Illustrated thumbnail showing Seong Han-su from the Netflix Korean drama Agent Kim Reactivated performing a powerful kick

Agent Kim Reactivated: Who Is Seong Han-su, the Martial Arts Master?

You may know him as the “Hak-ssi” uncle from When Life Gives You Tangerines. In the webtoon, he might be the deadliest of the three — and he does it all with his feet.


The last of the three fathers in Agent Kim Reactivated is a mild neighborhood taekwondo instructor, teaching kids how to kick. Fifty years old. Gentle-looking, seemingly the furthest thing from a fighter.

He may also be the most dangerous man of the three. He disarms an armed agent from South Korea’s intelligence service barehanded. His own son — a fighter who competed at the professional level — can’t land a single hit on him. This is Seong Han-su.

And for Korean viewers, there’s another layer to this character: the actor playing him, Choi Dae-hoon. He’s the “Hak-ssi” uncle from When Life Gives You Tangerines.

This covers material from the original webtoon. The drama may take a different path.

From “Hak-ssi” Uncle to Taekwondo Master — The Choi Dae-hoon Reversal

If you watched When Life Gives You Tangerines (폭싹 속았수다), you’ll remember Choi Dae-hoon. He played Bu Sang-gil — the petty, sharp-tongued local bully of Dodong-ri who barked “Hak! Ssi” at every setback. Contemptible, mean, and yet impossible to hate — a scene-stealer who spawned his own memes.

Here, that same actor stands at the opposite end. Seong Han-su, a former taekwondo gold medalist. On the surface he runs a white-walled taekwondo studio teaching neighborhood kids, but he’s a former operative who once ran missions between life and death.

From Bu Sang-gil to Seong Han-su — that range is the whole story of Choi Dae-hoon. An actor who spent more than twenty years in supporting roles, as a scene-stealer, close to anonymous, finally arriving at his moment. It’s why Korean audiences welcomed the casting.

Where He Came From — The Gold Medalist of Viral Hit

Seong Han-su originally comes from the webtoon Viral Hit (싸움독학), the story of a bullied boy who teaches himself to fight through YouTube videos — one of the flagship titles of the Park Tae-jun Universe. Netflix adapted it into a Japanese live-action drama released in 2026.

In that world, Seong Han-su is introduced as a former Olympic taekwondo gold medalist. The interesting part: he isn’t a mixed martial artist. No hand techniques, no grappling. He reached the top tier of the entire universe on taekwondo kicks alone. In his younger years, his combat ability was said to rival that of his friends Kim Bujang and Park Jin-cheol. The drama’s choice to cast him as a “taekwondo gold medalist studio owner” carries that original core straight over.

How Strong Is He — Strength Proven in Scenes

Seong Han-su’s strength is proven not in words but in scenes.

The first time he shows his hand in Manager Kim, a squad of armed government agents descends on him. Seong Han-su doesn’t throw a single hand strike — he sweeps them all with kicks, then walks out at a leisurely pace beside Kim Bujang. One of the agents watching says it: this is a man important enough that North Korea once tried to recruit him.

The high point is his fight with Kang Guk-cheol, an agent from the NIS — South Korea’s national intelligence service. Kang comes armed with a pistol and a knife, firing on him. Seong Han-su dodges every round without taking a single hit. Then he subdues Kang with kicks alone, finishing with a 1440-degree spinning kick that levels him. That one scene establishes Seong Han-su as a fighter who comfortably surpasses the top-ranked figures of Viral Hit.

His own son is no exception. Seong Tae-hun is a fighter who reached the professional MMA stage and ranks among the near-strongest in this universe. And yet, when that son faces his father, he can’t lay a finger on him — he’s dominated one-sidedly. Even when the father pushes him, warning him to fight seriously because he could die, the son is reduced to simply blocking.

How He Fights — Only His Feet

What makes Seong Han-su’s combat distinct even among the three fathers is its purity.

Kim Bujang removes targets silently with wire and assassination technique. Park Jin-cheol takes on an entire battlefield with C4 and firepower. Seong Han-su uses no weapon, no firepower — not even his fists.

Only his feet.

