The finale of 'The Second Coming of Gluttony' is a rollercoaster of emotions and revelations. After countless battles and personal growth, Seol Jihu finally confronts the Parasite Queen in a climactic showdown. The way his team bands together, each member pushing their limits, had me on the edge of my seat. What struck me most was how Seol’s journey from a selfish gambler to a selfless leader culminates here—his sacrifices aren’t just for power but for the people he’s grown to care about. The epilogue wraps up loose ends beautifully, showing glimpses of their lives post-war, and it’s satisfying to see how far they’ve all come. That last scene with Seol and Kim Hannah? Perfectly bittersweet.
One thing I adore about this ending is how it doesn’t shy away from the cost of victory. Characters you’ve rooted for bear scars, both physical and emotional, and the world rebuilding feels earned. The author avoids a fairy-tale resolution, opting instead for something raw and real. If you’ve followed Seol’s hunger—literally and metaphorically—throughout the story, the final pages hit like a feast after a long famine. It’s messy, hopeful, and utterly unforgettable.
The ending of 'The Second Coming of Gluttony' left me emotionally drained in the best way possible. After all the battles and betrayals, Seol Jihu’s final confrontation with the Parasite Queen is less about brute force and more about breaking cycles—of hunger, of regret, of despair. The way his teammates rally around him, each using their unique abilities in tandem, is a payoff for every earlier struggle. And that moment when Seol finally understands the true nature of his 'gluttony'? Pure storytelling brilliance. The epilogue gives just enough closure while leaving room for imagination, especially with Seol’s ambiguous future. It’s the kind of ending that lingers, making you want to flip back to the first chapter and spot all the foreshadowing you missed.
Man, where do I even start with this ending? It’s like the author took every thread of the story and wove them into this epic tapestry. Seol Jihu’s final battle isn’t just about strength; it’s a test of his convictions. The way the Parasite Queen messes with his mind, forcing him to relive his worst moments, had me holding my breath. And then there’s the twist with the Seven Sins—I won’t spoil it, but let’s just say it recontextualizes everything that came before. The supporting cast shines too, especially Yun Seora and Phi Sora, whose arcs wrap up in ways that feel true to their characters.
The aftermath is what stuck with me, though. The story doesn’t pretend the war didn’t change everyone. Some relationships fracture; others deepen. And that final conversation between Seol and the System? Chills. It’s rare for a power fantasy to end with such quiet introspection, but that’s what makes 'Gluttony' stand out. You close the book feeling like you’ve lived through something monumental.
2026-03-18 01:23:47
11
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
THE REVENGE OF THE CHUBBY HEIRESS
Swiftpen123
10
5.1K
For five years, Jessie Moore suppressed her personality, wore clothes she hated, and hid her staggering wealth. She did it all for one reason: to prove to her mother that true love could exist without a billion-dollar price tag.
But on the day they were supposed to register their marriage, her boyfriend, Allen Walker, didn't show up.
When Jessie went to find him, she didn't find an apology. She found a celebration. Allen was toasted by his friends for finally escaping "the fat girl" to get engaged to a "proper" socialite.
“Take this million-dollar cheque and get out of my sight," Allen sneered, tossing the paper at her feet.
Jessie didn't cry. She threw wine in his face, tore the cheque to pieces, and walked out—straight into the arms of the city’s most powerful, icy, and untouchable man: Stephen Harrington. Stephen is her best friend’s brother and a CEO who has never spared a second glance for any woman. He needs a wife to stop his family’s meddling; Jessie needs a husband to satisfy her mother’s inheritance demands.
It was supposed to be a cold business deal. No feelings. No mess.
But as Jessie returns to the Moore Empire to reclaim her throne, she realises the "Icy CEO" is anything but cold behind closed doors. And when Allen discovers the "penniless" girl he dumped is the very heiress he’s desperate to sign a contract with, he comes crawling back on his knees.
He’s too late.
“You had your chance, Allen.” Jessie smiles, leaning into Stephen's possessive embrace. “Now, I’m the one calling the shots.”
Now Jessie is reclaiming everything that belonged to her…including the heart of the icy CEO.
This is part 2 of “The Temptation of Adultery”
The question is whether there is loyalty in love or not. The answer is, of course, yes, but it has never been considered obligatory. If loyalty were mandatory, “adultery” would not exist. Unfortunately, loyalty not only exists but is also a temptation so sweet that it's difficult to break free from.
However, the price for loyalty is never cheap, and it never has been.
Bella's husband and her close friend are paying the price for the karma they have created—the price they have to pay for betrayal, infidelity, and exploiting others is steep.
But Bella is no exception either; the price she must pay may be far higher than that of the two who betrayed her.
The man named Levi Karter, with whom Bella has been having an affair, is not an ordinary person. It wasn’t until everything was over that Bella realized she had made a deal with a demon for the sake of revenge. But no matter how much Bella struggled and tried to escape, she couldn't get away from him because… being bound and possessed by Levi was the price Bella had to pay after making a deal with him.
To understand more, please read “The Temptation of Adultery” and then read “The Temptation of Adultery 2” The content is for 21+ readers, so please consider this before reading!
