wounded, talented people, teaching them how to run a bar/restaurant, and slowly turning the business into a real weapon against the corporate Goliath that wronged him.
The middle of the webtoon is very much a hustle narrative. There are business strategies, betrayals, alliances, and a steady escalation with Jangga Group — investor moves, corporate
sabotage, legal fights and media exposure. Side characters get way more pages than you might expect: we see backstories, slow heals, and personal transformations that make the eventual showdowns feel earned. Romance exists but it’s not the whole point; it’s woven into character growth rather than shoehorned as the finale.
By the end, the story has shifted from pure
revenge to a more complicated mix of justice, accountability, and the cost of obsession. Some characters get satisfying closures, others leave bittersweet notes. What I love most is that the webtoon gives space to the messy middle — the grind, the moral compromises, the quiet victories — so the ending lands emotionally. I still find myself rooting for the little wins DanBam stacked along the way.