Okay y’all, bear with me—I was intrigued by this line in the synopsis: “A village where death holds no meaning.” Remember when Guwon kills in front of them, makes them vote on life like it’s nothing, and no one resist right? It’s because they fear him, and they say he saved them. But that doesn’t add up.
What if Guwon isn’t a savior or a victim, but a mastermind pretending to carry everyone’s pain? He carries their burdens not because he has to, but because it makes them dependent on him.
It’s just like the myth of Sisyphus, who was cursed to push a boulder up a hill forever. But here’s the twist—Guwon chooses to carry that weight. Not out of punishment, but out of power.
He built a world where no one questions him, because they believe he “saved” them.
But the truth is, he didn’t save them. He owns them. He’s not some tragic soul. He’s the one who made death meaningless, because if people stopped fearing it, they’d stop fearing him too.
Okay y’all, bear with me—I was intrigued by this line in the synopsis: “A village where death holds no meaning.”
Remember when Guwon kills in front of them, makes them vote on life like it’s nothing, and no one resist right? It’s because they fear him, and they say he saved them. But that doesn’t add up.
What if Guwon isn’t a savior or a victim, but a mastermind pretending to carry everyone’s pain?
He carries their burdens not because he has to, but because it makes them dependent on him.
It’s just like the myth of Sisyphus, who was cursed to push a boulder up a hill forever. But here’s the twist—Guwon chooses to carry that weight. Not out of punishment, but out of power.
He built a world where no one questions him, because they believe he “saved” them.
But the truth is, he didn’t save them. He owns them.
He’s not some tragic soul. He’s the one who made death meaningless, because if people stopped fearing it, they’d stop fearing him too.