
Somewhere between his breakout role in Lovely Runner and his more recent appearance in Perfect Crown, a certain kind of internet consensus formed around Byeon Woo-seok’s face. Not because of the way he acted. Not about his chemistry with co-stars or his ability to carry a long-running drama. About his lips, specifically. And whether they were always that full. And whether his eyes had always opened quite that wide. In the Korean entertainment industry, it’s a well-known cycle: when a male actor reaches a certain level of prominence, someone starts a thread, which then takes on a life of its own.
The thing is, Byeon Woo-seok actually addressed this directly. He admitted on tvN’s talk show Taxi that he had thought about having some procedures done prior to his debut because he thought his features were unpolished. He considered it. He didn’t do it after that. In a field where the typical reaction to cosmetic rumors is silence or diversion, such an open admission is comparatively uncommon and merits greater recognition than it usually receives. He acknowledged that the idea had occurred to him. All he said was that he hadn’t followed through.
However, the pictures are the most convincing evidence in his favor, not what he said. In 2024, his middle school and high school graduation pictures started making the rounds on Korean forums. They had the same full lips. The same well-defined, soft facial structure. Even in pictures taken more than ten years before he became well-known, there is a slight natural hump on the nasal bridge that gives his profile a distinctly masculine quality. When they saw a teenage version of the same face, fans who had previously believed his features were surgically created ran out of things to argue about. It’s the kind of situation that ought to put an end to a rumor. Seldom does it.
Here, there is a more general pattern that is noteworthy. The cosmetic surgery industry in South Korea is one of the most advanced in the world, and procedures are genuinely more accepted there than in most Western contexts, especially in the entertainment sector. Because cosmetic work is so normalized, and because the industry has historically favored very specific aesthetic standards, people often assume that any conventionally attractive Korean celebrity must have had something done. In terms of statistics, it is a reasonable prior. But it becomes a problem when it’s applied as a default conclusion rather than a question, and when natural features get dismissed simply because they’re striking.
A natural double eyelid with a deep crease, a 1:1 eye-to-face width ratio that coincidentally closely aligns with idealized aesthetic proportions, and cheekbone structure that reads as defined without displaying the telltale flatness that frequently follows aggressive contouring procedures are some of the specific features that plastic surgeons who have publicly examined Byeon Woo-seok’s facial proportions tend to highlight. Instead of the smoothed V-line that is usually the aim of surgical jaw reduction, his jawline maintains small natural angles. These observations imply that his features are consistent with someone who just has an unusual face, but they don’t prove he hasn’t had anything done because photos are not perfect evidence.
All of this was further complicated by the Perfect Crown controversy. Some viewers of the drama assumed that Botox was the reason for his limited facial expressions, which included fewer micro-expressions and less noticeable movement. It’s possible. It’s also possible that the problem was directorial rather than cosmetic, and it’s even more likely given behind-the-scenes footage that showed him moving his face quite naturally. Stiff characters read as stiff on screen regardless of what an actor’s face can physically do, and the writing around his Perfect Crown character drew criticism independently of any cosmetic debate.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that we hardly ever pose these queries to actors who are deemed to be conventionally average-looking. Strangely, the conjecture surrounding Byeon Woo-seok’s face stems from how attractive he is; it’s a kind of disbelief that natural faces can be this symmetrical, this photogenic, and this consistent over fifteen years of documentation. It’s probably worth considering whether that incredulity reveals more about him or about the audience.
