pause. Something about the staging feels off—deliberately 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 love—or 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 champion’s 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 Dan—the boy who has always longed to be chosen—could not hear it.

The Mechanics of a Stolen Confession

Everything about the Ferris wheel cabin — the positioning, the posture, the lighting — 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 — a classic defensive posture — 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 — 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 — 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 therapist’s gaze. (chapter 84) The words escape sideways — 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 “speaks” 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? “I lost…”, 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 “I lost” 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 “loss” 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 Dan’s misunderstanding exposes the true meaning of the tree confession. Why did Jaekyung suddenly accept the match? Why frame it entirely in terms of “I need you for these two fights”?

Because work was the only safe language he had left for reconnecting with the therapist. He could not say, “Please stay with me.” He could not say, “I don’t want to lose you.” So he said the only thing he believed he was allowed to say:
“I need you for my return match… and my title match.”

It is a substitution — a mask — 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 — Jaekyung’s 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 — not to defeat, but to vulnerability and selflessness. The champion who once insisted on keeping Kim Dan “one way or another” (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 — 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 — but a truth about himself. Yet this emotional shift, as liberating as it is, does not make him ready to say “I love you” or even “I like you” in a clean, intentional, adult way. In fact, the opposite is true. When guilt falls away, he does not step into romantic maturity — 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 mother’s gaze, no father’s 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 Jaekyung’s eyes. (chapter 84) The panel hides them completely — not out of convenience, but out of protection. It is as if the author herself shields the wolf’s 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 — half internal, half external — 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 “I love you” or even “I like you.”
Such sentences require three things he does not possess yet:

  1. A sense that he himself is lovable → he does not. Hence he still views himself as nonredeemable and as a burden.
  2. A sense that Kim Dan feels the same → 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.
  3. A sense of equality in the relationship → 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 — and what fits the emotional mechanics of the scene — 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 — 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 “Never mind.”

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 “I wish to …”, whispered by a man who has never held anyone without ownership, is more intimate than any polished “I love you.”

And Mingwa knows it. The confession is blurred not because it declares love, but because it reveals Jaekyung’s inexperience with love. He can finally be honest — but he cannot yet be articulate.

He can reach — but he cannot yet claim. He is pure — 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.

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 — 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 — the words the firework stole — 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 Dan’s 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 therapist’s 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 — 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: (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 — (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 — desperately — 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. That’s why I wondered for a while if Joo Jaekyung had not copied Arnaud Gabriel’s 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 doctor’s 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 “I like you” or “I love you,” but a longing to be seen — and therefore, to be wanted. Every wound in Jaekyung’s 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 Dan’s 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 Dan’s 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 “I love you.” He cannot even say “I like you.” Those sentences belong to someone who has matured emotionally — 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!” (안고 싶어 너). 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 — too soft to be caught, swallowed by the firework’s explosion — 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) 안고 싶어 너: 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 doesn’t hear Jaekyung’s confessions. But as I argued earlier, we must question whether this is truly the case — 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, “I couldn’t hear what you said.”
He says: “I didn’t catch that.” “Catch” implies arms, grasping, holding — 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 — 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 — 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 Dan’s 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 Dan’s 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 — 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 — 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 – sound – silence in episode 19
vs
sound – silence – 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 — if not the wording — 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 parents’ 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 — 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 — 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 — 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 Jaekyung’s whispered sentence — a gift of raw affection — triggered the memory of another gift? What if the words under the fireworks echoed the tone of something said just before Dan’s 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.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Love 💘 is in the Air 🌬️🎶(part 1)

When Air Becomes Emotion

There are chapters in Jinx that feel like pauses in the storm, moments when the story seems to inhale before beating again. Chapter 83 is one of them. At first glance, it resembles a “date”: the two men wear complementary headbands — white and black, (chapter 83) mirroring the contrast of their clothes and their personalities — and the champion even leans in to lick a smear of ice cream from the therapist’s finger, an image so intimate that any passerby would mistake them for lovers. And yet, not quite. The physical therapist approaches the outing as part of his job, a therapeutic break meant to soothe his patient’s nerves (chapter 83), while the athlete approaches the day with a far more personal hope. He stages the rides strategically, intending to appear strong and reliable so that his companion might grow frightened and instinctively reach for him (chapter 83) — just as he once did in the swimming pool. (chapter 80) Beneath the surface, what looks like a date is a carefully orchestrated attempt to recreate closeness without naming it. To conclude, whereas the episode flirts with the aesthetics of a date, the intentions behind it remain mismatched, unspoken, and unresolved. It is not an official date, yet it does not behave like a simple work-related excursion either, and we as readers are left suspended in that tantalizing in-between space — as if the very moment were hanging weightless above the ground, waiting for someone to name what it truly is.

As we follow them through the amusement park, we sense something shifting. The air itself seems to vibrate (chapter 83), charged with a warmth that seasoned Jinxphiles will recognize immediately: a tension between joy and tension, duty and desire, wind and water. And then we see him — the usually anxious physical therapist — smiling with his eyes closed, arms raised, as if offering himself to the sky and joining his “companions”, the clouds. In this panel, his hands — so often clenched, overworked, or trembling from exhaustion, fear or anger — are finally resting, suspended in a gesture of pure lightness and ease.

This moment is more than simple amusement; it is a brief liberation from the weight he has carried for years. For the first time, the man who usually survives on caution allows himself to rise, to laugh, to surrender to the wind. He appears almost weightless — as if something inside him has quietly unclenched. And as I watched this unexpected lightness unfold, something else surfaced just as naturally: a melody. Soft at first, almost accidental. It felt as though the chapter itself were humming in the background — John Paul Young’s Love Is in the Air.

Its melody, repetitive and gently rising, mirrors the slow ascent of the Ferris wheel: a circular motion that builds toward a quiet crescendo. And what might strike you — almost instinctively — is how naturally the lyrics seem to align with the chapter’s emotional beats, as if each verse echoed a panel.

— suddenly these lines become more than a melody. They become a key to understanding what neither the fighter nor the therapist dares to say aloud. (chapter 83) The song becomes more than a soundtrack; it becomes an interpretive key, guiding us through the protagonists’ unspoken emotions and shadowed hesitations.

