The God Of High School -
Seven years after its webtoon concluded and four years after its explosive anime debut, Yongje Park’s magnum opus remains the standard for how to blend mythology, martial arts, and the unbreakable will of a teenager.
Park wasn't interested in who was the best fighter in Seoul. He was interested in the nature of divinity. By turning Jin Mori into the reincarnation of the Monkey King, Han Daewi into the vessel of the Jade Emperor , and Mira into the wielder of a national treasure, Park poses a question: Does power corrupt, or does it merely reveal? The God of High School
The climactic battle of the webtoon—Mori vs. Mubak Park—is not about saving the world. It is about a god who has forgotten how to feel pain finally remembering the warmth of his friends’ fists. Mori spends the final arc stripped of his divine powers, fighting as a mere human, bleeding, crying, and ultimately winning not through a Kamehameha, but through a perfect, desperate kick. Seven years after its webtoon concluded and four
The moment the “Key” is stolen and the “Priest” faction is revealed, GOH sheds its skin. The street-level brawls give way to Borrowed Power —the ability to channel mythical figures like the Monkey King (Sun Wukong), the God of War (Zeus), or the Four Cardinal Directions. What was once a martial arts comic becomes a cosmic horror-meets-mythological-war comic. By turning Jin Mori into the reincarnation of
When Crunchyroll and MAPPA co-produced the anime adaptation in 2020, it was a watershed moment. It wasn't just the first major Korean webtoon to get a high-budget Japanese anime treatment; it was a declaration that Korean storytelling had arrived on the global stage. But beyond the sakuga-filled fight scenes and the thumping OST, what makes The God of High School endure? Why, years later, does Jin Mori’s kick still echo through the genre?