
Age: 35
male
Greg Hsu (許光漢), born Hsu Kuang-Han, is a Taiwanese actor and singer celebrated for his emotional depth, range, and screen charisma, from romantic heartbreak to intense thriller presence. He gained widespread acclaim for his dual-role performance in the hit series Someday or One Day (2019) and has since built a diverse body of work across film and television, including his striking portrayal of the enigmatic assassin Mr. Smile in the K-drama No Way Out: The Roulette (2024). Hsu’s performances have earned him multiple prestigious nominations, including Golden Bell Award nods for Best Supporting Actor (Have You Ever Fallen in Love, Miss Jiang?) and Best Leading Actor (Someday or One Day) at Taiwan’s premier television awards. His film credits span A Complete Life (2013), Hijra in Between (2018), Back to the Good Times (2018), A Sun (2019), My Love (2021), the theatrical adaptation Someday or One Day: The Movie (2022), Marry My Dead Body (2023), Behind the Blue Eyes (2023), The Invisible Guest (2023), and 18×2 Beyond Youthful Days (2024). On television he has appeared in Dive into Love (2013), Qseries: Love of Sandstorm (2016), Qseries: Have You Ever Fallen in Love, Miss Jiang? (2017), My Dear Boy (2017), Attention, Love! (2017), Art In Love (2017), Inference Notes (2017), Meet Me @1006 (2018), Nowhere Man (2019), Someday or One Day (2019), Ru: Taiwan Express (2020), Rainless Love in a Godless Land (2021), Light the Night (2021), GG Precinct (2024), and No Way Out: The Roulette (2024). His work has earned both critical praise and popular recognition across Asian and international audiences.

Greg Hsu

Wei Shen
for Wei Shen in Sleeping Dogs (Live Action Film Adaptation)
Suggested by nihilus

(Based on the video game) Hong Kong is a city of ghosts—drowned in black, lit only by neon red, a graveyard that never sleeps. Wei Shen, an undercover cop, steps into the Sun On Yee triad with a badge hidden deep in his pocket and a heart already split in two. The mission is simple: infiltrate, dismantle, burn. But in the shadows of Kowloon alleys and blood-slick markets, nothing stays clean. Fists smash bone in rain-drenched backstreets. Machetes glint under strobing club lights. Bullets punch holes through crimson-lit glass. Every kill pulls Wei further from the law and deeper into the brotherhood, where respect is carved into flesh and loyalty is written in blood. The city’s palette narrows to black voids and arterial red—the badge fades, but the violence blooms. As bodies stack, Wei is remade by the world he was sent to destroy. His silhouette darkens, hooded, monstrous, a predator born of neon and gore. By the time the streets erupt into all-out war, the cop is gone. In his place stands a gangster baptized in violence, claimed forever by the Sun On Yee. Under the neon rain, Wei Shen doesn’t just fall—he ascends. Not as a savior, not as a traitor, but as the city’s newest nightmare.