At the same time, chapter 83 mirrors earlier moments of their story—especially the opening episode and the charged night-and-morning sequence of chapters 44 (chapter 44) and 45, where desire blurred into illusion and (chapter 45) reality collided with unspoken longing. The tension between dream (chapter 83) and waking life, quietly present in the lyrics themselves, resurfaces at the park amusement as well — though its meaning will become clearer as we look deeper. In season 1, the boundaries between the celebrity fighter and his therapist were blurred in ways neither of them understood: professional on the surface, intimate in practice, yet undefined in essence. Physical closeness existed, but emotional clarity did not. Now, in the bright openness of this amusement-park afternoon and evening, we are invited to look again. What exactly is their relationship here? A supervised rest day? A moment of companionship? The first fragile step toward something tenderer that neither man is ready to articulate?

And if their bond no longer fits the categories imposed by their roles, then we are left with the question that rises with them into the purple sky: What is love—when the line between duty and desire dissolves into the air itself?

Dan — “Love is in the air, everywhere I look around”

The first verse of the song insists on perception — on looking, hearing, sensing the presence of love in the world before one dares to name it. And this is precisely what happens to the physical therapist in chapter 83. When he sees a child running toward a mascot for a hug (chapter 83) or a family laughing together (chapter 83), something in him shifts so quietly that one might miss it at first glance: he smiles. (chapter 83) Not out of politeness, not to reassure someone else, not through exhaustion or habit. He smiles because he witnesses joy — and for once, it does not make him feel smaller. It does not activate the reflexes of deprivation or fear that shaped his life from childhood to early adulthood. On the other hand, the smile he gives in that moment is not radiant, not wide, not unguarded. It is a grin, a restrained upward curve that reveals both warmth and hesitation. His joy is present — unmistakably so — but it is still contained, as if his body has not yet learned how to express happiness without caution. This small, hesitant grin shows us a man who is beginning to open, yet still holds himself back, afraid of wanting too much.

And what makes this expression so striking is what it lacks. There is no envy in his eyes. No longing to trade places with the laughing family. No bitterness. No “why not me?” His gaze does not grab at the happiness he sees; it simply receives it. This absence is meaningful. For someone who grew up experiencing loss, scarcity, and emotional withholding, joy witnessed in others often triggers one of two reactions:

  • greed (“I want that, too.”)
  • hurt (“Why can’t I have that?”)

But Dan feels neither. He simply watches and grins — shyly, lightly, almost apologetically — as if happiness is something he is allowed to observe but not yet to claim. The expression reflects the quiet discipline of someone who has spent years dampening his own desires so he wouldn’t be disappointed. His joy is limited, yes, but also genuine. It is the joy of someone who is relearning safety through the world around him, step by delicate step.

And this is precisely why the grin matters. It shows that his emotional defenses are beginning to loosen, but not collapse. He allows the warmth of the scenery to touch him, without reaching out for more. He permits himself to feel — but in moderation, in the smallest possible dose that won’t frighten him. It is, therefore, the perfect visual embodiment of the song’s opening line:

because for the first time, he is looking around with the capacity to notice, even if he still doesn’t dare to hope.

Back in episode 1, the world was something he endured: every sound (chapter 1) reminded him of responsibility , every sight (chapter 1) pulled him back to duty or scarcity. Happiness belonged to others; he lived on the margins, always working, always surviving. But here, in the brightness of the amusement park (chapter 83), his gaze is finally unshackled. He looks outward and takes in the warmth of strangers’ affection without translating it into loss or longing. (chapter 83) Like described above, he is neither envious nor resentful. Instead, he experiences a fragile form of joy — not through himself, but through others. It is indirect happiness, a borrowed ray of light, but it is still happiness.

This scene reveals a subtle but profound transformation: the world no longer feels hostile. For a child who grew up believing that everything — security, love, parents — could vanish without warning or bring pain, the outside world was always tinged with danger. Now, for the first time, it becomes a landscape where he feels safe (chapter 83), though an accident could actually occur there. This contrasts so much to his thoughts in episode 1. (chapter 1) The amusement park becomes a place in which love exists openly, visibly, harmlessly. The lyrics capture this awakening beautifully: “And I don’t know if I’m being foolish… but it’s something that I must believe in.” (chapter 83) This is exactly what his smile expresses. He has no proof that love could include him. No certainty that he deserves it. No assurance that daring to hope won’t lead to disappointment. And yet, he believes — not because someone reassures him, but because his own senses finally give him permission.

When he smiles at the child or the family, he is not imagining himself in their place, nor projecting himself into some idealized domestic future. He simply lets the warm air settle in his chest. Happiness exists. It exists near him. It exists without punishing him. And if it exists, then perhaps — perhaps — he is not excluded from it forever. This is the first real beat of hope, the quiet reawakening of a heart that has spent too long underwater. The therapist who once sank in the pool out of fear now rises through the air of the amusement park simply by witnessing life unfold around him. His joy does not come from the ride; it initially comes from seeing love in the air, exactly as the song describes.

Yet this joy remains delicate, tentative — the kind that sits quietly at the edge of his lips. His smile is not wide or unguarded; it is a small, restrained grin, (chapter 83) a gesture that reveals how carefully he still manages his own emotions. For a man who learned early in life to minimize his desires to avoid disappointment, this gentle openness is already a form of courage. And then something unexpected happens.

Dan — “Love is in the air, In the risin’ of the sun


The moment he realizes that the fighter (chapter 83) — the man who seems invincible and superior in every domain — has never been to an amusement park, a spark ignites inside him. (chapter 83) His heart, which moments earlier beat quietly in observation, begins to race with excitement. For the first time, he is equal to the athlete. At the same time, for the first time, he is the one with experience or power. 😲 How so? For the first time, age becomes real (chapter 83): the physical therapist is twenty-nine, the athlete twenty-six.

