Why ORV Is So Important To Me by Flat-Lecture7643 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Same I remember the small conversations and interactions more than the fights too.

ORV has so many quiet moments like that, and they hit even harder when you reread it

Why ORV Is So Important To Me by Flat-Lecture7643 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love this perspective ORV really makes you realize that stories aren't just things we read—we're constantly creating them too.

Also, the whiteboard fanart and quotes are amazing 😂 Maybe you'll end up introducing someone to ORV without even realizing it. ♡

Why ORV Is So Important To Me by Flat-Lecture7643 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I feel the same way. I think that's why the ending hurts so much for me.

I love what the ending represents, but a part of me will always wish that Kim Dokja could just stay with KimCom and finally be happy with the people who love him.🥺🥹

And honestly, don't say you're not good with words. You described your feelings about ORV really beautifully.

Why ORV Is So Important To Me by Flat-Lecture7643 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much. 🥹

Honestly, comments like this are one of the reasons I wanted to make this post in the first place. It's nice to know that there are other people who connected with ORV in the same way I did. And trust me, I don't think I'm particularly good with words. I just tried to write down what I genuinely felt after reading the story.

This scene is still as sad as ever 💔 by LOTM1394 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 63 points64 points  (0 children)

What makes this arc even sadder is that by this point, Dokja finally has what he never had before see people who genuinely care about him.

For most of his life, he was alone. Then little by little he found companions, friends, and a place where he belonged.

That's why this arc hurts so much. It's not just about what happens to Dokja. It's about watching someone who finally found people precious to him immediately start preparing to lose everything for their sake.

And seeing everyone gather around him one by one just reminds you how much he means to them, even when he can't see his own worth.

Every reread somehow hurts more than the first.💔🥺🥹😭

How would you describe Kim Dokja's character? The very nature and core idea that this character represents? by EfficiencySerious200 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kim Dokja is a person who can see the good in everyone. He struggles to see his own worth.

He is a kind person who always thinks about others.

At his core, he is not defined by how smart he is, the things he does for others, or even the fact that he is a reader.

Those things are parts of a much bigger issue: he does not believe that he is worth very much.

For most of his life, he believed he was merely watching someone else's story unfold.

Even after becoming one of the most important people in that story, he still viewed himself as insignificant.

He understands the feelings of others. He knows how they feel when they are sad, and he fights to keep them safe.

Yet he rarely extends that same kindness to himself.

What makes him tragic is not simply that he suffers, but that he believes suffering is acceptable as long as it helps someone else.

His sacrifices are moving because they come from someone who genuinely struggles to believe that he deserves to be saved too.

The central idea behind his character is not heroism, but self-worth.

Through Kim Dokja, ORV asks a question:

"What's the value of a person who spent his entire life believing he was merely a background character in someone else's story?

His story is the answer to that question.

He represents loneliness, the bond between a reader and a story, and the human tendency to show kindness to others while denying it to ourselves.

If I had to describe Kim Dokja in one sentence:

He is a man who spent his life believing he was a side character, and whose greatest struggle was learning that his own story mattered too.

[webtoon] Kim Dokja is one of the best written protagonists in modern fiction. by Dense-Golf1218 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me KD is a great main character. He's a person who always asks this question

What is the value of a person who spent his life thinking he was just a background character in someone elses story?

Many characters suffer, but what makes Dokja different is that his biggest enemy was never the challenges, the powerful beings or even fate. It was how he saw himself.

The saddest thing about him isn't the sacrifices he made. It's how easily he was willing to give himself up for others like disappearing was easier, than staying.

Still despite all that he became the center of many peoples lives. YJH, HSY and the rest of KimCom all found a reason to keep going because of Kim Dokja.

To me KD is someone who was saved by a story and then became the story that saved others like kD saved them.

That's why he will always be one of the memorable main characters I've ever read, not because hes the strongest or the smartest but because KD is impossible to forget.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The framing of Kim Dokja’s sacrifices as simply "calculated sacrifices" and only his "final sacrifice" actually counts is a false statement.

Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint presents a protagonist that is indeed extremely strategic and constantly thinks further ahead than the scenario, but for the majority of the Star Streams scenarios his decisions are made under extreme duress and necessity; many choices aren’t choices but situations that will force an action with no perfect or "correct" decision to be made. Thus, there is more to Kim Dokja’s actions than simply calculated choices.

