So, in the process of trying to read Paper Tiger on Webtoons, the website simply would not let me create an account to read this 18+ story. I'd get annoyed and leave it for a few weeks, try again, and about two months of it sitting in a tab later, it worked as soon as I turned off ublock origin. I also learned webtoons on mobile cuts off how much you can read without downloading the app. Thankfully you can just tell firefox to "use desktop site" in the page settings and voila, read as much as you want. The funneling to the app is surely because there's some kind of currency and additional content gating without pay in the app, as well as excessive personal data collection (I checked- it's unnecessarily invasive). I didn't mean this post to just be bitching about how anti-user Webtoons is, but I got started and realized there was a lot to say.
Anyway Paper Tiger has been a pleasant surprise despite the site it's hosted on. The art is beautiful, pleasant watercolor/marker looking washes with subtle shadows, pen work sometimes tight and polished and other times loose and expressive. The style shows a confident hand and the backdrop of psudeo-fantasy Korean mythology is interesting.
My biggest complaint is the formatting of the panels. There's such extensive space between them that it's awkward to scroll or use pagedown key on desktop.
I've experimented with different levels of zoom and never found a happy solution that still let me enjoy the art clearly. The way smaller action panels are disconnected in particular makes the motions harder to read despite the contents of the panels themselves being clear and well drawn. The only effective way to read at a normal pace is letting middle click drag the page down slowly or use the scroll wheel, both of which cause my eyes trouble after very long. So unfortunately, my experience reading this has been tapping pagedown and chopping panels of all sizes up with almost every transition. (Below- the entirety of what I can see on screen at once of a long/large impact panel at comfortable reading zoom)
On a different website and with different formatting, this would be a pretty easy recommend for anyone not bothered by ultraviolence and a disturbing/dark story. The first handful of chapters didn't hook me, but as more of the main cast was introduced and began interacting, the plot also started going unexpected places and the forces of the world began pushing on each other in interesting ways. I got consistently more eager to read the next chapter, which makes me sad to find the series before it's completed and have to wait for updates. I'd still recommend it but would understand if someone found these things that bothered me too troublesome. I think it's likely best read on a phone rather than computer, within a mobile browser and not the app.