Dan’s seniority — long irrelevant, long suppressed — begins to surface, not through conscious thought, but through instinct. He does not step forward because he is older; he steps forward because, for once, he knows something the fighter does not: his own desires. His body moves before his mind names the change. His voice lifts before he understands. (chapter 83) He suddenly steps into a role he has never been allowed to inhabit before: that of the knowledgeable one, the guide, the hyung.

And this moment exposes a quiet truth about his past that the story had always hinted at: he has never been allowed to inhabit his age. (chapter 78) Dan’s lifetime of passivity did not come from lack of intelligence or lack of will; it came from conditioning. He was raised by a guardian who loved him, yes, but who also unintentionally infantilized him. He was not allowed to question her words and decisions. His grandmother, who was not just older but twice his senior in authority, experience, and certainty, occupied every position of knowledge in his life. She decided what was dangerous, what was sensible, what was allowed, and what was forbidden. Her worldview dominated so completely that Dan’s own judgment never had room to form. His grandmother’s authority was absolute — not malicious, but unquestioned — and Dan learned very early that his role in the household was not to decide but to obey.

The clearest illustration appears in Chapter 7, when she panics about the money he could spend for her treatment and immediately demands: (chapter 7) As if a twenty-nine-year-old man — a working professional — were incapable of making a responsible financial decision. Dan’s “Of course not!” is instinctive, defensive, almost childlike, exposing the emotional hierarchy between them. In her eyes, he is not an adult with agency, but a boy who must be corrected, cautioned, overridden.

And yet — paradoxically — he was forced to become an adult far too early which the grandmother acknowledges. (chapter 65) However, observe that here, she feigns ignorance, she doesn’t know the origins of this metamorphosis. On the other hand, it is clear that she is well aware of the cause. He worked to support them both. He paid the hospital bills. He negotiated the debts. He shouldered the responsibility of survival.

And the greatest irony? The debt is in his name. (chapter 17) Legally, financially, the burden is his. But emotionally, symbolically, he was never allowed to own that responsibility; it was neither recognized nor validated. Instead, his grandmother continued to treat him as a child incapable of navigating the world on his own — even though he was the one saving them both.

This contradiction shaped him: He learned duty without authority, responsibility without recognition, adulthood without autonomy. He was taught to carry the weight of the world but never the permission to decide how to carry it. And now, we finally comprehend why the physical therapist remained so passive throughout Season 2. By giving him choices (chapter 77) and asking for his opinion (chapter 83), Joo Jaekyung is liberating his fated partner.

And this is precisely why the moment in Chapter 83 hits so deeply. (chapter 83) For the first time, he is not the silent follower but the one who leads. For the first time, his taste and desire matter.
For the first time, he is allowed to choose — where to walk, what to try, how to spend the day.

And in that instant, something long-suppressed rises to the surface: the part of him that was never permitted to grow up. His racing heart is not just excitement; it is the awakening of a self that had been dormant for years — the self who finally, quietly, steps into the light. As if echoing John Paul Young’s quiet promise,
“Love is in the air, in the risin’ of the sun,”
something inside him rises too — a self long buried under duty and financial strain. Chapter 83 unfolds beneath the sun, but its emotional lighting belongs to him: not chronological morning, but the symbolic morning of a man finally waking up. We see this most clearly in the moment he blushes and murmurs: (chapter 83). His face, half in shadow and half in light, appears as though it is gradually emerging from darkness. It feels like dawn breaking across his features — the soft illumination of newfound boldness, desire, and possibility. Even if the scene takes place in the afternoon, his face carries the light of morning, the brightness of a heart beginning to beat for itself. (chapter 83) And this is why his heart speeds up. Why he blushes. Why he suddenly moves with purpose. Why he becomes the guide: “I’ll be your guide today!”

This is not merely excitement. It is the first time his joy has weight and his seniority has meaning. It is the first time he can lead without fear. It is the first time he can offer joy rather than labor. In this fleeting, luminous moment, the therapist steps into the adulthood he earned long ago — not out of duty, but out of freedom. And paradoxically, by stepping into adulthood, he is finally allowed to reclaim something he was robbed of: childhood. Thus he receives a huge Teddy Bear from the athlete. (chapter 83) The toy from his childhood had vanished, probably thrown away because it had lost its role and doc Dan had no longer the time to play. At the same time, we should question ourselves who had offered it to doc Dan. (chapter 47)

The man who had to shoulder debts, bills, and survival before he even finished school now gets to experience what ordinary children take for granted — wearing a headband, tasting ice cream, pointing excitedly toward the next ride.
His joy is not childish; it is restorative. It is the healing of a stage of life he never truly lived. And with every shift of light and fresh air, a new part of Dan awakens — his agency, his boldness, his playfulness, even his shy but stubborn desires. (chapter 83) And this awakening has another consequence: for the first time, money disappears as a source of fear.

Dan, who used to feel uncomfortable in front of presents or at the slightest expense, suddenly moves with ease. (chapter 83) He accepts the fighter’s generosity without guilt (chapter 83), yet offers his own in return — buying the drinks, fetching the ice cream, participating in the flow of giving rather than shrinking from it. (chapter 83) No one questions cost; no one frames affection as financial burden. This reciprocity is gentle, natural, unspoken. It stands in stark contrast to Heesung (chapter 32), who immediately reduced generosity to calculation. He implied that doc Dan couldn’t afford it. His smile was a lure; his kindness, a transaction.

But with Jaekyung, Dan is not a debtor or a burden. Money stops being a battlefield. He is simply someone who can say yes and accept a huge Teddy Bear. (chapter 83) In fact, he loves the “gift”. He is someone who can offer something back (the drink, but also concerns (chapter 83) Someone who can choose.

Here, in the sunlit corners of the amusement park, the therapist is no longer the boy (chapter 65) who was forced into adulthood nor the adult who was treated like a child. He is finally both: (chapter 83) That’s the reason why Mingwa placed a boy with his father between the couple in this image. At the same time, she also insinuated that Joo Jaekyung was acting not only as a father, but also as a “boy”. That’s why love is in the air… they come to accept their true self. The two protagonists are both adults and kids!
Now, doc Dan is free enough to play and enjoy the rides (chapter 83), and respected enough to lead. And in that rare space, something long dormant begins to bloom, the return of the little boy’s innocence and smile! (chapter 83) “Love is in the air, In the whisper of the trees” Keep in mind that according to my interpretation, the tree embodies the physical therapist.

