The thing that doesn't sit well with me is the attitude difference between Therapist Noah and Killer Noah (I don't think the memory wipe also affected the personality... but I could be wrong). Of course my mind went to Dylan instantly. Is he telling the whole truth? Or just a partial one? The story made everything he says so unverifiable, though. I don't hate it as I like suspense and mystery.
Oh I mixed them up, I originally meant what if Noah was also a victim (never good with names TT)
So it turns up Noah isn't the handsome man (killer) we're made to believe he was, which would also explain the difference in attitudes between killer Noah and therapist Noah
As if he's an entirely different person we haven't met yet, but that seems a bit farfetched...
Alas!! Noah's green eyes.... What was that...?!
I wouldn't say the attitude difference is that big, Noah is the "bad for the greater good"type of guy and it doesn't feel like his core personality change. If you look back on the dude that was beating his wife, he didn't care that someone might be inconvenienced or hurt in any way if it meant it'd end in a good result, which is the same approach Noah has to his research
IDK man... also, I think the attitude change can also be blamed on Dylan's faulty POV. I don't know if it's even used in webtoons but it's usually found in books— the unreliable narrator trope— where you can't trust the storyteller to tell the truth. I could be wrong but if I'm right, props on the creator for making use of such an underused/difficult-to-portray trope in webtoons.
The other thing I based my suspicions off is on how Therapist Noah acted as he knew "himself" bit by bit via Dylan's story. He is kinda disappointed and low-key shook in what kind of a person he was as per Dylan's account of who he was. It's like he can't find familiarity between him and Killer Noah. Also when he said "The better you know the person, the more they start to disappoint you. Therefore it's great if you don't know anything", it's like a double-purpose quote also telling the readers of how he feels after just knowing he's a person who kidnaps people and does a Josef Mengele on them.
Again, I could totally be all wrong and the plot simply follows occam's razor. However, I'd very much like to be wrong in my own time, though.
The story's ripe for it. Therapist Noah is a ghost without memories and relies only on Dylan's account of the events. Who's to say that Dylan's a reliable narrator? Of course, I could totally be wrong... but I can't help it. The story is set up to raise some subtle red herrings.