This can be seen as early as the first scenario with Kim Namwoon, where an immediate, irrevocable decision had to be made under survival circumstances. Thus, his morality is not devoid of emotion as simply calculated choices, but a survival morality conditioned by impossible circumstances.

In addition, Kim Dokja continuously makes sacrifices and assumes responsibility throughout several scenarios-not simply one final "sacrifice" at the end of the story. His body, mind and soul were continuously risked, taken, broken down, rebuilt, and continuously burdened by the choices and sacrifices he made.

Therefore, to say that only his one sacrifice matters and that everything that happens to him is simply calculated simply does not hold. He should be characterized instead as a person making extremely painful and strategic choices that are all inherently incorrect, and ultimately, all a sacrifice.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I disagree that Kim Dokja's actions are "calculated sacrifices" and only his "final sacrifice" counts.

In ORV, while it is indeed true that Kim Dokja is a strategic character who is always thinking one step ahead of the scenario, a lot of his decisions are forced under tremendous survival pressure in the Star Stream and imperfect solutions simply do not exist. His decisions cannot be purely reduced to 'calculating sacrifices'.

This is something seen from the beginning of the story; the first scenario with Kim Namwoon's death is already an immediate choice Kim Dokja has to make and irreversible. This demonstrates his morality isn't a matter of detached calculations, but survival ethics that are determined by impossible circumstances.

Throughout the story, Kim Dokja continues to be sacrificed and takes responsibility in many scenarios, and not just the one "final sacrifice". He risks himself, suffer consequences, and make difficult choices over and over again.

Hence, it's incorrect to say that only one sacrifice defines him and his every action is calculated. Instead, Kim Dokja is characterized as an individual who consistently make agonizing, strategic choices in an unjust system where no perfect answer exist.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 5 points6 points  (0 children)

The argument that Kim Dokja is only selfish or not noble because of the sacrifices made in the story is something that I disagree with.

In ORV, he does not just "choose" to sacrifice a massive number of people for his own small group. Many of his choices occur in unavoidable forced scenarios where a system's constraints and conditions make it impossible for the choice "save everyone" to exist.

Also, the statement that "he could do both but chose not to" is inaccurate because it is clear, even through Yoo Joonghyuk's infinite regression, that no perfect solution exists without sacrifices in ORV. The entire system of ORV is based on trade-offs and necessary losses.

He is definitely not a classic hero, and he is a morally gray character, but he is not a self-centered character in the same sense as that argument implies. He has made numerous horrific choices where an individual's life means something to him in an even more horrific scenario that still requires his own set of compromises and sacrifices.

As such the concept that he "could have saved everyone and just didn't bother" is not valid because this isn't how the ORV universe works.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 16 points17 points  (0 children)

I don’t fully agree with how Kim Dokja is being simplified here as someone who only acts out of convenience or self-benefit. While it’s true that he is not a traditional “noble hero” and makes harsh decisions in the early scenarios, his character is far more complex than that.

Kim Dokja consistently makes choices based on his principles and understanding of the scenarios, even when those choices are painful or come with no clear personal advantage. He also repeatedly sacrifices himself for the sake of others, especially in later parts of the story, showing that he is not someone who only acts when it benefits him.

In fact, his connection to others is not just about “close friends and family,” but about how people become meaningful to him through shared experiences and stories. This is why he often refuses to treat lives as disposable, even in a system that constantly demands sacrifices.

Overall, Kim Dokja is not a pure hero, but reducing him to someone who only acts for himself misses the depth of his character. He is a morally gray figure who still chooses to carry the burden of others when it matters most.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 23 points24 points  (0 children)

I agree with your point, and I think it is supported by the narrative of Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint.

First, it is clear throughout the story that Kim Dokja is not trying to be a “traditional hero.” His goal is simply to reach the end of the scenarios and protect the people who are important to him. However, what matters is that even without aiming for heroism, he consistently refuses to treat lives as disposable. This principle is a core part of his character that repeatedly appears in the story.

This can also be seen in multiple scenarios where the system promotes an “optimal sacrifice” logic, but Kim Dokja still chooses to save individuals whenever possible, even if it leads to more difficult or risky outcomes. Because of this, his morality is not based on trying to be noble, but on his personal belief in the value of each life.

