That is the legacy of GOH. It argues that the divine is terrifying, but humanity—flawed, fragile, furious—is sublime.

The genius of Park’s early writing is the simplicity of their chemistry. They aren't friends because of destiny; they become friends because they respect the way the other person throws a punch. The “GOH” tournament—a secret competition granting the winner any wish—is merely the crucible. What keeps readers glued to the page is the slow burn of Daewi learning to smile again, Mira breaking her chains, and Mori’s mysterious past beginning to leak through his goofy exterior.

At its core, GOH is a story of three delinquents. Jin Mori, the cocky, Taekwondo-obsessed prodigy who claims to be the “strongest under the heavens.” Han Daewi, the pragmatic, bare-knuckle brawler fighting for a dying friend’s hospital bills. And Yu Mira, the prideful swordsman of the “Blade of the Heavenly Way,” struggling against her family’s patriarchal expectations.