Who Wrote The Max Level Player Novel And Manhwa?

2025-08-25 15:00:45 261
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4 Answers

Isaac
Isaac
2025-08-27 04:51:04
I get why this is confusing—there are often different credits for the original novel and the manhwa adaptation. For 'Max Level Player' the thing to keep in mind is that the novelist (the person who wrote the prose web novel) and the manhwa team (sometimes a different writer/adaptor plus an artist) are usually listed separately. English fan sites and scanlation groups sometimes drop or mistranslate those credits, which is where a lot of the mystery comes from.

If you want a quick way to verify who wrote which version, check the first page of the official release on the platform that hosts it (KakaoPage, Naver, Lezhin, Tapas, etc.). Look for terms like "원작" (original work) and "그림" (art) in Korean releases or the equivalents in Chinese/Japanese release pages. Publisher pages, the book’s ISBN entry, or the author’s own blog/social media are the most reliable sources. If you want, send me a screenshot or a link and I’ll walk through the credits with you—I love digging into the messy credits of adaptations and finding the original creators.
Neil
Neil
2025-08-29 19:52:26
I’m the kind of fan who follows credits closely, and for 'Max Level Player' it’s important to separate the original novelist from the manhwa creators. Often the web novel author wrote the story, and later a different team adapted it into a manhwa—there might be a script adapter and an artist who get listed on the comic pages. English aggregation sites sometimes only cite the translator or the scanlation group instead of the original author, which gives the impression that author info is missing.

To find the names yourself, go to the official release page (where the manhwa is hosted) and scroll to the bottom or the first chapter: most creators are credited there. If it’s a physical release, check the copyright page. If you can’t find it, try searching for the title on sites like MangaUpdates, Baka-Updates, or even Goodreads; they often list original creators. If you tell me which platform you saw it on, I can try to point to the exact credits for you.
Ezra
Ezra
2025-08-30 15:04:47
Lately I’ve been digging into adaptations and the confusion around 'Max Level Player' doesn’t surprise me at all. There’s usually an original prose author (the web novelist) and a separate manhwa team: sometimes one person adapts the script while another does the art. Because Korean and Chinese credits use specific labels—like "원작" for original author or "작화" for artist—translations can drop those nuances and readers end up unsure who did what.

When I want to confirm, I open the official chapter on the host site and check the very top or the bottom of the page for the credit block. If the site is in another language, I use the browser’s translate feature and search for keywords that point to authorship. Another reliable trick is to look up the title on cataloging sites (they often show both novel author and manhwa artist), and to check the author’s profile page on the host platform—creators usually have a profile listing all their works. It helps to remember that fan uploads sometimes strip credits, so official pages are always the best source. If you prefer, I can help translate the credit block if you paste it here.
Mila
Mila
2025-08-31 07:05:49
I love asking this kind of meta question when a series I like pops up! With 'Max Level Player' it’s common for the novel writer and the manhwa artist/adaptor to be different people, so the trick is to look for the official credit lines. If you saw it on a webtoon/comic platform, open the first chapter and check for "original" or creator credits—those will tell you who wrote the novel and who handled the adaptation.

If that’s not available, try searching the title on sites like MangaUpdates or the publisher’s page; they often list both the novel author and the manhwa artist. Fan uploads can be messy about attributions, so when in doubt I always try to find the publisher’s page or an ISBN entry. Send me the link you’re looking at and I’ll take a peek—I actually enjoy hunting down original creators.
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