Fotografía de autor
83 Obras 1,835 Miembros 24 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Incluye los nombres: Chu-Gong Chu-Gong, Kisoryong Chugong

Series

Obras de Chu-Gong

Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 1 (2018) — Autor — 378 copias
Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 2 (2018) — Autor; Autor — 268 copias
Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 3 (2018) — Autor — 217 copias
Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 4 (2018) — Autor — 176 copias
Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 5 (2018) — Autor — 145 copias
Solo Leveling [Light Novel] Vol. 1 (2021) — Autor — 125 copias
Solo Leveling [Manhwa] Vol. 6 (2023) — Autor — 65 copias
Solo Leveling 04 (2021) 14 copias
Solo Leveling 06 (2022) 10 copias
Solo Leveling - Tome 8 (2022) — Autor — 8 copias
Solo Leveling 07 (2023) 8 copias
Solo Leveling T07 (2022) — Autor — 8 copias
Solo Leveling 08 (2023) 6 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 4) (2021) 4 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 3) (2021) 4 copias
Solo Leveling Roman 02 — Autor — 3 copias
SOLO LEVELING 05 (2022) 3 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 5) (2021) 3 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 6) (2022) 3 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 1) (2021) 3 copias
Solo Leveling 09 (2024) 2 copias
Solo Leveling Roman 06 (2022) — Autor — 2 copias
Solo Leveling Roman 03 — Autor — 2 copias
Solo Leveling Roman 04 (2021) 2 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 7) (2022) 2 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 8) (2022) 2 copias
Solo leveling (Vol. 13) (2023) 1 copia
Only I Level Up — Autor — 1 copia
Solo Leveling Roman 05 (2022) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 9) (2022) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 10) (2022) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 11) (2023) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 12) (2023) 1 copia
I Alone Level-Up — Autor — 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 14) (2023) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 15) (2023) 1 copia
Solo leveling (Vol. 16) (2024) 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Chu-Gong
Otros nombres
Chugong
Género
male
Nacionalidad
South Korea

Miembros

Reseñas

There is nothing ground-breaking in this volume. A familiar story that starts quickly without any backstory or world-building. However, just because it isn't a new concept, does not mean it is not well done. The art is good - especially the characters' facial expressions and movement is demonstrated smoothly.

Naturally, I want to read the next volume to see "what happens next." I read a few gushing reviews on some other sites and I am still somewhat perplexed - there was not enough content in this for it to be a five star item. It is, however, a solid afternoon amusement.… (más)
 
Denunciada
AQsReviews | 4 reseñas más. | Apr 24, 2024 |
Seong Jinu teve um Segundo despertar. O pior caçador de sempre é agora…um nível S.
Seong Jinu subiu cinco níveis e foi notícia em toda a parte. O interesse dos mestres das guildas aumenta, agora que sabem quem tem participado, sob disfarce, nos seus raids e tem salvado os seus membros.
Entretanto, Jinho é expulso de casa por defender Seong Jinu à revelia do pai, recusando a posição de mestre de guilda. A quem irá ele pedir guarida?
No castelo demoníaco, Jinu continua a missão: quer chegar ao 100.º piso, derrotar o último boss e produzir o elixir que salvará a mãe. Desta vez, com a companhia inesperada de um demónio com uma aparência humana e muito feminina….… (más)
 
Denunciada
Jonatas.Bakas | Mar 20, 2024 |
A largely enjoyable continuation of the series. There are a few hiccups in the story, and I think I'm a bit biased in that I enjoy the manhwa and like the anime adaptation (thus far), so that shades how I feel about this, but overall it's a neat way to see where things began.

A number of things were added to the manhwa adaptation, and expanded further in the anime, but some things were lost in the adaptation phase, too. In the novel, we learn more about Jinwoo's background of growing up poor and having to help raise his sister. The novel really emphasizes that his father was gone from their lives since he turned 14, and he had to give up on college because by that point, his mother was comatose/too ill to support their family. Jinwoo is also much more supportive and closer to his sister in the novel. They have a nice relationship in the manhwa, but it's not emphasized as much, at least this early on.

But not everything that was removed in adaptation was bad. For instance, a lot of the weirdness with women is removed: 1) a number of female characters show particular interest in Jinwoo in the novel, including a nurse who gets his number (whom he later ignores), a hunter who has a particular fascination about him, and a bank teller. These are all removed in the manhwa adaptation, and have yet to manifest in the anime. 2) At one point, Jinho wrongly thinks that Jinwoo, a 24-year-old, is romantically/physically pursuing a minor. Jinho is impressed with Jinwoo over this. The manhwa cuts the scene to just show Jinho's alarm at the idea. None of this adds anything to the story and it's overall very bizarre. The manhwa changes keep the women characters more professional and less "see power fantasy man go mad over it". It's an appreciated change.