He barely uses hand techniques. No grappling, no punches. He drops every opponent with Olympic-style taekwondo — the kick-focused kind you see at the Games — alone. In a universe that measures power by how many rotations a kick carries, his exceed 1440 degrees. At 360 degrees per rotation, that’s more than four full spins in the air before impact — a physically impossible number, which is exactly the point.

He reacts before an opponent has even begun to move, and shows reaction speed beyond human limits in the face of gunfire. Under the condition of one-on-one unarmed combat, almost no one in this universe can beat him.

The drama’s decision to pin him down as a “taekwondo gold medalist” connects directly to this. In the original too, he rose to the top on taekwondo alone. A kick — a weapon whose power reads instantly on screen — is about as good a setup as you could ask for when translating to live-action.

The Personality Patch — The Stronger He Gets, the Less Human He Becomes

This is where Seong Han-su becomes both the strongest and the most terrifying figure in the universe.

Seong Han-su has a unique trait called the Personality Patch. In his youth he was a nearly feral, violent man. Under a master’s mental discipline, he suppressed that nature to become the gentle instructor of today. So his personality is given a percentage. At rest, it sits at 100 percent — calm and controlled.

But when rage builds or an old trauma is triggered, that number drops. And his combat power rises explosively in direct proportion to how far it falls.

Watch what he does at each threshold.

Personality 34% — He casually slips the attacks of Kim Bujang and Park Jin-cheol, who are trying to restrain him, then blasts both friends away with a single kick. Park Jin-cheol, who always wears a grin, strips the smile from his face and says it: no one can stop Seong Han-su in this state.

Personality 8% — He faces the top-tier villain “King.” Down to eight percent, he makes King cough up blood with a single kick, then breaks King’s arm bone with a kick well past 1440 degrees.

As the number drops, it isn’t his old personality that returns — it’s his reason itself that vanishes. Running wild with no distinction between friend and foe, there is only one thing in this universe that can stop him.

A phone call from his wife.

The man who was raging out of his mind returns to himself the instant he hears his wife Lee So-hyeon’s voice. Devoted husband that he is, he even answers in a trembling voice. The stronger he becomes, the more of his humanity he loses — and a loved one’s voice brings him back to being human. The emotion running through this entire “father universe” is compressed into this one man.

Can the Drama Pull Off This Webtoon Strength?

Here’s the real question.

Dodging bullets with kicks, breaking a man’s arm with a four-rotation kick, combat power that scales with a rage meter — all of it is possible because the medium is a webtoon. A comic can express rotation count, a personality percentage, all of it, through a single look in a character’s eyes.

Live-action is different. The actor’s body has to sell the force of a 1440-degree kick, and the audience has to naturally accept a fantasy rule where a falling personality number makes him stronger. Handled poorly, it turns childish. Handled well, it becomes this character’s most striking weapon.

In that light, casting Choi Dae-hoon is intriguing. In When Life Gives You Tangerines, he carried a single character from his thirties to his sixties on his face alone. If any actor can render the subtle turns — from gentle instructor to a fighter running wild, and back again at the sound of his wife’s voice — through expression, then Seong Han-su’s Personality Patch may not stay a webtoon-only conceit.

The last of the three fathers. The most dangerous man wearing the quietest face. How far the drama chooses to show this strength is the reason to keep watching this character right now.

Basic Info

Video: Agent Kim Reactivated | Official Trailer | Netflix [ENG SUB] / Source: Netflix K-Content (YouTube)
  • English Title: Agent Kim Reactivated
  • Korean Title: 김부장 (Kim Bujang)
  • Character: Seong Han-su (성한수) — taekwondo gold medalist, owner of the White Taekwondo studio
  • Actor: Choi Dae-hoon — “Hak-ssi” uncle Bu Sang-gil in When Life Gives You Tangerines
  • Webtoon origin: Viral Hit (싸움독학)
  • Network / Streaming: SBS / Netflix (simultaneous)
  • Cast: So Ji-sub, Choi Dae-hoon, Yoon Kyung-ho, Joo Sang-wook, Son Na-eun, Kim Sung-kyu
  • Original Webtoon: Manager Kim, part of the Park Tae-jun Universe (available in English on Webtoon)

New to Agent Kim Reactivated? Start here first.
Agent Kim Reactivated: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Already hooked? Go deeper into the world behind the drama.