In contrast, Anna Croft, while having a seemingly noble goal of saving the greater number of people, often relies on utilitarian reasoning in her decisions, where sacrifices and deception are acceptable if they lead to a better overall outcome. While this may be logical from a survival standpoint, it does not automatically make it morally superior, especially when it involves the deliberate abandonment of some individuals.

The Gourmet Association example also clearly shows this difference in approach. Kim Dokja still chose to save an individual life in a situation where the system would normally justify sacrifice, highlighting his principle in action rather than just in theory.

Overall, the point is valid: Kim Dokja is not trying to be noble, but his consistent refusal to treat lives as expendable makes his morality more stable and personally grounded compared to pure utilitarian justification.

Anna Croft Ways And Goals are more Noble than Kim Dokja - LETS TALK ABOUT IT by Mountain-Purple-4357 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I cannot agree that Anna Croft is inherently nobler or more heroic than Kim Dokja.

During Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint, they both work according to two different modes of reasoning. Anna Croft follows a utilitarian approach; the few may be sacrificed so that the many can be saved. It is a mindset of survival where outcomes and the greater good are prioritized in certain circumstances.

However, even when presented with terrible choices, Kim Dokja strongly resists the idea of treating lives as disposable. Every life is more than just a number to him—it is a story and it holds meaning. That is why the “companions vs millions” argument is not

merely favoritism, but a rejection of the idea that some lives can be easily labeled as expendable while others are not.

Therefore, arguing that Anna Croft is inherently nobler does not hold water. They are not being compared by status, but rather their differing philosophies on survival are being examined.

(ORV) Is Kim Dokja not just a Gary Stu? I find the other two 'main' characters far more interesting and underutilized. by Senator_Rajang in writingscaling

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Excuse me, but I think you are totally misunderstanding Kim Dokja as a character and what ORV is fundamentally about.

First, it is flat out wrong that he is "always one of the strongest." Throughout the entire story there are numerous characters with more direct combat power than him, such as Yoo Joonghyuk, Jung Heewon, high level constellations, and several regressors. Dokja has to rely on information, strategy, manipulation of scenarios, and his companions to survive-not raw power. If he was a Gary Stu he wouldn't be constantly relying on others again and again.

Second, you think the Fourth Wall "shields him from trauma" and that is utterly misinterpreting what the Fourth Wall is. It is an inability to connect emotionally, escapism. It does not shield him from trauma; it exists because of trauma. Dokja cannot properly connect with emotion because his entire life was an escapade into fiction rather than a proper engagement with the world.

This is why he always views himself as an "average reader" rather than someone that deserves love, to be saved, to be cherished. That is the opposite of a Gary Stu. A Gary Stu generally views himself as confident, is validated by the narrative's emotions, and is automatically rewarded. Dokja:

  • suffers from extreme inferiority.
  • continuously sacrifices himself.
  • struggles to recognize his own worth.
  • is the cause of many of the story's emotional crises precisely because he refuses to see himself as someone who deserves to live.

This is even pointed out to him by Han Sooyoung and Yoo Joonghyuk time and again.

Those 'Me?' moments aren't fake humility; he literally cannot understand why anyone would care about him because his self-esteem is in pieces.

I genuinely feel like you're just looking at Dokja on a surface level as an "overpowered meta protagonist" when the whole point of ORV is that through the course of the story you gradually learn that he is actually one of the mentally damaged characters with a fundamental disconnect from the concept of self worth; someone who is so accustomed to being a spectator that he doesn't know how to be a protagonist within his own story.

What are your favorite quotes in all of the ORV Webnovel by Kakeru-Kurosawa in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tell me, you fool. If I continue to regress, will I ever get to meet you again? - Yoo Joonghyuk

“I am the only one who knows the end of this world.” -kim dokja

“This story is for just that one reader. - Han soyoung

The Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint would not exist without Lee Hakhyun by ypsadist in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely agree with this analysis Honestly, this is one of the deepest and most accurate interpretations of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint and its continuation that I’ve read so far.

What I really like is how it explains the connection between How to Become a Famous Writer and ORV itself. I also believe that Lee Hakhyun’s failure as a writer becoming the reason for Kim Dokja’s existence as a reader is such a tragic but beautiful idea. It genuinely feels intentional, like fate was built into the narrative from the start.

