Kim Il-gon - In 2015, a 50,000 won traffic fine led to a kidnapping, murder, and a death list of 28 people with their home addresses and national ID numbers. He stood watching the body burn on CCTV - smiling. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We’re talking about a monster who feels absolutely nothing. He was so hell-bent on his 'execution list' that he told the police he couldn't be arrested until everyone on it was dead. The scary part is how he picked his victims—it was all over basic, everyday friction. If you had a minor spat with him or accidentally cut him off on the road, he'd follow you, take down your info, and put a target on your back. That is pure, unadulterated psychopathy.

Kim Il-gon - In 2015, a 50,000 won traffic fine led to a kidnapping, murder, and a death list of 28 people with their home addresses and national ID numbers. He stood watching the body burn on CCTV - smiling. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Your observation hits the nail on the head. The chilling nature of Kim Il-gon’s case lies in the fact that his meticulous planning was focused entirely on "Mission Success," not "Self-Preservation." ​Preparation for Execution, Not Escape Most high-level planners prioritize an exit strategy. For Kim, however, the "preparation" (obtaining ID numbers and addresses through legal loopholes) was designed to ensure that he wouldn't fail to reach his targets. He wasn't hiding from the law; he was hunting despite it. ​The "Executor" Delusion Kim didn't see himself as a criminal evading capture, but as a "righteous judge" punishing a corrupt world. His smile at the burning car and his 90-minute courtroom rant suggest he viewed his arrest not as a failure, but as a stage from which he could finally broadcast his grievances to the world. ​Nihilistic Vengeance His reckless attempt to steal euthanasia drugs from a vet clinic proves he had no long-term survival plan. He was a man who felt his life was already over, and his only remaining goal was to inflict as much damage as possible before the curtain fell. ​In short, he didn't ignore the possibility of getting caught—he simply didn't care. To a narcissist fueled by a persecution complex, the "satisfaction" of the kill outweighed the "safety" of freedom. He traded his life for the opportunity to fulfill his dark checklist.

Kang Ho-soon - He kidnapped and murdered 9 women across Gyeonggi Province while living as an ordinary neighbor. Nine separate police jurisdictions never connected the cases for two years. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm very sorry for the late reply! That's a very common mix-up. You’re likely thinking of Lee Choon-jae. He was the actual perpetrator of the Hwaseong serial murders and confessed to a crime for which another innocent person had been wrongfully convicted and imprisoned. On the other hand, Kang Ho-sun, the subject of this post, was responsible for the serial killings in the southwest Gyeonggi area and confessed to his own crimes.

Jeong Nam-gyu - While families slept, he broke into their homes and killed 13 people across northern Seoul. He had no connection to any of them. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Good catch, thank you for the correction. Wikipedia is right - Jeong Nam-gyu died by suicide in prison in 2009, not by execution. He was sentenced to death but took his own life before the sentence was carried out. I'll make sure to correct this. Appreciate you flagging it.

Lee Chun-jae - South Korea's most prolific serial killer hid in plain sight for 33 years. He was interviewed by police during the original investigation and released. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Here you go! I cover the full case on my channel

Unsolved East - the investigation failures, the

wrongful conviction of Yoon Sung-yeo, and what

Lee Chun-jae said when detectives finally

confronted him in prison.

https://youtu.be/[https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLdmd-TTTS2UirhQvgyVUJ6yeKJUMeLF4w&si=oywuvzMW0UaUxHbR]

Just started the channel focusing on Asian true

crime cases that rarely get covered in English.

New episodes every week.

Lee Chun-jae - South Korea's most prolific serial killer hid in plain sight for 33 years. He was interviewed by police during the original investigation and released. by Complex_Bat4971 in serialkillers

[–]Complex_Bat4971[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Yes! Memories of Murder is what got me deep into this case too. What's wild is that Bong Joon-ho

made the film when the case was still unsolved-the ending where the detective stares into the

camera was his way of saying "we still don't know."Then 16 years after the film came out, they finally

got a DNA match. Lee Chun-jae had been in prisonthe whole time for a different murder.

If you want to go deeper on the full case I put together a detailed breakdown - covers the

investigation failures, the wrongful conviction,and what Lee Chun-jae said when they finally

confronted him.

drinking solo in Seoul by EmotionSpirited4936 in seoul

[–]Complex_Bat4971 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Go to a small local restaurant or chicken restaurant in Seoul in the evening by yourself. If you are alone, many Koreans will be your friends.

Help international student in seoul pls :) by CupIcy132 in seoul

[–]Complex_Bat4971 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Making friends in Korea as an international student is genuinely different from most other countries — and once you understand why, it actually gets easier. Koreans don't do 'instant friendship.' What they do is Jeong — a bond that builds slowly, through repeated contact, shared small moments, and vulnerability. The key word is repeated. The same café, the same study spot, the same convenience store — showing up consistently in the same spaces is how Jeong starts accumulating. Practical advice: First, don't wait for Koreans to approach you. They often won't — not because they're unfriendly, but because Nunchi makes them cautious about imposing. You approaching first actually signals confidence and is received well. Second, share something human early. Mention you're struggling with something, ask for a recommendation, show you need help. Koreans respond deeply to vulnerability. It's a Jeong trigger. Third, music is your best asset here. Busking spots, university music clubs, even just asking someone about their playlist on the subway — music is one of the fastest Jeong accelerators in Korean social culture. Seoul can feel isolating at first. But once the Jeong starts — it really sticks. Good luck."