
I REALLY HOPED that he would have at least restarted his therapy sessions before going into the relationship with Inseob, no matter how many years that took; and it would have been better to show that journey. People who have mental health disorders cannot be cured, they just get better (but it's still there), they will be in rehabilitation, forever.

It was revealed in Chapter 90, and this manhwa currently has 107 chapters. There is already 89 chapters beforehand where readers could make their own assumptions without a clear explanation, before we were told that it is a disorder.
So readers already settled in to the fact the 'he is not normal' or 'he is crazy' BUT it's not EXACTLY that 'he has a disorder'. If you search directly on google, what ASPD is, the clear phrase "disregards the rights and well-being of others" as a clinical description shows up. And it says a lot about the disorder.
All I'm saying is, had this fact been disseminated earlier in the manhwa, it would have dramatically shifted the lens through which readers interpreted his actions. Instead of perceiving him as just "unhinged" or "brutal" in a general, vague sense, readers would have been invited to analyze his behavior through a psychological and clinical framework. The tension wouldn't just come from WHAT he was doing, but from the reality of WHY he was doing it—and how detached he truly was from concepts like empathy, remorse, or moral responsibility.

It was revealed in Chapter 90, and this manhwa currently has 107 chapters. There is already 89 chapters beforehand where readers could make their own assumptions without a clear explanation, before we were told that it is a disorder.
So readers already settled in to the fact the 'he is not normal' or 'he is crazy' BUT it's not EXACTLY that 'he has a disorder'. If you search directly on google, what ASPD is, the clear phrase "disregards the rights and well-being of others" as a clinical description shows up. And it says a lot about the disorder.
All I'm saying is, had this fact been disseminated earlier in the manhwa, it would have dramatically shifted the lens through which readers interpreted his actions. Instead of perceiving him as just "unhinged" or "brutal" in a general, vague sense, readers would have been invited to analyze his behavior through a psychological and clinical framework. The tension wouldn't just come from WHAT he was doing, but from the reality of WHY he was doing it—and how detached he truly was from concepts like empathy, remorse, or moral responsibility.
This is not a way to defend the top. The reason why a lot of people cannot comprehend the shift in the top's attitude is because his mental disorder was revealed very late in the manhwa and there is little explanation to it. It could also be that the readers don't know a lot about the disorder. But, if you research more about it, those actions will make sense and as to why he acts like that, ESPECIALLY, for someone who has not had therapy for a long time and just constant medication (I' not even sure about this one).