Lore Olympus Webtoon 〈ESSENTIAL × 2025〉

Just bring tissues. And maybe a glass of pomegranate juice.

But don't let the pretty pastels fool you. Lore Olympus uses its candy-colored exterior to tackle incredibly heavy themes. At its heart, this is not a story about a "kidnapping" (sorry, ancient mythographers). It is a story about survival. Lore Olympus Webtoon

If you’ve scrolled through Webtoon in the last five years, you’ve seen her: the vibrant, blue-skinned goddess with pink butterfly cheeks, usually looking either terrified or furious. Rachel Smythe’s Lore Olympus isn’t just a comic; it is a cultural juggernaut. Just bring tissues

The genius of Smythe’s writing is how she modernizes the divine drama. The Fates are a gossipy news network. Apollo is the charming, entitled golden boy who hides a monster beneath the surface. The gods attend drunken parties, scroll through "Olympus Now" (Twitter), and deal with family drama that makes Thanksgiving dinner look like a picnic. Of course, we have to talk about the ship . Hades and Persephone (or "H x P" to fans) have set the standard for slow-burn romance in digital comics. The longing glances, the accidental hand-brushing, the late-night text messages. Smythe understands that tension is sexier than the act itself. Lore Olympus uses its candy-colored exterior to tackle

Their romance is a soft place to land amidst the chaos. Watching Hades, a 2,000-year-old god, get flustered by a short stack of a goddess is endlessly entertaining. But more importantly, they see each other’s damage without flinching. He doesn't try to fix her; he gives her a safe space to break down. I’d be remiss as a blogger not to mention the current discourse. If you are reading the Loki (fast-pass) chapters or the recent free episodes, you know the Trial arc has been a marathon. Some fans argue the story is spinning its wheels; others argue we are luxuriating in the consequences of trauma.

Drop your hot takes in the comments below! Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5) Available for free on Webtoon, with new episodes every Sunday.

With over 1.5 billion views (yes, billion with a B) and a prestigious Eisner Award under its belt, this modern retelling of Hades and Persephone has become the gateway drug for thousands of new webcomic readers. But in a sea of Greek mythology retellings, what makes this particular story hit so different?