pro bono Episode 3 opens with one of the most provocative questions ever posed in a Korean legal drama — what happens when belief overrides human dignity?
Among the many legal dramas released over the years, Pro Bono stands out for one clear reason:
each episode asks a real question.
Episode 3 is no exception.
Rather than relying on shock value, it confronts heavy themes head-on — belief, human dignity, and the violence that can hide behind so-called good intentions.
This episode firmly sets the direction of the series through:
- the expansion of the Pro Bono team’s personal backstories
- meaningful progress in Kang Da-wit’s central mystery
- and the full emergence of a powerful antagonist: Woongsan Group
By the end of Episode 3, the drama’s narrative compass becomes unmistakably clear.

🧩 pro bono Episode 3 — Why Park Gi-ppeum Chose Public Interest Law
The emotional center of Episode 3 belongs to Park Gi-ppeum.
At first glance, she appears cheerful, upright, and privileged.
But Kang Da-wit’s blunt question begins to crack that image.
“You were smart, from a good family —
so you ended up at a top law firm, right?”
The truth is very different.


Gi-ppeum grew up with hearing-impaired parents.
Her father lost his shop after being scammed.
Her life was anything but smooth.
The decisive moment that led her to become a public interest lawyer traces back to one court ruling —
a ruling that shaped her family’s fate.
And the judge who delivered that verdict?
Kang Da-wit.
The epilogue reveals this long-hidden connection, suggesting that their relationship runs far deeper than simple colleagues.
Even a small detail — an “apricot” shared between timelines — subtly reinforces this bond.
To be honest, one hopes the drama resists overplaying romance.
Pro Bono’s real strength lies in its narrative density, not love lines.

⚖️ pro bono Episode 3 Case Analysis — “I Want to Sue God”
— The Start of a Shocking Case
The episode opens with a powerful premise.
Kang Hoon, a boy with severe disabilities, declares that his life itself is a loss —
and that he wants to sue God for damages

Of course, God is not the real defendant.
The true targets are Woongsan Hospital and the Woongsan Welfare Foundation,
institutions that stripped a mother of her right to choose under the banner of religious belief.
Kang Hoon’s mother did not want to give birth.
Yet through the foundation’s network, she was taken to a hospital that forced childbirth,
without proper medical care.
The result:
a child condemned to a lifetime of pain and disability.
So the question arises:
- Whose belief was being protected?
- Who bears responsibility for that choice?

🏛 pro bono Episode 3 Deepens the Woongsan Group Conflict
— Kang Da-wit Chooses Escalation
Initially, Kang Da-wit opposes even taking the case.
But after Gi-ppeum’s relentless persuasion — and facing the core injustice head-on —
he ultimately files the lawsuit.
The trial unfolds exactly as expected.
- The hospital claims religious freedom in medical practice
- The Constitution’s language of human dignity and life appears to favor the institution
- The team loses in the first trial

Yet Kang Da-wit refuses to stop there.
“Dignity wrapped in beautiful words
is nothing more than beautifully packaged nonsense.”
He declares an appeal — and goes further.
Kang Da-wit vows to bring Woongsan Group’s chairman, Choi Woong-san, directly into court.
This is no longer just about one case.
It is a frontal challenge:
- Who truly made the decision that determined a human life?
- And to whom does constitutional dignity actually apply?

🕵️♂️ The Main Mystery Deepens
— Is There a Mole on the Inside?
Meanwhile, the incident that destroyed Kang Da-wit’s career begins to surface.
Call records reveal that fraudster Yoo Jae-beom contacted Kang Da-wit’s chambers.
Da-wit insists he never spoke to the man — not once.
Suspicion naturally turns to the person closest to him: Administrative Officer Yoon.
There is no proof yet.
Still, Kang Da-wit quietly orders a background investigation.
What becomes clear is that this is no simple personal downfall.
The threads now connect Oh Jeong-in, Yoo Jae-beom, and Woongsan Group —
hinting at a far larger structure beneath the surface.

🎬 Final Thoughts After Pro Bono Episode 3
Pro Bono succeeds because it:
- poses a different social question each episode
- portrays the judicial system through diverse judicial characters
- and balances character growth with an overarching mystery
Episode 3 is particularly striking for how it asks:
When does “good intention” become violence?
The question is posed without exaggeration,
yet with undeniable weight.
An all-out war with Woongsan Group,
the true force behind Kang Da-wit’s collapse,
and the layered backstories of the Pro Bono team —
This drama is far more solid than it first appears.
🔮 What to Watch Next
- Will Chairman Choi Woong-san actually stand in court?
- Which judge will preside over the appeal trial?
- Is Officer Yoon truly the internal mole?
- How far does Oh Jeong-in’s “big picture” really extend?
Official Streaming & Production Resources
tvn pro bono Program Page
https://tvn.cjenm.com/ko/PROBONO/
https://www.netflix.com/browse
Recommended Articles from Go K Wave
PRO BONO EPISODE 1 RECAP │ HOW ONE TRAP DESTROYS EVERYTHING
https://gokwv.com/pro-bono-episode-1-recap-review/
PRO BONO EPISODE 2 RECAP │ A BOLD NEW CONFLICT BEGINS
https://gokwv.com/pro-bono-episode-2-recap-review/