The adaptations also generally do a better job of introducing characters and worldbuilding earlier, and the anime really does this even better. Woo Jinchul has a much bigger role in the story in the manhwa, Kim Sangshik, Chiyul Song, and Dongsoo Hwang also have expanded roles. The manhwa also slightly trims some things to make the story flow better. The whole plotline with the cellphones is a bit odd, and its loss is an improvement with the manhwa. But the novel also includes a lot of worldbuilding that gets trimmed out of the manhwa, which is unfortunate, because it makes certain moments later in the narrative not have as great an impact, or not make sense.

All in all though, this is still the story by and large that you like if you like the manhwa and/or the anime. It's an interesting action-adventure power fantasy, with some cute moments, and intriguing protagonist who's sometimes a bit of a dick to people but also has compelling soft sides. Looking forward to volume 3.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
AnonR | Feb 22, 2024 |
An interesting continuation of the story, with some neat character and less than stellar moments from Sung Jinwoo in terms of dealing with female characters. Coming from the manhwa and anime adaptations, it's still interesting to see how much was removed/changed/expanded.

One thing that makes this rating kind of bounce between a 3 and a 4 is the treatment of female characters and the sometimes truly strange plot beats. The story isn't exactly the worst in the former area: Jinwoo can at times be kind of patronizing to women, particularly the female healer in the A-rank dungeon. The story is weirdly focused on how she brings her purse with her in the dungeon, which is incredibly stupid. This is a truly unnecessary detail and I'm not sure why it's here, when all these characters are meant to be experienced and intelligent. Cha Haein also kind of has moments of the same intelligence disease, and some bizarre design choices: she's interested in Sung Jinwoo because he has protagonist energy and that's how that works. On top of this, she senses mana by her noise, and Sung Jinwoo, for some reason, smells nice. This is despite the fact she discovers this after he's been working in a mine for some hours, and should be quite sweaty. To each their own kink, maybe his sweat just smells really nice to her or he doesn't sweat after mining, but it's kind of strange all the same. Jinwoo does at least respect her a bit, at least to the point he thinks she's stronger than Choi Jongin. All in all, it's not the worst way to design a female character, it's just weird, on top of how the whole pick-axe situation is handled, again treating her like she's an idiot.

Jinwoo is also just generally clueless about interacting with people, which can make for entertaining and bizarre interactions that are usually pretty weirdly interpreted by other people. Sometimes he just truly doesn't care and has better things to do (which makes his encounters with Jongin and Baek hilarious), and sometimes he just doesn't understand personal boundaries (like with Esil). This might be down to his lack of socialization: he seemingly has been working to support his family and nearly dying in the doing straight out of high school, though I guess he just never interacted with his coworkers before he became a hunter? But it's also just sometimes strange, like how he interacts with Esil and the female Hunters hunter. He's kind of one-track minded, and fiercely protective of people he cares about, so some of it makes sense. It's just off-putting at times.

As a power fantasy, the story is generally fun and exhilarating, and there are a lot of actually cute moments where Jinwoo is fond of his minions, and excited for them. That being said, the plot where Go Gunhee offers a successor position to Jinwoo with no knowledge whatsoever of Jinwoo's qualifications - other than his physical capability - is truly bizarre. Yes, he's a protagonist in an action-adventure RPG, so of course he's going to be offered positions of power by strange authority figures, even without their knowing anything other than he's physically strong. But we're meant to believe Go Gunhee is intelligent and good at what he does... and he just jumps into it. This is solved in the manhwa (and seemingly also in the anime) by expanding Woo Jinchul's character so that he spends a lot more time closely following Sung Jinwoo, and likely informs Go Gunhee of more of Jinwoo's life and antics in advance, giving Go Gunhee more of a reason to offer the keys to the kingdom to him. But in the webnovel it's just kind of silly.

The webnovel also goes a lot more into the thoughts of Go Gunhee, Choi Jongin, Baek Yoonho, Goto Ryuji, and Matsumoto Shigeo than the manhwa does, and the actions of Japan are a lot more sinister, with plans to essentially turn Korea into a biddable servant of Japan, not just to kill off the S-rank hunters to leave them vulnerable. It's an interesting plot, and I'm wondering if the anime will follow the manhwa route and mellow it down a bit, or add its own twist, given the anime is being made by a Japanese company for a primarily Japanese audience.

The power fantasy is still largely entertaining, when women aren't involved, and he's not being kind of dickish to Jinho, Jinwoo is a pretty fun character. Still interesting to see how the story goes. The writing at least in the translation can be hit or miss, but it flows pretty decently. If you like this and want more, I would recommend giving the manhwa and anime a shot, since they expand on a lot of the cast in fun ways and make the story flow better, and most of my criticisms in re: Jinwoo's character aren't present there.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
AnonR | Feb 22, 2024 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
83
Miembros
1,835
Popularidad
#14,025
Valoración
4.0
Reseñas
24
ISBNs
79
Idiomas
6

Tablas y Gráficos