Meet the man himself — the full backstory of Code Name 66.
Who Is Code Name 66? Manager Kim’s Backstory Explained

Meet the war machine behind the smile.
Agent Kim Reactivated: Who Is Park Jin-cheol, the “God of War”?

Three legendary fathers, three fighting styles — who actually wins?
Agent Kim Reactivated: The Three Legends — Who Is Actually the Strongest?

Illustrated thumbnail showing Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated
Illustration: Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated / KwaveInsider

Waiting for something darker? Netflix’s next big Korean series drops July 17th.
The East Palace Teaser: What Korean Viewers See That You Don’t


Into Korean historical fantasy? These are worth reading first.

No spoilers — read this before you watch.
My Royal Nemesis: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Watched it already? The ending has layers only Korean viewers catch.
My Royal Nemesis Ending Explained — Why the Korean Title Matters


Want something that delivers satisfaction every single episode?
Cham Gyo-yuk: Why Korea’s Biggest Netflix Hit Makes Everyone Uncomfortable

Illustrated thumbnail showing the main cast of the Netflix Korean drama Teach You a Lesson
Illustration: Netflix Korean Drama Teach You a Lesson

Anything about Seong Han-su you want to dig into further? Drop it in the comments — I’ll answer, or fold it into the next post.

Some links in this post may be affiliate links. If you make a purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Illustrated thumbnail showing Park Jin-cheol from the Netflix Korean drama Agent Kim Reactivated

Agent Kim Reactivated: Who Is Park Jin-cheol, the “God of War”?

A Marine in the drama. A special-forces legend in the webtoon. Either way — the man who ends wars.


Watch Agent Kim Reactivated, and one of Manager Kim’s two friends quickly becomes impossible to ignore. The man squinting through a smile — until things turn ugly, and he changes the genre of the whole scene. That’s Park Jin-cheol.

If Manager Kim is an assassin and Seong Han-su is a martial artist, Park Jin-cheol is war itself. To understand him, you have to know where he came from.

This draws on the original webtoon (Manager Kim, 김부장). The drama may frame some details differently.

From Special Forces to the Marines — What the Drama Changed

There’s one detail original-webtoon readers check first in this adaptation: Park Jin-cheol’s military background.

In the webtoon, he’s a former special forces operative. The drama recasts him as a South Korean Marine — specifically, a passionate member of the Marine Corps Veterans Association. It looks minor. For Korean viewers, it isn’t. The Marines carry the toughest reputation of any branch in Korea, nicknamed “the ghost-catching Marines,” and their veterans are famous for a fierce, almost tribal bond that lasts long after discharge. It’s a shorthand that lands the weight of the character on a Korean audience instantly.

Where He Came From — The Father from My Life as a Loser

Park Jin-cheol began as a supporting character in the webtoon My Life as a Loser (인생존망), introduced as the father of the lead, Park Da-bin.

In My Life as a Loser, he was a serious figure. On a mission where his entire unit was wiped out, he alone survived — and just as he was ready to give up, a man appeared and told him to stay alive for his family. Park Jin-cheol held onto those words and lived. He gave that man a nickname — “Fighting Rooster” (쌈닭) — for his impressive beard. That man would go on to become the masked, chicken-headed fighting YouTuber at the center of Viral Hit (싸움독학), one of the biggest hits in the Park Tae-jun Universe, later adapted by Netflix into a Japanese live-action drama in 2026.

In Manager Kim, he shows up wearing a completely different face. A man who keeps squinting through a grin no matter how much chaos erupts around him. That refusal to drop the smile is exactly what makes him more unsettling, not less.

Ares — The Leader Who Embraces Even His Enemies

What really defines Park Jin-cheol is his leadership.

In the Manager Kim webtoon, he isn’t a lone operative. He’s the head of an organization called Ares — named for the Greek god of war — a kind of elite mercenary outfit built from a cast of distinctive original characters.

The interesting part is how he builds it. Even a former enemy, if they meet his standard, gets a recruitment offer without hesitation. He doesn’t dominate people into submission; he pulls the ones worth respecting into his circle. The man who symbolizes war turns out to be the most inclusive leader in the story — and that contradiction is what lifts Park Jin-cheol above a simple firepower character.

