The action-packed finale of Squid Game Season 2 leaves viewers with a mix of emotions and unanswered questions. Available on Netflix since December 26, this season takes the dark side of Seong Gi-hun, known as Player 456, back into the hazardous games with a purpose- to tear them down from within.
The Plot Thickens
Season 2 mainly deals with Gi-hun, who cancels his plan to leave South Korea for the United States with the prize money. He plots with Hwang Jun-ho to reenter the evil game again. However, the elaborate scheme goes awry when Junho’s participation is reduced, and he has to fend for himself.
Throughout the games, Gi-hun strives genuinely to make the new attendees see the miserable fate that is awaiting them. However, his message is largely irrelevant to them, and turmoil arises inevitably. When Gi-hun can persuade half of the participants in a revolt against the masters of the game, then most have already fallen into the massacre.
The Dramatic Insurrection
In a last, desperate bid to rebel against the mysterious overlords who were feasting on the bloodshed, Gi-hun rallies his remaining comrades in preparation for a crucial re-vote that would determine the continuation of the tournament. However, in-fighting between the two rival factions significantly thins their numbers-a calculated result engineered by Gi-hun himself as a sacrificial gamble.
Taking the opportunity, Gi-hun and his companions overpowered the pink-uniformed guards, seized their guns, and advanced to the control center. He didn’t know that Hwang In-ho—dressing in the background as Player 001—was working on a counter-plan.
Revealing the Front Man’s Conspiracy
During the last moments of the finale, the duplicitous Front Man in-ho retrieves his infamous mask to reveal his true intentions, which are to enter into the game as Player 001 and sabotage the rebellion within. Pretending to be a friend, he endearingly wins the confidence of Gi-hun just to betray him at the peak of the rebellion.
In a shocking turn of events, In-ho orchestrates his apparent death to deceive Gi-hun, only to later re-emerge as the ruthless suppressor of the rebellion. He kills Gi-hun’s closest ally, Park Jung-bae (Player 390), thereby destroying the uprising in one fell swoop. Many others die—some as defiant rebels, others as collateral damage of the mayhem that ensues.
A Cliffhanger of Epic Proportions
The seven-episode season ends with several loose ends and cliffhangers, with fans anxiously waiting for the last season in 2025. Some questions are still left unanswered:
Was Gi-hun alive after the end of the rebellion or had he suffered the same fate as Jung-bae?
What happened to the rest of the remaining players kept in the basement?
Does Jun-ho, still wading through murky waters to find out more about the game, know about the mole in his team?
Will the game survive, and who will win this round?
Returning Cast and New Faces
The series has featured a good cast, with Lee Jung-jae, Lee Byung-hun, Wee Ha-jun, and Gong Yoo returning. Supporting them are some of Korea’s best actors, Yim Si-wan, Kang Ha-neul, Park Gyu-young, Lee Jin-uk, Park Sung-hoon, Yang Dong-geun, and others, breathing life into the thriller.
With all its intricate storytelling, morality to contemplate, and visceral thrills as it unfolds, the third part of the Squid Game saga promises to go wild in its final episode- full of revelation and reckoning.