its a school life manhwa. there is a girl who keeps trying to be the weirdest of them all, but the mc is a natural weirdmaxxing goat and they both are basically having a weird-off by playing truth or dare i think, some sort of game. the mc also has her moms dead body in a kimchi freezer at her house. the whole school is filled with freaks.
It has to be really niche like you almost never see other people in this fandom. For me is all for the game fandom it's not super super niche on Tumblr and TikTok but it's because a new book for the series finally released and new fan came in :3
As a casual reader of this webtoon, I just want you to understand the metaphor, Jo is probably the most beautiful blue colored roses in the garden, but it was never Ian favorite color. It was always red colored roses. The 1st roses Ian came to knew and recognized before knowing other colored roses. His 1st love.
Jo might be beautiful, ideal, even perfect on paper. A “green flag”: kind, stable, offering unconditional love. But again, being objectively good doesn’t automatically make someone the one a person chooses. Jo believe love can “fix” someone, but that kind of love can become one-sided—because it’s based on who they want the other person to become, not who they already are. And with someone like Ian, who is already emotionally tied elsewhere, that approach can feel more like pressure than comfort.
TJ is a complex character and he is messy & destructive but he is the only person that matches Ian emotional wavelength. Ian’s attachment isn’t about what’s healthiest or most logical—it’s about emotional imprinting. Ian love for the red roses that he would "replant" it if the red roses is flawed or wilted instead of letting go. It's not about what’s healthy; it’s about what feels irreplaceable and it still holds meaning that Jo simply can’t replace.
This kind of love isn’t universally appealing, and it doesn’t have to be. Some readers will see it as deep and romantic; others will see it as unhealthy or exhausting. Both reactions are valid. I personally choose the latter.
If anything, the story seems less like it’s endorsing one kind of love and more like it’s saying: people don’t always choose the best option—they choose the one their heart is already tied to.











