Seong doesn’t answer, though throughout the games he had tried to never kill another player.
Oh had first asked Seong if he still retained hope in others after witnessing the manipulation, betrayal, and selfishness demonstrated throughout the games. Oh dies shortly after, prompting Seong to ask if he saw-if he saw that he had been wrong.Īs low stakes as this final game appears, it may be one of the most important of the series. A person, who stopped beside the man earlier, returns with police a minute before midnight.
Oh’s wager: Before midnight no one will stop to help the man. During the meeting, while Oh lies minutes away from death, the two play one final game, betting on the fate of a homeless man, himself minutes from death, below on the street. In one of the final scenes, Seong reunites with Oh and learns the old man’s role behind the games. 0456) determinedly leaving the airport to stop the organization’s next game.
We also learn that despite Oh’s death and the photos Hwang attempted to send to his Seoul police partners, the next year’s games are in full swing. He founded the games with several wealthy friends after the group had become bored with their fortunes and wanted to have “fun.” We learn that the organizer of the games is in fact Oh Il-nam (No. We learn one of those participants (and winner) is the Front Man, brother of detective Hwang Jun-ho-who he shoots and who falls off a cliff (fate unknown). We learn the game has been going on for decades and has featured thousands of participants. The players are renditioned to an island and forced (?) to compete in playground games, with the winners advancing to the next game and the losers being shot, stabbed, plummeted, or killed in some other creative and gruesome fashion.Īfter six games, the winner is awarded the monetary amount assigned to everyone who has been killed-the final prize being some ₩ 45 billion.Īt the end of the series, we learn several things about the game.
The series follows several “players” recruited into a multi-day survival game.
There’s a lot happening during the ending of Netflix’s battle royale thriller Squid Game, something of a cross between Bong Joon-ho’s Oscar-winning film Parasite-with its body horror trojan horsing a more complex message about class conflict, stratification, and predation-and Saw. Warning: The following contains spoilers for Season 1 of Squid Game.