Usually not a fan of an open-ended endings but this one is okay i guess. I like clean endings with no loop holes. But this manhwa made me cry shitless. This is very well written i can say. I like this
i am unbearably sad after reading this. i literally could not stop crying reading each chapter because i was always reminded of the fact that jaeha was d word and all of the regrets yeonho had.. and the open enDING HHH im so torn this manhwa left me rekt
WHAT KINDA ENDING IS THIS AUTHOR LITERALLY ENDED THIS WITH 3 POSSIBLE SITUATIONS WTF WTF I liked everything except the ending because how am I gonna decide which one is real dammit
Fin 16.5 After shifting back to his homtown 10 years later, MC came across an antique phone in the attic of his new house. Having no other friends, he ended up dailing the number of a friend he held dear but had passed away 10 years ago, yet it actually connected, and the person on the other end of the phone actually had the same name as that friend.
HSers (sort of). A guy in his 20s moves back to his old town with his dad, and finds a secret stair inside his room, and memories come flooding back of a guy he cared about in HS that got killed by truck-kun on graduation day. He finds an old telephone too, and decides to *69 to call the last number called and let it ring for a while. Someone picks up. They talk. The guy on the other end of the line has the same name as the guy who died on graduation. Something weird is happening with time, how could this be possible? This isn't the happiest story, but it is well-written and the plot is very engaging. It doesn't attempt to explain whatever supernatural thing is happening, and doesn't try to force a particular ending on the reader. The final chapter it is left ambiguous as to if the mc is dead, and the extra chapter it is left ambiguous as to if it's the real ending or maybe a dream the mc has as his life flashes by, etc. It's an interesting way to end it. Anyway; the artwork isn't great, but the story is good enough to make up for it. This is flagged as tragedy, but it's more melancholy than that since the tragedy isn't really a surprise. I don't mind the unclear ending; it's appropriate for the plot and genre.