Just two people sharing the cost of a shared day — naturally, effortlessly, without negotiation. It is a small detail, but it signals a tectonic emotional shift: he no longer sees himself as someone who must earn affection through restraint, sacrifice, or poverty. He no longer sees himself as a burden!

Joo Jaekyung — “Love is in the air, in the thunder of the sea”

If Dan awakens in air, Jaekyung is pulled, almost violently, toward water. (chapter 83) The second half of the verse — “in the thunder of the sea” — finds its embodiment not in waves or ocean spray, but in a wooden flying boat swinging high above an amusement park. (chapter 83) It is here, of all places, that the façade of the undefeated champion bends, flickers, and reveals the frightened boy hiding beneath the man. (chapter 83)

At first, the athlete walks through the park with a confidence bordering on theatrical. He speaks like someone who knows the rules of amusement rides (chapter 83), although the knowledge is borrowed, second-hand, quoted from “the guys at the gym.” He buys cute headbands (chapter 83), pays for almost everything (chapter 83), selects a giant teddy bear as a prize. He tries to perform adulthood, to appear experienced, reliable, worldly — the one who leads. That’s why his reaction after the ride on the boat resembles a lot to the father: scared of rides (chapter 83) And yet this performance is delicate. One touch is all it takes to fracture it. (chapter 83) Because the truth is that Jaekyung, too, is both an adult and a child. Thus the author used many “chibi” in this chapter: (chapter 83) He is the man who finances the day, but also the boy who has never stepped inside an amusement park. (chapter 83) He is the warrior who never loses, but also the boy who becomes jealous of a rollercoaster because it made Dan smile. (chapter 83) He is the emperor of the ring, but also the boy whose innocence was stolen far too early through neglect, violence, and trauma.

This duality surfaces even during the ride moves. (chapter 83) When he sees Dan laughing with the wind in his hair, he is first moved. (chapter 83) For the first time, he truly notices the doctor’s joy and happiness. However, later his thoughts tighten into a childish pout: (chapter 83) The jealousy is not malicious — it is heartbreakingly sincere. It belongs to someone who has never been the source of gentle affection. Someone who has always been valued for power, not warmth. Someone whose earliest memories taught him that attention comes only when he performs. What he fails to notice that he is still behind the doctor’s happiness. How so? It is because he was the one who had suggested this trip!!

But let’s return our attention to the boat, the ride who combines water and air. The great athlete — the dragon of the cage, the man who terrifies opponents simply by standing in front of them — folds inward like a frightened child. (chapter 83) As the ride swings, his fingers clamp around the safety bar, his head drops, his breathing stutters, and his posture collapses into defensive instinct. The motion is too familiar. Too close to something his body remembers even when his mind tries to forget. One might think, it is related to his fear of fall. However, it is only partially true. His dizziness on the flying boat is not simply fear of a ride, nor the comedic reversal of roles between the fearless champion and the timid therapist. It is the physical echo of a lifetime of trauma — the kind the body never forgets.

A fighter’s training does not harden the vestibular system; it punishes it. Years of repeated blows (chapter 72)— even those that fall short of a diagnosable concussion — accumulate inside the inner ear like invisible fractures. The system responsible for balance, spatial orientation, and visual stabilization becomes worn, over-calibrated to impact but under-prepared for fluctuation. A man can be conditioned to withstand punches that would floor an ordinary person, yet still falter when the world tilts beneath him.

This is exactly what we witness on the flying boat. Jaekyung turns pale long before the motion becomes violent. His breathing shifts. His body stiffens. He clings to the safety bar not out of embarrassment, but because his senses are betraying him. These are classic signs of vestibular sensitivity — the lightheadedness, the nausea triggered by visual motion, the momentary whiteouts where vision loses stability, the delayed recovery after sudden shifts in height. Boxers experience it. Wrestlers experience it. MMA fighters live with it. But Jaekyung’s case carries a sharper edge.

Because his vulnerability is not merely the byproduct of sport.

It carries the ghost of childhood instability — the disorientation of being struck by someone who should have protected him, the instinctive bracing for impact, the nights when the world spun not from amusement but from fear. (chapter 72) The body he trained into steel was built upon a nervous system shaped by violence. Let’s not forget that before his father died, the latter hit his head with a bottle once again. (chapter 73) Finally, he started fighting at such a young age, (chapter 72), actually boxing at such a young age is limited to non-contact activities like footwork drills, shadowboxing, jump rope, basic strength & coordination, bag work with very light gloves. So there is no sparring, no head contact. (chapter 72)

It can survive force, but unpredictability — the rocking of a boat, the sudden drop of a height — awakens old alarms he never learned to silence. And now, you comprehend why Mingwa placed this panel just before they got on the boat! (chapter 83) This is what his father should have done in the past.

This is why the flying boat becomes his “thunder of the sea.” Not a thrill. A warning.

While Dan rises with the air (chapter 83) — light, joyful, awakened — Jaekyung is dragged back toward the element he once drowned in. His dizziness is the somatic memory of a boy who learned to endure chaos by stillness, who now finds himself unable to breathe when the world refuses to stay still.

And yet, even after this destabilizing moment, the athlete refuses to give up (chapter 83), thus they try other rides. It is important, because it implies that Joo Jaekyung is gradually leaving the water! This explicates why later something extraordinary happens. (chapter 83) He opens one eye — just one — and in that tiny gesture, the entire emotional axis of the chapter tilts. It is not the instinct of a fighter checking his surroundings; it is the instinct of a man searching for someone. The flying boat lurches beneath him, the air rushing past in violent arcs, yet all his focus narrows to a single point of stillness: Kim Dan.
(chapter 83) This moment mirrors Dan’s earlier “sunrise” panel, but in reverse. Where Dan’s face emerged from shadow into light, Jaekyung’s eye emerges from strain into clarity.
Where Dan stepped into awakening, Jaekyung clings to consciousness, seeking an anchor.

