The inciting incident occurs when No-ah witnesses the bullying of a lower-ranked student. Unlike the passive bystanders around him, No-ah steps in. However, the twist comes in the final ten minutes. He realizes that intervening isn't brave; it's part of the game. The school has a point system, and conflict resolution is monetized. By stepping in, he has inadvertently entered the game he sought to destroy.
That night, Hae-yeon puts on a black hoodie and a tribal mask (a motif from his own webcomic). He finds Woo-chul at a norebang (karaoke room) with his crew. What follows is a brutal, three-minute fight sequence shot in unbroken takes—no shaky cam, no cutaways.
At school, Hae-yeon is the target of (Kim Min-seok), the son of a wealthy construction magnate. Woo-chul’s bullying isn’t just pushing and name-calling—it’s systematic: stolen art portfolios, ruined clothes, and forced “errands.” The teachers look away because Woo-chul’s father funds the school’s new gymnasium.
Unlike many street-fighting dramas, this focuses specifically on traditional karate forms.
A: Not at all. The drama explains legal concepts (self-defense vs. retaliation, juvenile sentencing) organically through dialogue.
The protagonist who undergoes the most significant growth.
As of this writing, Justice High is legally available on:
The story begins by establishing the brutal hierarchy of the high school and the introduction of Chae-young, a girl who doesn't tolerate injustice. 📍 Key Plot Points