One caveat: Ares belongs to the later stretches of the webtoon. Given that the drama’s first season centers on the daughter-rescue arc, whether Ares — and Park Jin-cheol as its leader — makes it into this adaptation intact is an open question. It’s the thing webtoon readers are watching for most closely.

Fighting Style — What Sets Him Apart from the Other Two

Line the three of them up side by side and Park Jin-cheol’s difference snaps into focus.

Manager Kim is an assassin who removes a target silently, with minimal motion. Seong Han-su is a martial artist who overwhelms opponents through pure technique. Both of them, fundamentally, fight one-on-one or one-against-a-few.

Park Jin-cheol operates on a different scale entirely.

While the others trade punches, Park Jin-cheol plants C4 and opens up with automatic weapons. His battlefield isn’t hand-to-hand — it’s firepower and tactics. He isn’t fighting one man; he’s fighting a unit, a whole battlefield. That’s why the webtoon’s genre shifts from high-school action to war film the moment he appears.

In the webtoon, he’s written as a licensed operative — one of a rare few the state authorizes to kill. (A webtoon conceit, of course; no such license exists in the real Korea.) Since his deployment to Somalia, he has been a walking war zone.

His codename is Otter. It sounds cute, but it refers to the Amazon’s giant otter — an apex predator that hunts animals larger than itself. A scene where he demolishes enemies while dazed from inhaled sleeping gas shows the codename isn’t an exaggeration.

One anecdote captures his standing. Nam Sil-jang — a top-tier fighter in the Park Tae-jun Universe who has personally gone up against both Manager Kim and Park Jin-cheol — decided that breaking his own arm by leaping from a moving car was preferable to facing Park Jin-cheol at close range. That’s why fans joke his effective combat range is “practically unlimited.”

Why Yoon Kyung-ho Was the Right Call

There’s a nice symmetry in the casting.

Yoon Kyung-ho didn’t arrive at this role as a leading-man heartthrob or an action-star physique. He built his career the long way — as a character actor, the guy who quietly steals scenes from the margins. That work has broken through in the last few years, elevating him into one of Korea’s most in-demand supporting actors, and he’s deeply loved by Korean audiences now. Korea has a soft spot for actors with exactly that arc.

Which is precisely Park Jin-cheol’s arc. Never the face on the poster, but commanding of every panel he appeared in — a supporting character who survived on sheer presence until he finally reached a lead role. The actor and the character walked the same road. No A-lister could have fit better.

And that’s the cleanest way to place him among the three. Manager Kim ends targets. Seong Han-su ends fights. Park Jin-cheol ends wars.

Basic Info

Video: Agent Kim Reactivated | Official Trailer | Netflix [ENG SUB] / Source: Netflix K-Content (YouTube)
  • English Title: Agent Kim Reactivated
  • Korean Title: 김부장 (Kim Bujang)
  • Character: Park Jin-cheol (박진철) — codename “Otter”
  • Actor: Yoon Kyung-ho
  • Drama setting: Member of the Marine Corps Veterans Association
  • Webtoon origin: My Life as a Loser (인생존망), leader of Ares, father of Park Da-bin
  • Network / Streaming: SBS / Netflix (simultaneous)
  • Cast: So Ji-sub, Yoon Kyung-ho, Choi Dae-hoon, Joo Sang-wook, Son Na-eun, Kim Sung-kyu
  • Original Webtoon: Manager Kim, part of the Park Tae-jun Universe (available in English on Webtoon)

New to Agent Kim Reactivated? Start here first.
Agent Kim Reactivated: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Meet the lead — the full backstory of Code Name 66.
Who Is Code Name 66? Manager Kim’s Backstory Explained

Three legendary fathers, three fighting styles — who actually wins?
Agent Kim Reactivated: The Three Legends — Who Is Actually the Strongest?

Illustrated thumbnail showing Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated
Illustration: Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated / KwaveInsider

Waiting for something darker? Netflix’s next big Korean series drops July 17th.
The East Palace Teaser: What Korean Viewers See That You Don’t


Into Korean historical fantasy? These are worth reading first.

