
maybe it’s because most reads these days are too fast paced and extreme-drama filled that this might be a little boring. I think most of us really like the affection and playfulness between them and the story itself is promising. Maybe give it another shot looks like the drama is coming up a bit in the next chapters

as i said, i found it boring
characters- mc bland as could be righteous guy and ml childish asshole (with rough childhood ofc) and thats their whole personality + that girl character is basically just a plot device.
plot- arbitrary law firm plot thats treated as a background/setting for the characters, rather than serving as a specific narrative and direction in itself- to be explored and developed alongside the characters
writing- over explaining, and unnecessarily wordy at times while nothing was actually happening, made the pacing wonky.
and i dont nock a story for its art, but it sure doesnt help that ml and mc have incredibly inconsistent faces, its like every angle could almost be a different character design.
its rare for me to find a story with no flaws, but here there is nothing for me to even care about, just two boring ass characters in an orchestrated set up.
did i elaborate enough for you?

I think you’re completely missing what No Morals is actually doing. The courtroom isn’t just a frame—it’s a mirror. The law firm and the cases aren’t there to fill space or give flavor; they’re there to show us, along with the MC, how the world really works. How power is leveraged, how relationships override facts, how “truth” is often irrelevant compared to what can be moved. It’s not about being factually right—it’s about surviving and winning in a system designed to protect the powerful.
That’s why the build-up from the MC’s sister’s case is so significant. It’s not arbitrary. From the beginning, we see the ML say over and over again that it’s stupid to go against institutions like Suihan. It’s survival 101. But he does. Not for plot. Not for shallow drama. But because he’s starting to break from his self-protective code—because the MC and what they’re fighting for matters enough to override his learned cynicism. That’s character growth.
And the MC? He starts out as that so-called “righteous bland guy”—but the whole point is that he has to change. He learns that morality alone isn’t enough to win. That to actually protect people, he has to sacrifice the idealism he once clung to. That his definition of “good” has to evolve to be useful.
Their love story isn’t just romance—it’s an ideological war. Two people from completely different foundations, challenging and reshaping each other’s worldview case by case, confrontation by confrontation, until they meet in the middle. That’s not bland. That’s earned.
So yeah, maybe it’s not flashy or tropey enough for you—but for those of us who get it, it hits hard.

im not missing what its doing, i dont like what its doing, there is a difference.
i wanted the courtroom element to be more than a mirror, more than a stage.
you have the sisters case in the background but everything els happing in the law firm is so arbitrary and unimportant, it sets itself up in a way thats too obvious that nothing els matters for the plot in terms of...well plot, and i dont find that engaging.
im not looking for shallow drama, im looking for a more fleshed out plot.
character driven plots can be great, but in this case it just leaves me feeling like i need more dimension to their world and to them.
i actually found it too tropey for a story thats not trying to be flashy.
its the classic overly righteous and mean asshole meeting in the middle character growth.
this story just doesnt make me care about its characters, but thats great for you and everyone els who liked it, i know its a popular read.
damn this is really boring, i cant even force my way forward, what do yall see in this