Today’s Webtoon
- Leah Largaespada
- Feb 22
- 5 min read
Updated: Mar 3

9/10 is my rating. This is a 2022 South Korean workplace romance drama with 16, 62-76 minute episodes.
First, I provide a unique synopsis then review. I provide the synopsis because I find, when I’m looking for a show to watch, some of the synopses do not describe the series very well. So, unique synopsis is intended to provide another perspective. If you aren’t interested in the synopsis scroll down, the review is labeled.
Synopsis
On Ma-eum (Kim Se-jeong) is ready to move on to other opportunities after being injured during her quest toward Olympic glory in Judo. When Ma-eum decides to chart another path pursuing her dream job as a webtoon editor, she must hide it from her Judo coach father On Gi-bong (Ko Chang-seok). Ma-eum’s father thought they were just waiting for the injury to heal so she could get back to Judo. Having put all of of her energy into getting the job of her dreams she is not about to return to Judi which had taken such a tremendous toll on her body. But Ma-eum is facing a tremendous challenge as a webtoon editor as she doesn’t have traditional qualifications. But the determined young woman is not about to give up on her dream that easy. Her career in Webtoon creation could be short-lived though because the branch she works for is part of a larger company that is about to eliminate the webtoon platform as it is losing money. She got her chance because the leader of the branch took a liking to Ma-eum when she worked security and was willing to take a chance on her as a trainee web editor. So it is unlikely if this branch goes down that she could get another job with another webtoon company. But, when she first starts out, the fact that Ma-eun is a super fan of webtoons means she has to scale herself back from fan girling on all of the clients/authors they work with. Her over enthusiasm at first causes her mentor, Seok Ji-hyung (Choi Daniel) to scold her to be more professional and leave her own interest out of her interactions. But what seems to be a weakness at first turns out to be a strength in that she understands the authors on a deeper level. In fact, Ma-eun’s particular fan girl mojo just might be what was needed to help save the webtoon branch. Ma-eun’s wins over all the other project managers and editors with her magnanimous, personality, and boundless energy. Goo Jun-yeong (Nam Yoon-su) was hired at the same time as Ma-eum with outstanding credentials and at first cannot understand how Ma-eun is so successful while he is struggling. That is until he himself starts to fall for her charms. Can one outstanding employee save the drowning webtoon branch? Will the two opposite in personality newbies find the other half in each other?
Review
I enjoyed this start to finish even though it was not fully what I expected. I thought it would be more focused on the romance with the Webtoon platform as a backdrop, but it is actually the other way around. In terms of slice of life, it does an above average job of that. You get a deep look at how Webtoon platforms identify, support, develop and manage the artists they work with. But, if you are after a romance, you will get some of it with this but not for those of us that want the happily ever after full suite. There is a love triangle. Lots of romantic tension. But I see where other reviewers said it is like they left it open for a second season on some of those plot points. I am glad I watched it, feel like I know more about the making of the sausage with Webtoons and would recommend it to others. I might watch it again but only if someone else had it on.
Spoilers
I liked learning more about the rigors in the Webtoon world. The artists do really become slaves to their art and are producing a product. My daughter is an award-winning artist and had dabbled with online comics. She had a lot of interest in her work, so I asked her why she did not more actively pursue that to make money. I thought she could enter some contests and see if she could get signed or whatever. She told me that it is basically an artist mill. That it becomes miserable for the artists. This helped me to see a little more what she was talking about. I could see where the art would lose its joy.
I know it's a cultural, but it really bothered me that that the other newbie, Jun-yeong blamed all of the long timer Webtoon colleagues at NEON for his sister's accidental death. Yes, they let her go when she was a contractor but when a business is basically ready to go bankrupt or get bought out, contract positions are always the first to go. They did not do anything unusual. The loose association was she was out on the road early because she no longer had the Webtoon job, but it is not fair to blame others for that accident. So, that was a little frustrating. But I find it to be frequent in Korean dramas so there must be something to that indirect blame.
They danced around the romance so much, as someone who is in need of romance, I found it frustrating. She seemed to have a lot of romantic tension with the Senior Editor (her superior). I am glad they did not go that route because there felt like a huge age gap just in terms of where they were at maturity wise in the scheme of life. But, he definitely liked her like that and wound up letting go when he realized how much PD Goo liked her and that she seemed to like him back (even though she was not admitting it to herself). Which is why the soft ending with them was so frustrating. He finally confessed and she is thinking about it and they just leave it there. It was a very soft, unfinished ending to their story.
There was also the assistant web artist who really was very good and with some guidance could likely have made it. But he quit after ten years, is still around helping everyone out, but they don't do anything to advance him. I was disappointed we didn't get to see him finally make it. He said he had another dream, but we didn't even get to know what that was.
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