No spoilers — read this before you watch.
My Royal Nemesis: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Watched it already? The ending has layers only Korean viewers catch.
My Royal Nemesis Ending Explained — Why the Korean Title Matters


Want something that delivers satisfaction every single episode?
Cham Gyo-yuk: Why Korea’s Biggest Netflix Hit Makes Everyone Uncomfortable


Anything about Park Jin-cheol you want to dig into further? Drop it in the comments — I’ll answer, or fold it into the next post.

Some links in this post may be affiliate links. If you make a purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Illustration of Code Name 66 from Manager Kim (Agent Kim Reactivated)

Who Is Code Name 66? Manager Kim’s Backstory Explained

No name. No records. Just a number — and a mission success rate of 100%.


For once, a Korean action drama worth clearing your weekend for. Agent Kim Reactivated hit No. 4 on Netflix’s Global Top 10 TV list within days of its premiere. Watch it.

And once you start, you land on the same question every viewer does: who is Code Name 66, actually? The drama reveals his past in pieces. The original webtoon tells you far more. Here’s who Manager Kim really is — the version worth knowing before the show gets there.

This draws on the original webtoon (Manager Kim, 김부장). The drama may frame some details differently.

The Man Without a Name

Early in the webtoon, the first person to meet him says: “Huh. This guy’s strange. He has no name. Not left blank — he genuinely doesn’t have one.”

Manager Kim has no name. Not on paper, not in memory. There are only two ways to refer to him: his job title, bujang (“manager”), and his code name — 66.

And here’s the most human detail in the whole story. His number was never 66. It was 73. 66 belonged to a comrade who died in the field. He had himself called 66 so the man wouldn’t be forgotten. Everything you need to understand about this character lives in that one choice.

Not a South Korean Spy — Something Stranger

On the surface he’s a mild savings-bank employee. Underneath, he isn’t the simple South Korean agent he appears to be.

In the webtoon, he was raised from boyhood as an elite operative in the North, trained through what amounted to torture — engineered from the start as a human weapon. He later laundered his identity and operated across both sides of the border, a ghost who belonged fully to neither. The North built him. The South hid him. He worked for both, and both denied he existed.

That double origin — infiltration records pointing in both directions at once — is a past no other character in the entire Park Tae-jun Universe shares. It’s also exactly what the story spends its time unpacking.

The Résumé, Read Aloud in Chapter One

In the webtoon’s first chapter, a special-operations captain hunting him recites the file out loud.

Seventeen infiltrations into the North. Five double-agent operations. Two prison breaks. One assassination attempt on North Korea’s supreme commander. There’s a bounty on him in the North. China and Russia each keep a team dedicated solely to tracking him.

But the most dangerous thing about Code Name 66 isn’t the résumé — it’s the success rate. The missions handed to him never failed. He eliminated the target and came home, every time. His specialties are assassination and intelligence. He isn’t a brawler; he’s a man who finishes objectives.

He says it himself: “Honestly, mission work suits me better than combat. I’m a little too strong to be asking for a fieldwork posting.”

A man strong enough to dominate — with no interest in showing it off.

Fighting Style — The Closer

Here’s where Western viewers already have a reference point, even if they don’t realize it. Manager Kim’s foundation is Jeet Kune Do — yes, Bruce Lee’s own martial art — built on top of a close-combat framework. In ordinary fights he handles people lightly, with arts like Wing Chun. The moment he judges someone a real threat, he shifts gears. Among readers, the read is settled: the moment he gets serious is the moment the fight actually starts.

One of his signature strikes is chon-gyeong (촌경, 寸勁) — “inch power,” the exact principle behind Bruce Lee’s famous one-inch punch. Aimed at the heart, it briefly stops it. Land it cleanly and the opponent drops, regardless of how tough they are.

A note on “CQC,” a term the webtoon uses constantly. It isn’t the real-world military phrase for close-quarters combat. In this universe it’s a fictional fighting system: close the distance in an instant and unleash every technique you own at once — and the more arts a fighter has mastered, the more devastating it becomes.

Then there’s his true signature: the eun-sa (은사, 銀絲 — “silver thread”). A wire as fine as a hair, tough enough that a real blade can’t cut it and sharp enough to slice through flesh. He doesn’t just swing it. He laces it through the room faster than the eye can follow — locking down movement, blocking a weapon, closing it around a throat. In the webtoon, most scenes where the eun-sa appears end the instant it does.