And that is why this panel is so quietly devastating. He does not open his eye to judge the ride or assess danger;
he opens it to find the lightness he cannot produce within himself, due to the guilt he is carrying in himself.

He is pale, dizzy, destabilized — the seat rocks like a wave he cannot fight — and instinctively, his gaze reaches outward for the one thing that steadies him. And there he sees it:

Dan smiling. Dan at ease. Dan radiant in the wind. (chapter 83)

It hits him like a beam of sunlight breaking through nausea, fear, and vertigo. (chapter 83) In the song’s language, this is his “rising of the sun” moment — not because he feels lightness, but because he perceives it in someone else. The warmth he cannot generate becomes visible in the face of the man beside him.

For Dan, love rises like morning.
For Jaekyung, love enters like light through a crack — a single opened eye.

And in that sliver of brightness, he breathes again. It is a pure parallel to the song’s line — “Love is in the air, everywhere I look around” — because that is exactly what he does: he looks around, and his gaze lands on Dan. The doctor’s smile becomes the only stable point in the shifting world. Jaekyung’s competitiveness, his jealousy of the rollercoaster, his greed for Dan’s smile — all of it collapses into something softer once his body falters.

For the first time, he allows himself to rely on someone else. To conclude, the ride — with its water-like arcs and unpredictable shifts — becomes a symbolic reenactment of the environment that shaped him. This is the song’s “thunder of the sea”: violent motion, destabilizing memory, fear disguised as nausea.

Yet despite his struggle, something remarkable awakens. Joo Jaekyung is still enjoying his time with his fated partner. Thus he wished to stay longer there. (chapter 83) It is because he enjoys listening to doc Dan. He enjoys his voice and words. This is not the internal voice of a fighter; it is the voice of someone falling in love without yet understanding how strong his feelings are.

He is too dizzy to perform adulthood, too overwhelmed to hide behind rank or reputation. The fragility he has always repressed leaks through every line of his body — and for the first time, he lets it. Thus he follows his heart and wins a huge teddy bear and buys headbands.

To conclude, the flying boat marks the moment (chapter 83),when Joo Jaekyung is stripped of his armor. The amusement park returns him to something raw, trembling, unfinished. But instead of shame, there is warmth. Instead of anger, there is gratitude. (chapter 83) Instead of retreat, there is reaching — a quiet but unmistakable reaching toward the man beside him. The problem is that he is still too scared to voice his thoughts in front of the physical therapist.

This represents another step of Jaekyung’s transformation: the shift from solitary dragon to partner, from survivor to someone who longs to be understood. And here, the parallel with his earlier metaphor becomes striking.
Back in Chapter 29, he described challengers as hyenas nipping at his heels , (chapter 29) a swarm of predators waiting for him to slow down. His career was an ocean of teeth and waves — constant motion, constant danger. Thus I detected a progression. In episode 69, he jumped onto the boat (chapter 69), then at the amusement park, the boat was in the air (chapter 83) Thus I deduce that the boat is “the last wave” he rides.

Once it stops, his world no longer moves with the violence of water. When he ascends the Ferris wheel (chapter 83), he rises into air — the first air he has breathed without fear.

He leaves the sea behind. He leaves the waves of fighters behind. He leaves the ocean of survival behind. Therefore I am sensing that the athlete is about to change his career and path. He will stop acting as a fighter only. That moment of ascent — quiet, suspended, pink-lit — is the moment he finally becomes what he was always meant to be: not prey chased across waves, not a beast trapped in turbulence, but a dragon lifting into the sky.

And the first breath of that ascent — the first hint of air entering lungs long constrained — begins beside Dan, in a gently swinging gondola at sunset.

The two men meet there in the subtle overlap between air and sea —
between awakening and unraveling,
between lightness and instability,
between childhood and adulthood.

The whisper of the trees meets the thunder of the sea.
And the love that neither can yet name floats quietly between them.

The Ferris Wheel — Where Dream and Reality Finally Meet

The emotional architecture of Chapter 83 only reveals its full depth when placed beside the earlier night-and-morning dyad of Chapters 44 and 45. Those chapters form a pair of opposites: a false dream (chapter 44) followed by a false dawn. Chapter 44 unfolds in artificial night — neon (chapter 44) and night lamp (chapter 44) — a landscape where nothing is stable and nothing is truly felt. Jaekyung is drunk, his consciousness slipping in and out of awareness; Dan, overwhelmed and inexperienced (when it comes to relationship), projects meaning onto a moment that cannot hold it. He wishes time would “stand still,” but he is wishing against reality. The entire scene is built on one-sided desire. The intimacy is sensory, not emotional. Dan longs to “get to know” (chapter 44) someone who is not present, rather drunk. But getting to know someone means communication. It is precisely the illusion captured in the song’s confession: I don’t know if I’m just dreaming… I don’t know if I see it true… And he wasn’t seeing it true; he was dreaming alone.

Then comes Chapter 45 — cruel daylight, harsh and flat, the sun stripped of warmth. (chapter 45) Morning light becomes a scalpel. There is no magic left, no gentleness, no room for misunderstanding. Jaekyung’s bluntness (chapter 45) annihilates the illusion Dan had constructed the night before. This is not heartbreak; it is disenchantment, the almost physical pain of realizing a moment meant nothing to the other person involved. Chapter 44 was the dream, and Chapter 45 was its punishment. Together they show a relationship out of sync, two people whose desires never touch at the same time. One wishes for home and attention, while the other has no idea that he is loved. So far, he has never heard this: “I love you”. One tries to reach out emotionally, while the other remains absent. However, when they are both lucid, none of them are totally honest, as they are self confused. Thus they are in two different worlds.

Chapter 83 is the first time those worlds merge. Hence we have the purple sky! (chapter 83) This scene confirmed my previous interpretation about the symbolism of the blue/golden hour.