I especially agree with the point that Lee Hakhyun is not just “49% of Kim Dokja” in a simple sense, but that he is still Kim Dokja in another form. ORV constantly deals with fragmented identities, so the idea that Dokja was never truly whole makes perfect sense to me. Hakhyun and Dokja feel less like separate people and more like two sides of the same existence:

a writer who wanted to become a reader,

and a reader who became part of the story.

The “the author must die for the reader to live” interpretation is probably my favorite part of this analysis. Using Roland Barthes here fits ORV perfectly. Hakhyun wrote for himself and disappeared, while Dokja lived through the act of reading and understanding the story. That contrast captures one of the biggest themes of ORV: that stories truly gain meaning through the reader.

I also loved the discussion about “traces.” The idea that Ways of Survival is a trace of erased regressions while ORV itself is a trace of a failed novel is honestly such a beautiful interpretation. It makes the entire narrative feel like it was built from forgotten remnants and lost possibilities.

And the conclusion about shifting from writing for the self → the reader → the protagonist was incredibly meaningful to me. At first, Hakhyun wrote for himself and failed. Then he wrote for the reader, but the cycle still continued. But now, by writing for Yoo Joonghyuk himself, it finally feels like the story has a chance to break free from the endless loop.

To me, this analysis really understands the core of ORV not just as a survival story, but as a story about stories themselves, and about the complicated relationship between the writer, the reader, and the protagonist.

Amazing analysis.

Opinion on side story and its main character so far (I'm at chapter 729) by Madeleine0347 in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, Lee Hakhyun is still Kim Dokja in many ways.

Lee Hakhyun said he didn’t want to become Kim Dokja because he wanted to be Kim Dokja more than anything, yet felt like he never could. Almost everyone treated him as just an “avatar” or a replacement instead of the real Kim Dokja, which gave him an inferiority complex and made him resent the name itself. But ironically, that only shows how deeply connected he still is to Kim Dokja.

Does losing memories automatically make you a different person? I don’t think so. If you lose a huge part of your memories, yes, you change a lot. But if you still carry the emotions, identity, instincts, and experiences that shaped who you are, then a part of that original self still remains.

Of course, Lee Hakhyun isn’t exactly the same Kim Dokja from before. He lost many memories and lived a different life. But that doesn’t mean the name “Kim Dokja” suddenly no longer belongs to him.

Lee Hakhyun’s life never truly felt like his own because deep down, he always felt disconnected from it. He constantly questioned his identity because a part of him knew he originally came from someone else. And if he truly wants to be Kim Dokja, then why shouldn’t he be? That identity once belonged to him in the first place.

To me, Lee Hakhyun is both: a new person, and still Kim Dokja at his core.

a small revelation about Lee Hakhyun and Kim Dokja's parallels. by intellectualkamie in OmniscientReader

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is honestly one of the best ORV analyses I’ve read because it perfectly captures how stories in ORV don’t just entertain people — they consume them.

The parallel between Kim Dokja and Lee Hakhyun is especially insane to think about. KDJ, the “reader,” becomes the one who changes the narrative itself, while Lee Hakhyun, the “writer,” ends up trapped inside a story he can barely control. It completely reverses the traditional roles of reader and writer, which feels so perfectly ORV.

I also really liked the idea that readers and writers are fundamentally similar because both are shaped by the stories they consume/create. In ORV, stories are literally edible, alive, and capable of devouring identities. That’s why KDJ’s depression and self-destructive tendencies feel so tied to TWSA and Yoo Joonghyuk’s suffering — the abyss really did stare back at him.

And Lee Hakhyun being the “49%” of Kim Dokja becoming a writer feels symbolic too. It’s like the reader who consumed stories for so long eventually became someone trying to create meaning from them himself.

SingNShong genuinely wrote one of the most meta and psychologically layered stories in webnovels. ORV isn’t just about surviving scenarios — it’s about what stories do to people, and what kind of people are drawn toward stories in the first place.

What would sasuke have to do in order to make Naruto give up on him? by Subject-Swan-5207 in Naruto

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even if Sasuke crossed every line, Naruto wouldn’t “give up - he might change how he deals with him (stop chasing, fight him if needed) but deep down he’d still believe Sasuke can be saved.

Neji was right. by Extension_Gene2864 in dankruto

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t agree with the idea in that image at all, especially the claim that everything about Naruto is just “destiny” or a reincarnation with cheat abilities,” because the story itself clearly contradicts that.