Its real value is the wire paired with close combat — that combination is Manager Kim at full, lethal commitment. He also has a technique that belongs to him alone, effective even against the universe’s strongest tier: with it, he finally beat Park Young-gwang, a powerhouse from his past he’d never once defeated. (Drama viewers: that’s the character 2PM’s Taecyeon plays in a special appearance.)

The Years Written on His Body

Manager Kim carries some of the heaviest scarring of anyone in the series — more than characters whose entire bodies are described as covered in them. Those marks say everything about the working life of an agent his own government refused to acknowledge.

And yet he remembers those years fondly: there was a certain thrill to it, he says — a romance to the danger. A man denied by every state he served, who still looks back on that era with pride. That contradiction is the core of the character.

Is He the Strongest? The Long-Running Debate

Manager Kim is named among the top-tier fighters of the Park Tae-jun Universe. Whether he’s definitively the strongest is where the arguments start.

Creator Park Tae-jun has remarked that the character may be drawn too strong. Recent chapters stage the gap between him and other elites as narrower, and some readers now place him just below the very top. But no one disputes he belongs in that conversation.

Here’s the part fans can’t let go of: the Manager Kim of Lookism and the Manager Kim of his own webtoon are drawn so differently in raw power that readers have spent years arguing whether they’re even the same man. Did being promoted to lead make him stronger — or was he always this strong and simply never showed it in a supporting role? Still unsettled.

The Webtoon’s Final Monologue

In the webtoon, he finally answers the question he’s been asked his whole life.

“Someone once asked me who I was. Now I can answer. I was Number 73, and I was Code Name 66. But now I’m just an ordinary father in South Korea, with one daughter.”

A man who lived his entire life without a name chose, in the end, an identity that wasn’t a code number. It was father — like so many who chose family over freedom.

That’s almost certainly where Agent Kim Reactivated is headed, too.

Basic Info

Video: Agent Kim Reactivated | Official Trailer | Netflix [ENG SUB] / Source: Netflix K-Content (YouTube)
  • English Title: Agent Kim Reactivated
  • Korean Title: 김부장 (Kim Bujang)
  • Network / Streaming: SBS / Netflix (simultaneous)
  • Episodes: 10
  • Airing: June 26 – July 25, 2026, every Friday & Saturday
  • Original Webtoon: Manager Kim, part of the Park Tae-jun Universe (available in English on Webtoon)
  • Cast: So Ji-sub, Choi Dae-hoon, Yoon Kyung-ho, Joo Sang-wook, Son Na-eun, Kim Sung-kyu

New to Agent Kim Reactivated? Start here first.
Agent Kim Reactivated: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Meet the friend who turns every scene into a war zone.
Agent Kim Reactivated: Who Is Park Jin-cheol, the “God of War”?

Curious how Manager Kim stacks up against the other two legends of this universe?
Agent Kim Reactivated: The Three Legends — Who Is Actually the Strongest?

Illustrated thumbnail showing Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated
Illustration: Kim Bujang, Seong Hansu, and Park Jincheol from Agent Kim Reactivated / KwaveInsider

Into Korean historical fantasy? These are worth reading first.
No spoilers — read this before you watch.
My Royal Nemesis: What You Need to Know Before You Watch

Watched it already? The ending has layers only Korean viewers catch.
My Royal Nemesis Ending Explained — Why the Korean Title Matters


If you’re looking for something quieter — a drama that leaves you with warmth and a lingering feeling long after the credits roll:
We Are All Trying Here — Why the Korean Title Is Much Darker

Watched it already? The ending goes deeper than it looks.
We Are All Trying Here: Dong-man’s Ending — What the Weather Means
We Are All Trying Here: Eun-a’s Ending — What Her Smile Means


Want something that delivers satisfaction every single episode?
Cham Gyo-yuk: Why Korea’s Biggest Netflix Hit Makes Everyone Uncomfortable

Illustrated thumbnail showing the main cast of the Netflix Korean drama Teach You a Lesson
Illustration: Netflix Korean Drama Teach You a Lesson

Watching the drama? Which reveal about Manager Kim’s past caught you off guard? Drop it in the comments — I’ll answer, or fold it into the next post.

Some links in this post may be affiliate links. If you make a purchase through them, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.