Watch the Kwon Introduction:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yjhz6dgSd7w
Before Kwon became The Phantom Hook, his face was plastered on billboards, glowsticks, and overpriced photobooks. He was part of a top-tier K-pop boy group, performing at sold-out arenas from Seoul to LA.
Millions knew his smile. Nobody knew his thoughts.
Between endless rehearsals, diet plans, and staged fan service, Kwon started craving something real — something he couldn’t rehearse. That craving led him straight into the Arenas, where fights were messy, victories hurt, and no one cared about perfect skin or camera angles.
From Stage Prop to Signature Weapon
His first hook wasn’t even a weapon — just a shiny prop from an unreleased concept video that never made it past management.
Kwon kept the prop, modified it, and turned it into a piece of gear that hits harder than any high note ever could.
Mirage: From Duets to Duels
There’s a reason Kwon and Mirage have history. Before Bullet Echo, they were both in the idol game — she as a rising soloist, he as a group member drowning in PR obligations.
They met at awards shows, danced in variety specials, and occasionally snuck into underground clubs — not to party, but to chase something raw.
Now, their stage has changed, but the chemistry? Still electric. Whether they’re teammates or enemies — that’s a different story every time.
Satoshi: The Total Opposite
Where Kwon brings flair, Satoshi brings discipline.
Where Kwon sees every fight as a performance, Satoshi treats every fight as a matter of honor.
They met in battle, and the only thing they respected about each other was the skill. Satoshi didn’t care who Kwon was — and that’s exactly why Kwon respects him back.
The Mask That Hides the Truth
The craziest part? Kwon’s fans — the ones who lined up for days to buy his merch — they still have no clue.
To them, Kwon disappeared after a "hiatus for health reasons." Rumors say he’s recovering from plastic surgery. Others swear he got married in secret.
The truth? Their idol never left the stage — he just switched to a stage where applause sounds a lot like gunfire.
For Kwon, every fight is a comeback stage.
Every hook — a perfectly timed beat drop.
And every victory? That’s his encore.