There was no way Iwol would tan his skin. He treasured sunscreen more than his own life.
But sothing did seem off. Even when standing next to Lee Cheonghyeon and Park Joowoo—both of whom had fairly light skin—Kim Iwol’s skin was the only one practically glowing white.
After a 3-minute search, Baek Haewon was able to find out the reason Kim Iwol had set foot in the human realm.
≫ Iwol apparently changed his foundation
He used to use a brighter one, but it stood out too much unless it was a solo shoot, so he decided to tone it down for group shoots, I heard
It seems he’s been mixing them since the IMO era
└ Wait, 17 is toned down?
└ Then what shade did he use originally;;;; 13 or 15?
└ It’s not just the shade number, his skin tone itself has a lot of blue undertones, so he usually buys it directly from overseas
Fans who had previously shared beauty tips with Iwol poured in with testimonials.
“They say it’s because he changed his makeup.”
“Makes sense.”
Baek Haein was convinced.
But that was weird. How did a bastard who didn’t even put toner on his own face notice Iwol’s change?
She was curious, but not enough to ask. Instead of wasting ti asking her damn sibling, it was more urgent to scan the corners of the screen to see if her boy was appearing.
After that… the spoiler reviews she’d seen on her tiline unfolded before her eyes as visual evidence.
They said Kim Iwol flashed a dazzling, confident smile, and she thought everyone was just throwing around blatant lies—until he actually high-fived Choi Jeho after scoring a goal, landing a massive area-of-effect blow right to Baek Haewon’s heart.
It was also true that Park Joowoo, the symbol of calmness, had shot an arrow with an uncharacteristically troubled expression. Baek Haewon, overwheld by the charming gap of a stoic pretty boy showing attitude, nearly passed out in front of the TV.
“Those guys playing ssal-bori in the back, are they Spark too?”
(TL note: ssal-bori is a light slap-fighting ga, usually on the arms or shoulders.)
Baek Haein asked, squinting and pointing to a corner of the screen.
Two huge guys in black tracksuits were relieving the boredom of the long waiting ti by playing ssal-bori.
…Though it looked a little more intense than the usual ssal-bori.
“That looks less like ssal-bori and more like they’re hitting a punching machine,”
Baek Haein added, seeing the spin in Choi Jeho’s punches.
“Our Jeho probably hasn’t played that much, that’s why. He’ll adjust gradually.”
“Kind of hard to say that when the one taking the hits looks that serious too.”
The cara also caught Kim Iwol, stably bending his arms and hands to receive Choi Jeho’s punches, which were aid at his abdon.
≫ Who are those guys in the corner playing ssal-bori with what look like real punches?
Their fists seem to carry a lot of emotion
└ Our boys aren’t fighting, they’re playing!
≫ That ssal-bori guy would be good at boxing
Looks like he has a talent for hooks
└ Kim Iwol, blocking those with his palm, is just as scary
└ Shouldn’t Iwol be doing a strength show breaking wooden boards or sothing?
└ The group where younger mbers would absolutely never dare to rebel against their hyungs—ranked #1
└ ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ
└ The hyungs are just too strong for anyone to rebel against them
≫ It’s striking how innocently the kids play
Outside of fan sections, all they do during wait tis is ssalbori or give each other piggyback rides
You’d think a trio like them would cause an explosion like Kkuyo Kkuyo, but even with six of them grouped up, nothing breaks—must be a bug
└ Even with six of them grouped up, nothing breaks, must be a bug >in front of us
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