Everything that failed in Chapters 44 and 45 is repaired — not by repetition, but by transformation. (chapter 83) The setting is no longer artificial night nor cold morning. It is true daylight — warm, golden, forgiving. Both men are fully conscious. Both are vulnerable. Both are honest. Both are sober. And for the first time, both want the same thing at the same time. This mutuality is the quiet miracle that turns an ordinary Ferris wheel cabin into a sacred emotional space. When Dan looks toward the horizon and murmurs, (chapter 83), the wolf thinks, with disarming sincerity, he is thankful toward the physical therapist. ” The wish that destroyed them in Chapter 44 now binds them together in Chapter 83. Suspended high in the sky, they share the same breath, the same light, the same fragile desire. This is where John Paul Young’s lyrics finally find their home: And I don’t know if I’m being foolish… don’t know if I’m being wise… but it’s something that I must believe in… and it’s there when I look in your eyes. And now it is the champion’s turn to become brave and confess his feelings to doc Dan, but like it was just revealed: Joo Jaekyung refused to repeat his confession! (chapter 83)

And the Ferris wheel forces them to talk to each other and face that truth. Unlike that night when Jaekyung could simply roll over and fall asleep, or that morning when Dan could retreat into silence, the Ferris wheel offers no escape route. They are trapped together — enclosed, elevated, suspended. Neither can walk away. (chapter 45) Neither can pretend not to feel. Neither can avoid the other’s gaze. They must see each other as they are, in that moment. And miraculously, neither flinches. There is no denial, no deflection, no cruelty. Only two men who finally dare to look. Whereas Chapter 44 let them hide behind darkness and drunkenness, and Chapter 45 forced them into cold exposure, Chapter 83 holds them in a gentle, suspended in-between: the space where dream and reality finally meet.

And Mingwa gives this moment a witness (chapter 83) — the enormous Teddy Bear Jaekyung won earlier that day. In the cramped Ferris wheel cabin, the bear sits with them, silent and soft, absorbing every unspoken emotion. It becomes the guardian of the day’s truth, the counterweight to the night of Chapter 44. Nothing from this moment can be denied, rewritten, or dismissed as drunken illusion. The bear remembers. It carries the warmth of Dan’s rediscovered childhood, the soreness of Jaekyung’s fear on the boat, the sweetness of their awkwardness, the courage of their mutual wish. Later, when Dan sees the bear again, he will remember not the fear of falling, not the dizziness, not the awkwardness — but the moment Jaekyung looked at him and apologized to him. Hence later the doctor is seen looking at his present (chapter 84) and holding the bear’s hand. (chapter 84) The bear contains the view, the sunset, the air, the honesty — everything that neither of them can run away from now.

This is why the Ferris wheel scene is more than a romantic interlude; it is a structural correction of the narrative wound created in Chapters 44 and 45. It does not repeat the night. It redeems it. It heals the morning. It merges the suspended magic of Chapter 44 with the daylight honesty of Chapter 45 — but only because both are willing, present, open. For the first time, their timing aligns. For the first time, neither is dreaming alone. For the first time, love is truly in the air, not as fantasy nor delusion, but as a shared, breathing reality. But wait… in episode 84, there is no “I like you,” no dramatic declaration, no romance in words. So it looks like my association was wrong. (chapter 84) Instead, what rises between them is something quieter and far more intimate: penance. The fighter does not confess love; he confesses his faults. He does not offer desire; he offers regret. In Jinx, this is the deeper beginning of love, because an apology centers the other person’s pain rather than one’s own feelings. Then Jaekyung admits he was wrong, he gives Dan something far more valuable than a confession — he gives recognition. The hamster has rights, he can express his thoughts and feelings.

This is why the air in the cabin feels charged despite the lack of explicit emotion. Love appears not as a statement but as a change in behavior, a cessation of superiority, a willingness to repair what was broken. For the first time, they meet on equal ground: the athlete stripped of his dominance, the therapist freed from his habitual submission. Neither plays a role; both simply exist honestly in the same small space. They are both humans.

And in this suspended moment, John Paul Young’s refrain drifts quietly into the scene—not as music, but as meaning. Because what unfolds in the cabin is exactly the tension the song names:

Both men stand at that threshold. Dan is wise enough to hope again, hence he is holding the teddy bear’s hand (chapter 84), but foolish enough to remain cautious and remain silent. (chapter 84)

Jaekyung is foolish enough not repeat his words (chapter 84) (chapter 84), but wise enough to regret immediately. (chapter 84) He is also wise enough to care deeply and repair instead of demand. Thus his apology feels so genuine.

Their intimacy is not built on certainty but on uncertainty bravely shared. Not on declarations, but on communication—hesitant, imperfect, but real. Not on fantasy, but on the courage to face each other without hiding. And that’s the common point between these two places in the air (chapter 45) (chapter 84) (chapter 84) Both men are not brave enough to confess their true feelings to their fated partner. Hence both came to regret their actions. (chapter 46) (chapter 46) The champion also played “dumb”. Thus the pillow got punched later. (chapter 84) He shouldn’t have thrown away his “feelings”. So by rubbing the hand of the toy, doc Dan is gradually expressing the return of “his greed and hope”.

The Ferris wheel becomes the place where foolishness and wisdom merge, where vulnerability replaces power, and where air itself begins to carry the shape of a future neither of them can yet name…but both can finally feel.

I was almost finished, when chapter 84 got released. Hence I could enrich the last part.

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.

Jinx: Breathless in the Light 🏰😶‍🌫️ – part 2

Since today, a new chapter will be released, this second part can not be long. Yet, I wanted to share my latest observations before the publication of chapter 83.

In the first part, I focused on the origins of the champion’s breathlessness and its cure: the amusement park. However, the air was not the only important element in episode 82. Let’s take another look at this image: (chapter 81) The plane soars not only above the Alps, but also above a vast river (probably the Rhône)— two landscapes that silently echo the dual composition of breath itself. Breath is made of air and water: oxygen and vapor, wind and moisture. (chapter 82) In that sense, the clouds surrounding the aircraft are not mere weather; they are the perfect union of the two elements that sustain life.

