With the explosive success ofSolo Leveling’sfirst two seasons, fans are eagerly awaiting the continuation of Sung Jinwoo’s journey in season 3. The anime has hooked audiences with its high-octane battles, stylish animation, and Jinwoo’s rise from weakest hunter to the most powerful being on Earth. But that rapid power escalation, while thrilling, is already starting to show some cracks heading into the next arc. The challenge is that Jinwoo has become so strong that he overshadows everyone around him.

As season 2 wrapped up, it becameclear that there were virtually no threats left that Jinwoo cannot handle solo. While this sets him up for epic one-on-one battles against massive enemies, it risks reducing the tension of the story.If Jinwoo is the only one who can fight the real threats, the rest of the cast becomes little more than spectators.This undermines the stakes and weakens the emotional impact of what should be ensemble-driven moments.

Solo leveling anime season 2 episode 11 Korean S-rank hunters vs Ant Queen

Jinwoo’s Power Curve Creates Narrative Imbalance

Solo Leveling’s Jinwoo is Growing in Strength and Power Too Quickly For the Story to Handle

Jinwoo’s meteoric rise in strength was a core appeal early in the series, but now it threatens to unbalance the story.The supporting characters, fellow Hunters and allies introduced in previous arcs, are simply no match for the scale of danger Jinwoo now faces.This makes it difficult to create meaningful group conflicts. The tension fizzles out if the viewer knows that Jinwoo will inevitably show up and wipe out the enemy in a few minutes.

This problem is not unique toSolo Leveling. Many anime series with overpowered protagonists fall into the same trap, where secondary characters exist solely to build up the threat before the hero wipes the floor. But that formula gets stale.If season 3 continues in this direction without adjusting the power dynamics, the anime risks becoming repetitiveand losing the sense of progression that made earlier arcs so exciting.

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Letting the Supporting Cast Shine

Solo Leveling Needs to Put More Focus on Its Side Characters

There is a straightforward solution the anime can use, and that is to give the supporting cast a boost. The manhwa did not focus much on powering up side characters, but theSolo Levelinganime has already done a commendable job of fleshing them out emotionallycompared to its source. Adding anime-original scenes or battles where other Hunters get to shine, even if only briefly, would make the story more dynamic and immersive.

These changes would not need to drastically alter the plot. Even if the supporting cast ultimately cannot finish the job, letting them put up a real fight would add more weight to Jinwoo’s interventions. Viewers would feel more invested in the whole world, not just one character. Plus, showcasing group battles could highlight creative uses of powers and make encounters more strategic and layered, rather than just displays of brute force. By giving the side characters more room to grow,Solo Levelingseason 3 can sidestep a major pacing issueand maintain the momentum that made it a global hit.