
Suicide Boy
- Genre: comedy school life slice of life
- Author: park gee
- Artist(s): park gee
- Year: 2017
- Original Publisher: lezhin
- Status: Hiatus
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21st century abandoned protagonist abused male lead apartment life attempted suicide black humor boxing bullied male lead bullying dark comedy dead parents death wish debts depression fights friendship full color high school students hikikomori low self-esteem modern era muscular females new friends poor protagonist protagonist frequently panics protagonist lives alone self-harm self-inflicted injuries social anxiety south korea suicidal characters unlucky protagonist webtoon
Rating(3.5 / 5.0, 11 votes)
5 stars
2(18%)
4 stars
2(18%)
3 stars
6(55%)
2 stars
1(9%)
1 stars
0(0%)

Popular Reviews
I enjoying this so much, even tho there is few chapter that hard to reas for me, Poor Him i feel so much bad but still this is good
I'm not gonna even rate this. It's definitely not for the faint of heart.
Anyone reading this must definitely check out the categories listed first. I abandoned this thing after 4 chapters only. It was more depressing than funny
Hooni struggles a lot, and it's tough to see him so sad, but when he finally makes some friends and has positive influences in his life, it's really nice to see.
In the beginning, I didn't like the Iida-looking dude in his class. But, I grew to like him as well.
Also, same author who made this also made a fantasy shounen manhwa called 'Slave B' if you wanna see. It's pretty good too!
First off, let's get one thing straight. This is a Black Comedy. I've seen people complain that this shouldn't have the Comedy tag. This manhwa uses mental illness, self-harm, suicidal tendencies, and bullying to portray its form of soft comedy. If you are not comfortable with that then this may not be the series for you.
The story follows Hooni's life as he struggles with severe depression, bullying, and the occasional suicide attempt. This manhwa actually treats these normally very heavy subjects rather lightly. This is both a good and a bad thing depending on how you look at it. As someone who struggles with depression and suicidal thoughts, I can see how some people might be upset at how nonchalantly it treats suicide, but for me, it was like a weird breath of fresh air. When depression and self-harm are portrayed in media they oven only focus on the moody aspect of it or they dramatize it. However, the way that Hooni's depression manifests its self is pretty accurate to the real thing. Unlike how it normally is shown as a sense of sadness or moodiness that comes and goes, severe depression is something that is always there and it becomes your new "normal". So the way that Hooni's every decision influenced by his Mental illnesses made him, to me, a very relatable character. The story about how
While the story can get very dark, I believe that this is an overall happy story. Because we see Hooni at his lowest point at the beginning of the story and as the story goes on you can see him slowly recover.
There are missing chapters, my only assumption is that they combined together every one of the chapters at once to give the readers a longer comic-strip. This is fine, you don't miss any of the story.