Among them was Jong-du, a man whose skin was a map of scars and tattoos. As the ship hit international waters, the plan went into motion. A hidden wire, a slit throat, and a spray of crimson against the dull gray bulkhead. The prisoners were loose.
The screams that followed were different. They weren't the sounds of a fight; they were the sounds of a harvest. Criminals and cops found themselves forced into a nightmare where the only goal was to see the next sunrise. As the ship tossed in the dark Pacific waves, the "Uncut" horror reached its peak: on this boat, there were no heroes—only those who died quickly and those who died screaming. Among them was Jong-du, a man whose skin
In a sublevel marked with warning tape, something had woken up. It wasn't human, and it didn't care about prisoner rights or police procedure. It was a project born of old sins and darker science—a "Wolf" designed for hunting. The prisoners were loose
The metal floor of the cargo ship Frontier Wolf hummed with the vibration of heavy engines, but the sound couldn't drown out the tension. Deep in the hull, the "Uncut" reality of the mission was laid bare: a collection of Korea’s most dangerous criminals, shackled and snarling, being deported under heavy guard. Criminals and cops found themselves forced into a