I would’ve guessed it was a biblical reference. With the whole tower (everyone speaks the same language because of the pockets), having said tower presumably meet a god at the very top, Baam being a damn near sinless man, him being born on the 25th night. Being resurrected. And being very charismatic and have everyone flock to him.
@@marlom7882 yeah he can be the last antagonist siu is teasing very much the sun he has is very very dangerous add baam began to know he is monster even if we didn't have all revelation rn
@@neo-matrix134 yeah whatever but where do you get that he is hypocritical? his character just grew to not be dumbass who tries to save every insignificant thing in the tower
You ve helped me open my eyes about Tower of God. I am very thankful for that :) What a great piece of art this Manwha is. I only wish the best for SIU. Thanks a lot for your analysis.
I always thought it was strange that SIU has no time off. He could just make each chapter slightly shorter, build up a backlog of chapters to release, and then take breaks whenever he wants and keep releasing on a regular schedule.
He already had fan complaints when he made shorter chapters to take a rest, and it seems that there's a minimum length he has to respect for each chapters (not sure about this but it's the case for a lot of webtoon)
A history lesson and ToG good morning 🎉. Always thought it was interesting that when jahad was choking baam in data world the thorn just warped him out of there..? Is enryu inside the thorn or something 😅
Funny, because I thought you'd go that Jahad's empire is an analogy to South korea, where the chaebols (great families) control nearly the entire tower, with Samsung (Jahad) at the top. Then again, you've shown insane ignorance towards Korean history. South korea, after the separation was *not* a liberal democracy, but a western imposed, ruthless dictatorship. It naturally and gradually developed a democracy, but this came at the price of chaebols gaining increasing power over the nation.
The analogy I'm making concerns Korea's present, the era in which SIU lives. For it is his environment that shapes the ideas he develops. So yes, I consider it more likely that the depiction of Jahad as a dictator with full power and developing a cult of personality is more inspired by Kim Jong-Un than by the military dictatorship of the 60s. When I speak of "liberal democracy", I'm talking about the side the country symbolically represents through the Cold War, not what it actually is. Exactly like North Korea, which has absolutely nothing to do with communism. Besides, I still find it hard to see today's South Korea as a democratic country, precisely because of the influence of the chaebols.
You should never again summarize world history. I can't believe you called the military dictatorship that was South Korea in that time period as being representative of democracy. Maybe don't repeat bad Western propaganda back at your viewers.
Also, with proxy wars there are two sides who are using the people on the ground d in the war to their advantage. That is not what happened in the Korean War. First of all it was a Civil War that the Americans decided to get involved in. They literally sent the military there. The USSR on the other hand was not all over Korea like you make it seem. You just made up history when I comes to who attacked who since the South massacred citizens from their South to their North. I don't know where you got your information from, but do a little fact checking before just saying incorrect things.
I would’ve guessed it was a biblical reference. With the whole tower (everyone speaks the same language because of the pockets), having said tower presumably meet a god at the very top, Baam being a damn near sinless man, him being born on the 25th night. Being resurrected. And being very charismatic and have everyone flock to him.
Ah this opposite actually lmfao
Baam is a wolf in sheep clothe like somes politician and is very hypoticrical
@@neo-matrix134 baam? Wow shit… I did not expect that. Now I’m actually looking forward to see how his character grows
@@marlom7882 yeah he can be the last antagonist siu is teasing very much the sun he has is very very dangerous add baam began to know he is monster even if we didn't have all revelation rn
@@neo-matrix134 yeah whatever but where do you get that he is hypocritical? his character just grew to not be dumbass who tries to save every insignificant thing in the tower
You ve helped me open my eyes about Tower of God. I am very thankful for that :) What a great piece of art this Manwha is. I only wish the best for SIU. Thanks a lot for your analysis.
Great video as always
I always thought it was strange that SIU has no time off. He could just make each chapter slightly shorter, build up a backlog of chapters to release, and then take breaks whenever he wants and keep releasing on a regular schedule.
He already had fan complaints when he made shorter chapters to take a rest, and it seems that there's a minimum length he has to respect for each chapters (not sure about this but it's the case for a lot of webtoon)
It was amazing video as always thanks a lot
A history lesson and ToG good morning 🎉. Always thought it was interesting that when jahad was choking baam in data world the thorn just warped him out of there..? Is enryu inside the thorn or something 😅
No need for Enryu. The Admin fragments are inside (Blue and Red Thryssas).
@@l.asriel9005 so you think they warped baam out? Just seemed so random at the time he was about to be a goner lol by jahaddeathgrip
I kinda thought it was his own powers and kinda the god's will
Great video
You forgot to annalogise with jucheism.
Funny, because I thought you'd go that Jahad's empire is an analogy to South korea, where the chaebols (great families) control nearly the entire tower, with Samsung (Jahad) at the top.
Then again, you've shown insane ignorance towards Korean history. South korea, after the separation was *not* a liberal democracy, but a western imposed, ruthless dictatorship. It naturally and gradually developed a democracy, but this came at the price of chaebols gaining increasing power over the nation.
The analogy I'm making concerns Korea's present, the era in which SIU lives. For it is his environment that shapes the ideas he develops. So yes, I consider it more likely that the depiction of Jahad as a dictator with full power and developing a cult of personality is more inspired by Kim Jong-Un than by the military dictatorship of the 60s.
When I speak of "liberal democracy", I'm talking about the side the country symbolically represents through the Cold War, not what it actually is. Exactly like North Korea, which has absolutely nothing to do with communism. Besides, I still find it hard to see today's South Korea as a democratic country, precisely because of the influence of the chaebols.
You should never again summarize world history. I can't believe you called the military dictatorship that was South Korea in that time period as being representative of democracy. Maybe don't repeat bad Western propaganda back at your viewers.
Also, with proxy wars there are two sides who are using the people on the ground d in the war to their advantage. That is not what happened in the Korean War. First of all it was a Civil War that the Americans decided to get involved in. They literally sent the military there. The USSR on the other hand was not all over Korea like you make it seem. You just made up history when I comes to who attacked who since the South massacred citizens from their South to their North. I don't know where you got your information from, but do a little fact checking before just saying incorrect things.