Joo Jaekyung’s breathlessness, then, is not simply a physiological lack of oxygen — it is the absence of water, the missing element of tenderness and flow. The champion has spent his life breathing air devoid of moisture, surviving on discipline, pride, and control — a dry atmosphere where emotion cannot condense. (chapter 82) That’s why, when Potato offers him a bottle of Evian, he doesn’t even look. He doesn’t need the water from the mountain and as such the world; he needs the water of the body — the intimacy, the shared moisture that reconnects him to life itself. What he truly longs for is Kim Dan’s saliva, the living trace of water transformed into affection, into care, into exchange. (chapter 81) He is longing for his lips and as such a kiss.

Only through that bodily element — through the return of water inside air — can he breathe again fully. Dan’s body literally rehydrates him. The vapor that once escaped his lungs returns as mist, as breath shared between two beings. At the same time, it teaches him how to breathe properly, the reverse of this scene in the locker room. (chapter 15)

And this elemental union anticipates the next landscape: the amusement park, where the air is filled with laughter, humidity, and movement. (chapter 82) Many attractions — the Ferris wheel, the fountain rides, the water park zones — combine air and water, height and spray, just like breath itself. And now, you understand why the champion got wounded with the spray (chapter 49) It corresponds to the negative version of the “breath”.

Another possibility is that they first share the same drink or the same ice cream (epilogue), because doc Dan wants to ensure that the drink or the ice cream is okay. (chapter 82) When Jaekyung and Dan enter the funfair, they’re not simply having fun; they’re reliving the chemistry of respiration and affection — the inhalation of joy, the exhalation of fear, the splash of renewal. The park becomes an externalized lung, a circular world of rides where water and air, play and life, are finally reconciled.

The Castle as Fairy-Tale Threshold

In the amusement park, the castle (chapter 82) stands as a replica of every child’s first dream: a place where danger ends, where curses lift, where the beast becomes human. In this new setting, the ring is replaced by an amusement park — a space where joy is no longer born from suffering. (chapter 15) The arena that once fed on pain, blood, and hierarchy gives way to a landscape of shared laughter, circular motion, and renewal. Here, entertainment is not built upon the exhaustion of bodies but upon their liberation. The crowd no longer watches to see who will fall; they rise and descend together. (chapter 82) People are more focused on their own emotions and experiences.

For Joo Jaekyung, this shift marks a fundamental redefinition of performance itself. The fighter who once turned agony into spectacle now experiences movement as play. The wolf who fought to survive in the ring learns to live among rides, fountains, and lights — spaces where the body moves not to conquer, but to feel.

Thus, the amusement park becomes his anti-ring — a sanctuary of reciprocity, where elevation and descent belong to everyone, and no one bleeds to entertain the rest. For Joo Jaekyung, who has spent his life trapped in the cycle of competition and rage, walking into that space with Kim Dan is an act of symbolic initiation. He brings the doctor — his witness and healer — into a world he has always avoided: fantasy, gentleness, illusion.

The wolf who once prowled in underground gyms now enters a castle built for children, and in doing so he accepts the possibility of becoming a fairy-tale prince — not by winning, but by transforming.

Why the “First Kiss” Matters Here

A fairy tale’s turning point is always the kiss — the moment when the spell breaks. And you might recall that I came to associate Kim Dan with Sleeping Beauty and in the illustration of that analysis, I I placed the doctor’s birthday. And that’s how I remembered here the boy’s huge smile and joy. (chapter 11) And now, pay attention to the number of the next episode: 83! The two numbers combined together make 11! As you can see, the amusement park is the most natural setting for a smile and kiss. Joo Jaekyung could even speak about his first kiss, an intimate secret that even Kim Dan doesn’t know. Confessing it there would align his personal myth with the fairy-tale architecture around him. This would make doc Dan realize that he is special contrary to the green-haired ex-lover. (chapter 42). But there’s more to it. In episode 81, Doc Dan rejects the champion’s advance — he turns his head away (chapter 81) letting the lips slip past him like water. Yet, in the very same scene, he allows a kiss on the neck, a place where breath, warmth, and pulse converge. (chapter 81) He never pushes him back. The doctor resists with the face — with speech, with identity — but not with the body. (chapter 81) And so, at the end, the athlete moves upward, trying to reach the mouth, trying to taste what remains forbidden. But he fails. (chapter 81) Why? Because the lips are not mere flesh; for Doc Dan, they are the visible border between desire and love. Jinx-lovers will remember his quiet request in the locker room (chapter 15): he links the lips to the heart — and through it, to the notion of consent. (chapter 15) To kiss him there is to ask for entry not into his body, but into his feeling.

That is why the scene at the pool stops at the threshold. The champion can touch his skin, but not yet his soul. (chapter 81) The water envelops them both — fluid, intimate — yet the final element is still missing: agreement, the meeting of air and will. Until Jaekyung learns to ask, to replace taking with invitation, the kiss will remain suspended, like a breath held underwater, waiting to surface into love. And now, you comprehend why he couldn’t achieve his goal in the swimming pool. It was, as if he was trying to recreate the situation in season 1. In other words, I deduce that there will be a confession before a kiss happens!!

From Wolf To Prince

A Jinx-lover noticed the similarities between this scene (chapter 17) and the one in front of the amusement park: (chapter 82) The two scenes mirror each other like opposite poles of Joo Jaekyung’s evolution. In both, he is dressed in black — a color that once signified anonymity and danger, but later becomes the mark of calm confidence.

In episode 17, the champion hides behind darkness. The cap pulled low conceals his eyes, his face is half-shadowed, and his clothes absorb light rather than reflect it. (chapter 17) When he intervenes to save Kim Dan from the loan sharks, he is first mistaken for one of them — a predator among predators. The irony is sharp: the man who comes to rescue looks indistinguishable from those who harm. The fighters’ world has taught him that power and fame must be hidden; he was encouraged to hide, as if the fans would attack him. He chose anonymity, unaware that this would not only isolate him but also make him appear as a thug. And don’t forget how the manager called him initially: (chapter 75) He is a monster. It was, as if the manager wanted to hide the “wolf” from people out of fear that he might attack people randomly. But the problem is that by dressing like that, he was no different from Heo Manwook. Therefore his heroism passes unnoticed, interpreted as violence and intrusion. (chapter 18) Like Batman, he moves in secrecy, protecting without ever being thanked. The outfit explains why his good deed leaves no trace of gratitude — the savior looks like the aggressor.

