Which Manhwa Cheating Authors Discuss Betrayal In Interviews?

2025-11-05 17:14:56 307

3 Answers

Colin
Colin
2025-11-07 05:23:41
Lately I’ve been digging into creator talks and can’t help but notice a few names who come up again and again when betrayal is the topic. One of the clearest examples is koogi, the creator of 'killing stalking' — even when Koogi isn’t giving formal press interviews, their creator notes, Q&As, and panel appearances often circle around toxic trust, manipulation, and what betrayal does to a person’s psyche. Those little asides and translated interviews are raw and sometimes uncomfortable, but they explain why betrayal is less a plot twist and more a character engine in that story.

Another creator who frequently approaches betrayal head-on is SIU, the mind behind 'Tower of God'. In panels and translated interviews SIU has talked about how betrayals — planned or accidental — are crucial for testing morals and reshaping relationships, and why they’re useful for long-form storytelling. Kang Full, who wrote 'Apartment' and 'Timing', tends to discuss betrayal in a broader social context in interviews: not just romantic cheating but community-level betrayals and trust breakdowns. If you want to read creator words, look for video panels from conventions, the Webtoon/Lezhin official channels, and translated compendiums on fan blogs; those are gold for seeing how authors frame betrayal beyond plot mechanics. Personally, seeing how different creators treat betrayal — some as tragedy, some as consequence — still fascinates me and keeps me bookmarking every interview I can find.
Tabitha
Tabitha
2025-11-11 06:15:57
I get excited whenever creators peel back the curtain on why they write betrayal into their stories. Off the top of my head, Koogi of 'Killing Stalking' often speaks in creator posts and interviews about the layered, personal side of betrayal — it isn’t always a simple villain move but a psychological fracture. SIU of 'Tower of God' has been open in translated panels about how betrayals create stakes and force characters to evolve; he treats them as narrative pressure points rather than just shocks. Kang Full, whose works like 'Apartment' and 'Timing' examine society, tends to frame betrayal as part of social commentary in interviews — how people fail institutions or one another, and what that says about us.

If you’re hunting for these interviews, follow official Webtoon channels, look through convention uploads on YouTube, and check out translated interviews on fan sites and Twitter/X threads. Also, search for Korean terms like '배신 작가 인터뷰' if you can — it surfaces a lot of original sources that fans have translated. These creators don’t always use the word ‘betrayal’ outright; sometimes they use broader terms like ‘trust’ or ‘deception’, so it’s worth skimming more general interviews too. I enjoy piecing together these clips and quotes — they make re-reads of the comics feel richer.
Ivy
Ivy
2025-11-11 23:55:15
I’ve noticed that when people ask about betrayal in manhwa, three creators keep coming up for me: Koogi ('Killing Stalking'), SIU ('Tower of God'), and Kang Full ('Apartment', 'Timing'). Each one talks about betrayal from a different angle in interviews and panels — Koogi with the intimate, psychological fallout of violated trust; SIU on betrayal as a plot engine that tests character; Kang Full on societal and communal betrayals. If you want primary sources, check official Webtoon/Lezhin channels, convention panel recordings on YouTube, and translated threads on Twitter/X or Reddit where fans capture quotes and link original Korean interviews. Reading those pieces side-by-side really changed how I interpret scenes that initially felt like shock value — the interviews reveal intention, and that’s why I keep hunting them down.
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