Squid Games (Season 2)
- Leah Largaespada
- Sep 23
- 6 min read
Updated: Oct 4

8/10 is my rating
I am probably being generous with the rating because I know I can immediately watch Season 3. If I was watching it as it aired, I think the way it ended would have frustrated me a lot.
Review
I liked Squid Game Season 2 for what it is - which is a solid follow-up to the first season. It is notable that they were able to keep the same intense, cutthroat survival vibe that had me glued to the screen albeit not liking the "icky" way it made me feel in my brain. The early episodes hooked me with all the clever planning by Seong Gi-hun (Lee Jung-jae) to take down the game’s twisted system. That, for me, was a pleasant departure from the gore. I was so pumped for his strategy that it was disappointing when it didn’t pan out the way I hoped—it felt like all that buildup went nowhere, and the story shifted back to him in the games and it felt like here we are again. It was also hard to understand his feeling about the money on one hand yes it was "blood money" but, on the other hand, not spending it on good things was a slap in the face of all those who played so hard and died. They had the choice to leave and chose not to. So, winning and frivolously giving it away or just sitting on it also felt wrong. It was a dammed if you do, dammed if you don't type situation.
If you loved Season 1, you need to watch this to keep up with the story—it answers some questions—but don’t expect a tidy ending.
Spoilers
Once he was back in the game, I was rooting for him to convince the new players. I wanted them to believe so they could avoid getting hurt and it seemed like there was hope in the red light, green light game where they were listening to him on strategy. He tried so hard to convince everyone it wasn't just these benign children's games. That people would die and that there wouldn't be groups of them making it to the end. But history has shown repeatedly, using the Holocaust as one example, that people will ignore warnings about horrors because it’s easier to buy a pretty lie than face a harsh truth. That whole cognitive dissonance and confirmation bias angle struck home because I have seen it play out in real life both in history and more recently. To me the trans character, Hyun-ju, felt totally forced. I just didn’t see how that character added anything to the story—her connections with players like Jang Geum-ja (Kang Ae-shim) or Jun-hee didn’t justify her role; it seemed like a diversity checkbox. Same with the druggie character, Thanos (Choi Seung-hyun)—his real-life drug scandal made his role feel like a stunt. He was an over the top almost Batman joker type character. For an actor making a comeback after drug allegations, that seemed like a poor choice as it would take people out of the moment thinking about the real person behind the character. I was disturbed that there was a pregnant girl, Jun-hee, because it felt like they added that just to show there were no depths to their depravity. I saw fans on X ranting about these same issues, so I know it’s not just me. I loved that they mixed up the games, though. The pairing-up game was brutal as hell—imagine hearing people getting taken out and walking through blood pools. The new voting rule after each game kept things fresh and not just a Season 1 rehash.
I’m not a gore fan, and chilling with straight-up evil characters isn’t my thing, but knowing the show’s vibe, I always brace for the worst-case scenario. If I think, “Could this happen? Could something worse happen?”—yup, the worse thing’s probably coming. That dulled the shock a bit, in this second season relative to the first.
The ending, though? Just straight up infuriating. It’s not a cliffhanger—it’s a middle finger. No closure on major characters or plotlines, leaving you hanging with nothing. Netflix’s greedy, profit-driven model is killing what makes K-dramas great: those tight 16-episode seasons that tie everything up. Fans on X are pissed, and I get why—some ditched the show entirely. I waited to binge, which saved me some rage since I know Season 3’s is already available. But if I’d watched this as they came out, I’d be fuming. I mean nothing ended tidy - it was mostly left wide open. Park Gyeong-seok (Lee Jin-wook), the dad helped by North Korean defector guard Kang No-eul (Park Gyu-young) for his sick daughter, ends up at gunpoint after the rebellion flops. She suggests saving him but how? And what happens to both of them? Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon) never finds the right island because the captain sabotages drones and kills mercenaries, confirming his role in the game’s corruption. But, they did find a hatch and it blew some of them up so they must have been in the right place. Are they still coming? The fates of surviving players are left totally up in the air, making the cliffhanger feel like a cheap ploy to string us along. Which would not have been so bad if it wasn't Netflix. Netflix will just end a show if the profit isn't there. They also create these cliffhangers in a way that only serves to ensure true fans will be looking for another. It is completely profit over people.
Synopsis
Season 2, which dropped on December 26, 2024, packs **7 episodes** with an average runtime of **65 minutes** each, ramping up the psychological warfare and brotherly betrayals while introducing a vibrant new cast of misfits in games that probe deeper into themes of revenge, identity, and the inescapability of systemic cruelty. Fans of the original's intensity will devour this escalation, but newcomers might want to start at the beginning—it's darker, more introspective, and ends on a cliffhanger that demands the finale.
Three years after his pyrrhic victory, a haunted Gi-hun abandons escape to America and launches a vengeful crusade to dismantle the Squid Game's elusive architects, only to find himself back in the arena amid a fresh batch of 456 broken dreamers facing deadlier evolutions of the childhood gauntlet—now laced with votes to quit or continue, testing fragile alliances and buried guilts.
**Major Characters:**
- **Seong Gi-hun (Player 456) (Lee Jung-jae)**: Scarred by survivor's remorse, the once-bumbling everyman evolves into a steely avenger, infiltrating the new games to end them forever, his fractured psyche fueling both heroic resolve and self-destructive rage.
- **Hwang In-ho / The Front Man (Lee Byung-hun)**: The enigmatic game master, revealed as the 2015 winner and a disillusioned architect of despair, grapples with his brother's pursuit while enforcing order, his stoic facade cracking under familial ties and moral erosion.
- **Hwang Jun-ho (Wi Ha-joon)**: The tenacious detective, still reeling from Season 1's revelations, goes rogue in a high-risk infiltration to expose the operation, his loyalty to family clashing with the deadly risks of getting too close to the truth.
- **The Recruiter (Gong Yoo)**: Returning with expanded menace, the slick ddakji dealer expands his predatory recruitment, his polished exterior hiding a web of manipulations that draw even more souls into the abyss.
- **Myung-gi (Player 333) / Thanos (T.O.P.)**: A fallen K-pop rapper turned crypto scammer, cocky and self-serving, whose online infamy follows him into the games, where his manipulative charm unravels amid paranoia and desperate bids for relevance.
- **Hyun-ju (Player 120) (Park Sung-hoon)**: A resilient transgender woman and former sex worker fighting for her child's future, bringing fierce vulnerability and unapologetic authenticity to the arena, challenging prejudices in a fight for dignity and survival.
- **Geum-ja (Player 149) (Kang Ae-sim)**: A cunning, foul-mouthed grandmother and con artist, whose street-smart savvy and maternal ferocity forge unlikely bonds, turning her into a wildcard ally in the chaos of betrayal.
- **Yong-sik (Player 007) (Yang Dong-geun)**: A jittery, tech-obsessed young gamer burdened by his mother's debts, whose awkward innocence and quick wits shine in puzzle-like challenges, highlighting the games' toll on the digital generation.
- **Seon-nyeo (Player 044) (Chae Kuk-hee)**: A faded shaman whose eerie prophecies and spiritual rituals unsettle the players, blending mysticism with sharp survival instincts in a bid to divine escape from the mortal coil.
- **No-eul (Player 149) (Park Gyu-young)**: A stoic North Korean defector and soldier, hardened by defection and loss, who allies with Gi-hun with disciplined precision, her quiet strength masking a storm of unresolved trauma.






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