By episode 82, the transformation is complete. (chapter 82) He still wears black, but the darkness no longer hides him. The cap now sits higher, revealing his eyes and mouth — the organs of emotion and speech. A necklace gleams at his throat, a quiet emblem of openness. He walks beside Kim Dan in daylight, not to fight but to share joy. The man who once lurked in alleys now stands beneath the sky of the amusement park, where black absorbs light rather than extinguishes it.

The contrast encapsulates the metamorphosis of the wolf into a prince. And how did Heo Manwook call him? (chapter 17) A princeling! He was mocking him, because he knew that the fights were actually rigged. That’s why he called him fake. (chapter 17) This new connection reinforces my theory that the schemers are anticipating the Emperor’s demise. (chapter 82) Thus Arnaud Gabriel’s words are full of irony. There’s no luck in this match. However, the antagonists are not anticipating a metamorphosis. The wolf hides and strikes; the prince reveals and protects. The wolf saves without witnesses; the prince loves in full view. In the ring’s darkness he fought to survive; in the park’s brightness he learns to live and love. And the moment Joo Jaekyung is freed from his curse and can breathe, his next game will be different. Why? It is because the champion has another reason to make doc Dan’s wish to come true: they should work together for a long time! And observe the power of Doc Dan’s angel on the Emperor after spending his first night with his “bride”. He was full of energy!

Where his earlier anonymity made his goodness invisible, his new transparency makes tenderness possible. The same man, once mistaken for a criminal, now smiles like a fairy-tale hero. The cap lifted from his eyes symbolizes the lifting of his own blindness — he can finally see and be seen.

The Floating Duck Syndrome

However, contrary to the Sleeping Beauty or the Mermaid, we have two men as protagonists. So there is no princess. It is important because it signifies that we should expect two metamorphosis at the amusement park. That’s why it is difficult to say who will confess first. Nevertheless, this weekend, I discovered the following article: Floating Duck Syndrome. Psychologists use the expression floating duck syndrome to describe people who appear serene on the surface while paddling frantically beneath the water to keep themselves afloat. The image is both graceful and tragic: calm above, exhaustion below. It captures the condition of those who have learned to survive through composure — who equate love with performance and stability with silence.

This is Kim Dan’s illness in miniature. Ever since childhood he has floated through life without showing the effort beneath. The grandmother’s silence taught him that visible pain is shameful; the bullying taught him that vulnerability invites attack. So he learned to glide — polite, deferential, self-effacing — while his legs beat desperately under the surface. His smiles are survival reflexes, not joy. His stillness is not peace but tension. And we should see the picture of Kim Dan with his grandmother as a reflection of this Syndrome. (chapter 65) so he is not standing on his own two feet. And remember that according to me, Shin Okja stands for shore. He is smiling as if everything is fine, but the reality is different. When Dan sits on her lap wearing the duck shirt, he seems safe, grounded, “held.” Yet the shore (the halmoni) isn’t truly stable — it’s brittle earth pretending to resist erosion. She gives him the illusion of safety, not the reality of it. The hydrangeas stand for temporality. The body contact replaces emotional transparency. What he learns in that moment is: “If I stay still and quiet, she’ll hold me.” Thus, his first emotional rule becomes immobility and silence. That is how the floating duck is born — not by moving freely in water, but by learning to suppress movement to preserve attachment.

The floating duck explains why he could live beside death for so long — the dying grandmother, the dying puppy, the dying parts of himself — without ever asking for help. He confuses endurance with dignity. When the champion first meets him, he sees only the surface: the quiet doctor, calm as water. (chapter 56) He doesn’t yet see the storm and suffering beneath.

Parallel Currents: The Prince and the Duck

As Joo Jaekyung rises from wolf to prince, he travels from hidden aggression to open affection. And by doing so, he encourages to see activities as something fun. So far, Kim Dan sees such a day more as a burden and not as a source of joy. Why? It is because he still views himself as the champion’s physical therapist and nothing more. (chapter 82) But in such a place, it is, as if time was stopped. Thanks to the many emotions and sensations, his body and heart will be revived. Through fun, the duck will change. As Kim Dan ascends from floating duck to swimmer and to a flying duck, he moves from hidden suffering to open breath. Thus the Ferris Wheel will have definitely an impact on him. Both arcs revolve around air and water — the two elements that make up breath and emotion. Don’t forget that the doctor embodies the clouds as well, while the athlete stands for steam.

In the early episodes, Dan’s relationship to water is defensive: he stays afloat but never dives. He cannot trust the element that once carried his grief. Jaekyung, conversely, dominates air — he owns every breath in the ring but cannot breathe freely outside it.
When the champion teaches him to swim and later to have fun, their roles merge: the man of air brings air to the man of water. Dan’s first genuine strokes are also his first act of rebellion against quiet despair. He is no longer a duck faking serenity; he is a swimmer choosing motion. Thus he can start flying. And now, you comprehend my illustration.

From Survival to Freedom

The floating duck syndrome ends the moment visibility becomes safe. For Kim Dan, that safety arrives when Jaekyung learns to play — when the arena turns into an amusement park, when life stops demanding perfection and begins inviting joy. Play, after all, is what ducks do when they are no longer afraid of drowning: they splash.

Thus both men’s journeys converge.

  • The wolf learns tenderness.
  • The duck learns courage. Hence he has the strength to fly on his own and can join the clouds.
  • The air learns moisture.
  • The water learns breath.

Together they compose the complete lung of the story — two halves finally synchronizing. The one who once hid in darkness now walks in light; the one who once floated in silence now swims toward sound. And this can only happen, when both feel grateful toward each other. (chapter 45)

Feel free to comment. If you have any suggestion for topics or Manhwa, feel free to ask. If you enjoyed reading it, retweet it or push the button like. My Reddit-Instagram-Twitter-Tumblr account is: @bebebisous33. Thanks for reading and for the support, particularly, I would like to thank all the new followers and people recommending my blog.