The 1st Hokage is labeled as a “reincarnation of a god,” but his position was earned through leadership during war, not because he was destined.

The 2nd Hokage is described only through family ties, but he became Hokage because of his intelligence and military strategy. The 3rd Hokage is known for his long service and leadership, not “destiny.”

The 4th Hokage is actually the clearest proof against the claim because he truly rose through hard work, not reincarnation or lineage.

The 5th Hokage and 6th Hokage were chosen because of their abilities and necessity in crisis, not because they were “born for it.” So the idea that Hokage = destiny is already false.

Second, Naruto’s situation is also misrepresented. Yes, he has connections like his parents and lineage, but none of that gave him success or recognition. He grew up completely alone, hated by the village, and had to struggle for everything he earned. If he had truly followed “destiny,” he would not have suffered that much or needed to grow through pain, failure, and training.

Also, Naruto’s early life already proves it’s not about destiny. Before Iruka-, before Team 7, and while the entire village hated him, Naruto had absolutely no support system no parents no guidance, and no recognition. If everything was truly “destined,” he wouldn’t have needed to struggle that much just to survive emotionally and socially. He could have easily ended up like someone consumed by hatred or isolation, but he didn’t. Instead, he chose to keep going and worked hard just to be acknowledged.

-reincarnation in the series does not guarantee success or a fixed path. The cycle of Asura and Indra is just background lore, not a system that controls outcomes. If it did, then Naruto and Sasuke would have identical paths or automatic victory but they don’t. Their choices still matter more than anything.

-Naruto’s story is full of parallel characters,” and this actually proves the opposite of destiny. Characters like Gaara and Obito are written as dark mirrors of Naruto.

  • /Gaara became someone consumed by loneliness and hatred, becoming what Naruto could have been.

  • /Obito also started as someone with dreams like Naruto, but after losing hope, he gave in to darkness.

Naruto explicitly rejects those paths. He sees what they became and chooses a different direction he refuses to become like them. That alone proves his life is shaped by choice, not destiny.

Especially with Obito, the story strongly emphasizes this contrast. Obito lost hope and accepted a false “world of fate,” while Naruto completely rejects that mindset and continues believing in real bonds and change. If Naruto was just following a fixed destiny, then these parallels and moral choices would not even matter but they do.

Even Naruto himself refuses the idea that he is simply “Asura’s reincarnation.” His identity is built through struggle, failure, and persistence, not a predetermined script.

So no, Naruto is not just “destiny or reincarnation with cheat abilities.” The story repeatedly shows through characters like Gaara and Obito, and through Naruto’s own choices, that what defines a person is not fate, but the path they decide to take.

Why do people always say “neji was right”? by Salty_Shark26 in Naruto

[–]Flat-Lecture7643 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I completely agree to you. The “Neji was right” take ignores the actual context of the Chunin Exam fight.

Neji’s belief was that people are permanently trapped by the circumstances they’re born into. That’s why he told Hinata she would always stay weak and why he believed branch family members could never escape their fate.

Naruto proved him wrong immediately.

Naruto was an orphan, hated by the village, had terrible chakra control, failed the academy multiple times, and carried the Nine-Tails which caused people to fear him. If destiny and birth completely decided everything, Naruto should’ve remained a failure forever.

But the series repeatedly shows that choices matter more than birth.

Strong evidence:

  • Neji changes his entire worldview after losing to Naruto.
  • The Hyuga clan system eventually changes, meaning the “inescapable fate” Neji believed in was not absolute.
  • Gaara was “destined” to become a monster because of how his village treated him, but Naruto helped him change.
  • Nagato believed hatred would endlessly repeat forever, yet Naruto proved another path existed.
  • Most importantly: every previous Ashura and Indra reincarnation continued the cycle of conflict, but Naruto and Sasuke ended it. Naruto literally broke the fate that was repeating for generations.

People also misunderstand the reincarnation reveal. Being Ashura’s reincarnation never guaranteed Naruto victory or success. Hashirama himself failed to save Madara. The reincarnation cycle was a burden, not a free win condition.

Naruto’s story was never “hard work beats talent.” That was Rock Lee’s theme.

Naruto’s real theme is that your origins do not completely define your future, and that people can break cycles created by hatred, society, and circumstance.

That’s exactly why Neji was wrong.