Ten years ago, he was forced to escape from a rich and powerful family. From then on, he drifted away like an ant, and everyone could bully him. Until that day, he dialed the familiar yet strange number. If you hold my hand, I will make you proud...
The Devouring Queen is a paranormal revenge fantasy set between a blood drenched Lycan kingdom and a starving vampire empire, where every moon can crown a monarch or claim a corpse. The story follows Elara, once a gentle Luna who was betrayed and murdered on her wedding night. Instead of finding peace, she awakens three years in the past inside the stolen body of a hidden vampire princess. She returns to life in a world already preparing for her death, because in thirty nights the Lycan King must kill his true mate to awaken an ancient god beast. Now two women wear the same face, and only one can survive the prophecy that hungers for blood.
Elara, reborn as a ghost wearing royal skin, abandons innocence and embraces the power she never had in her first life. With a quiet voice and a predator’s smile, she steps into a kingdom filled with secrets, manipulations and creatures who underestimate her. Cassius, the beautiful and broken Lycan King, is trapped between the woman he once loved, the version he helped destroy, and a prophecy that demands sacrifice. Their love is poisonous, irresistible and destined to end in ruin.
As the nights slip away, Elara weaves a dark game of power and deception. She announces a false pregnancy, visits the chained original bride under midnight moons, and manipulates courts and armies with deadly grace. The mirrors around her begin to bleed, the lies thicken, and the prophecy tightens like a noose.
The climax erupts in a courtyard filled with fallen soldiers, where the two identical brides tear the king apart to decide which destiny will rule. The kingdoms that remain have only two choices: kneel or burn.
I knew perfectly well that people from the Emirates do not eat pork.
Yet this time, I watched in silence as my husband's childhood sweetheart insisted on placing a pork dish on the table. In fact, I even supported her decision.
In my past life, when our company hosted a welcome banquet for powerful investors from the Emirates, she had been desperate to flaunt her cooking. Against all reason, she forced a pork dish onto the menu.
I stopped her then. I explained that pork was forbidden by religious belief, and that offending the investors could cost us everything. If they withdrew their funding, the company's finances would collapse overnight.
She took my warning as jealousy. In a fit of rage, she ran out of the banquet hall and was struck by a car, leaving her in a permanent vegetative state.
I thought my husband would break down. Instead, he remained calm, stayed through the dinner, and secured the investment in surprisingly calmness.
The truth revealed itself later. After the company went public, he brought me abroad under the guise of business, only to drag me onto a medical ship in international waters.
As my kidney was cut from my body, I cried and asked him why.
His answer came with a slap.
"If you hadn't been jealous back then... If you hadn't tried to sabotage her, she wouldn't have ended up like that."
I died in agony on the operating table.
After my death, he used the money from selling my organs to cure his beloved childhood sweetheart, and the two of them went on to live rich, comfortable lives together.
And then I opened my eyes again, back to the very day she decided to serve pork to the clients.
Man, that ending left me feeling a bit flat, gotta be honest. 'God of Gluttony' starts with such a wild, almost comedic premise—this guy with a power based on consuming anything to get stronger. The whole mid-section has this crazy momentum as he devours monsters, artifacts, even other people's cultivation bases. It's pure power fantasy wish-fulfillment.
But the ending? It kind of collapses under its own weight. He reaches this ultimate pinnacle, transcends the known realms, and then... it just stops. There's a vague sense he's become a cosmic principle or something, but the actual final confrontation with the primordial chaos or whatever the ultimate antagonist was felt rushed. We spent so much time on the gluttony mechanics, and then the finale barely uses them. I remember closing the tab and thinking, 'Huh. That's it?' It satisfies the 'become the strongest' itch but doesn't land the emotional or narrative punch the journey seemed to promise.
The ending of 'Berserk of Gluttony' Vol. 1 is a wild ride that leaves you both satisfied and desperate for more. Fate, the protagonist, starts off as this powerless guy cursed with an insatiable hunger for souls, but by the end, he’s embraced his 'Gluttony' skill in a way that’s both terrifying and kinda badass. The climax involves this intense battle where he finally stops running from his nature and uses it to devour a powerful enemy’s strength. It’s not just about the action, though—there’s this emotional weight to it, like he’s accepting the monster inside him isn’t just a curse but a part of who he needs to be. The volume wraps up with him setting off on a new journey, no longer just surviving but actively seeking out challenges to grow stronger. What really stuck with me was how the story balances his internal struggle with the external threats—it doesn’t shy away from the darker implications of his power, but there’s also this underlying hope that he might find a way to use it for something good.
One thing I love about this series is how it plays with the idea of power coming at a cost. Fate’s not your typical hero; he’s flawed, desperate, and sometimes downright scary, but that’s what makes him interesting. The ending sets up so many possibilities—like, what happens when his hunger grows even stronger? Will he lose himself completely, or find a way to control it? The last few pages tease this bigger world out there, with hints of other cursed individuals and factions that’ll probably come into play later. It’s one of those endings where you immediately want to grab Vol. 2 because the story’s just getting started.