The God Of High School Now
As the industry rushes to adapt Solo Leveling , Tower of God , and Noblesse , they should look back at GOH. Not for the spectacle of the borrowed powers or the scale of the god battles, but for the quiet moment in the rain where Jin Mori offers a hand to a grieving Han Daewi.
Most tournament manga hit a wall. Once the protagonist wins, where do you go? Park’s answer was audacious: You break reality.
Park’s art style in the early chapters is kinetic, almost dizzying. He draws impact frames like a photographer capturing lightning. Every kick has a trajectory, every grapple has weight. It is martial arts pornography in the best sense of the word—a love letter to Street Fighter , Dragon Ball , and classic Hong Kong cinema. The God of High School
That is the legacy of GOH. It argues that the divine is terrifying, but humanity—flawed, fragile, furious—is sublime.
In the crowded pantheon of action-driven webtoons, there are heavy hitters, and then there is The God of High School (GOH). When the first chapter of Yongje Park’s series dropped on Naver Webtoon in 2014, readers expected a simple beat-’em-up: a tournament arc stretched across hundreds of chapters. What they got was a shapeshifting monster of a narrative—a story that began as a high-energy martial arts festival, evolved into a war against gods, and ultimately became a philosophical meditation on power, sacrifice, and the definition of humanity. As the industry rushes to adapt Solo Leveling
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.
9/10. A flawed masterpiece of escalation. Read the manhwa, watch the fights on YouTube, and skip the filler. Are you a fan of the original webtoon? Did the anime do it justice? Share your thoughts in the comments below. Once the protagonist wins, where do you go
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.