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Squid Game Season 3 korean drama review
Completed
Squid Game Season 3
0 people found this review helpful
by SunOh
1 day ago
6 of 6 episodes seen
Completed
Overall 10
Story 10.0
Acting/Cast 10.0
Music 10.0
Rewatch Value 10.0
This review may contain spoilers

Squid Game was always a tragedy about humanity

I watched all 22 episodes of Squid Game in a few days, and it probably helped that I experienced all three seasons back to back. In my opinion, the ending is perfect—there is no other "right" way.

My favorite character in the whole drama was Sang Woo. His last scene, especially his final exchange with Gi Hun, really moved me. I also particularly loved Myung Gi. His story with Jun Hee was touching, and he's a tragic villain who shows how an environment like the Games can push someone who's already far from perfect to a point of no return. And contrary to what others say, he was a genuine but shy character who couldn't make up for his mistakes. Especially when he killed Thanos, something seemed to have snapped inside him. The crypto investment was also an important way to reflect more modern issues. Sang Woo was an anti-villain, and Gi Hun wasn't that morally bright either, even before he killed Dae Ho—he literally sacrificed the Xs for the rebellion, which was understandable in a life-or-death situation. I loved Gi Hun's own fall because he's the one who said, "You don't know what this place does to people. It changes them." And Min Su being traumatized by Se Mi's death absolutely broke my heart.

I loved all the dark psychology, tragedy, and contradictions between the characters. To me, Squid Game is a beautiful ode to humanity and history: the votes, the rebellion, the diversity of the cast, the setting that gives Korean and universal childhood games a completely different meaning, the sometimes nightmarish atmosphere, and a story that stays grounded in reality, combining fear, greed stemming from a strong desire to live a better life in a world that's also hell, and survival.

Season 2 was almost too joyful to be true 😭. Of course it wasn't "necessary," but Season 1 literally ends with Gi Hun turning back at the airport and confronting them on the phone. Personally, I would've never watched the show if it had stopped there—Seasons 2 and 3 ended up being my favorites, even though I loved Season 1 too. I also think many people misinterpret the ending of Season 3. A VIP in Season 1 already says, "This year, the games from Korea were the best!", so Squid Game USA wasn't some last-minute addition. I also wondered if Gi Hun's red hair foreshadowed In Ho's "red pill" speech in Season 2, especially since Gi Hun later wears the red player shirt.

As for Jun Ho, I don't understand why people say his scenes should've been cut. People forget the island isn't supposed to be easy to find, his final search only lasted a few days, and he was deliberately misled by the captain. The real horror is that the Games keep continuing. Since the main setting can become suffocating, the scenes at sea also helped the pacing. He wasn't useless either: his character is crucial to the plot, he saved Gyeong Seok, and while he wanted to protect his brother, he didn't know In Ho would remove his mask. His betrayal storyline also worked as a parallel to Gi Hun and In Ho's story.
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