There's actually nothing surprising, you're just used to the unnecessary story stretches of the Korean and Chinese webtoon industries used to milk more money out of readers. Here's what I said in another comment:
"I guess you are so used to authors dragging the story that you forgot what it's like when the story ends at the end of the plot without extra superficial elements to milk readers money.
That would actually be also any regular book / manga or any paper sold medium would end. Simply in webtoon and generally in digital format, especially Korean ones, there's this culture of keeping things going and having many many random events after what could be considered a "main story".
Imagine a movie turning into a sitcom, but for every movie no matter the plot of the movie. That's basically what the Korean webtoon industry does. So you are used to stretches that actually don't make sense in writing from a narrative standpoint, unless it's big universes with a huge picture to cover such as game of thrones.
But just because it's common in this industry doesn't mean it actually makes sense, it doesn't but people accept it because they like characters or they've spent too much money to not know " the end" even though what should've been an end happened 30 chapters ago.
So that's not surprising that's just good writing."
There's actually nothing surprising, you're just used to the unnecessary story stretches of the Korean and Chinese webtoon industries used to milk more money out of readers. Here's what I said in another comment:
"I guess you are so used to authors dragging the story that you forgot what it's like when the story ends at the end of the plot without extra superficial elements to milk readers money.
That would actually be also any regular book / manga or any paper sold medium would end. Simply in webtoon and generally in digital format, especially Korean ones, there's this culture of keeping things going and having many many random events after what could be considered a "main story".
Imagine a movie turning into a sitcom, but for every movie no matter the plot of the movie. That's basically what the Korean webtoon industry does. So you are used to stretches that actually don't make sense in writing from a narrative standpoint, unless it's big universes with a huge picture to cover such as game of thrones.
But just because it's common in this industry doesn't mean it actually makes sense, it doesn't but people accept it because they like characters or they've spent too much money to not know " the end" even though what should've been an end happened 30 chapters ago.
So that's not surprising that's just good writing."