Why is Everyone Watching "Squid Game"? - I was wondering too.

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Netflix’s Squid Game is a dystopian fiction that pits a group of desperate people against each other in deadly children’s games, lured by the salvation of a large cash prize. The main character is an initially unsympathetic gambling addict Seong Gi-hun who steals from his diabetic mother and can’t provide for his daughter. The games seem a viable last resort until Gi-hun and the 455 other players realize that elimination from the games is literally death.


Squid Game is a fictional extension of the ‘humiliating game show’ genre wrapped around a social message. It is undoubtedly full of Korean cultural references lost in translation for me as a Western viewer. Still, the social message about wealth disparity and privilege is loud and clear. It is also unsettling and violent, a kind of Hunger Games meets Battle Royale meets Lord of the Flies that continually pits humanity against survival, captures the current social distress, and perfectly targets the nihilist humor of Gen Z.


Antonio Guillem/Shutterstock


Source: Antonio Guillem/Shutterstock
Horror films and other post-apocalyptic movies can handle real-life anxiety and fear, such as we experienced with COVID-19. Some studies found that horror fans experienced less psychological distress to the pandemic than others because fiction enables us to explore imagined outcomes at a safe psychological distance.


Fiction can provide all kinds of learning experiences, but horror is the only genre specifically created to elicit fear consistently and intentionally throughout a narrative. Horror films can trigger all sorts of physiological responses, from shivering and screaming to having your hair stand on end. At the same time, psychologically, they deliver a wide range of emotions, such as excitement, anticipation, anxiety, fear, empathy, and disgust. This emotional journey is the basis of its appeal.


Squid Game also capitalizes on the cognitive dissonance of using children’s games to create mini-mystery arcs within the larger story. The symbolic innocence and vulnerability of childhood used to perpetrate violence amplify the horror and sense of powerlessness.

Squid Game have added appeal because of the way it blew up on social. The games resemble viral challenges that become memeified on TikTok and Instagram. Squid Game memes are so plentiful that multiple sites have ranked their favorites, and the game designer Ubisoft has gotten into the meme game.


There are probably rooms full of creatives trying to figure out if their brands and campaigns can take advantage of the Squid Game lift or if it will backfire. However, the amount of social traction means that many people will watch all or some of it to satisfy their curiosity and avoid FOMO. There is social capital in knowing what’s trending in pop culture.


Should kids watch the Squid Game? Common Sense Media polled parents and tweens/teens about the “appropriate age” for viewing and, not surprisingly, there was a gap between what parents thought was ok (somewhere between never and 16-18 and up) versus what tweens and teens thought was reasonable (12 and up). The social value of knowing about something trending like this show is, including across Minecraft and Roblox, means that kids will feel compelled to see it driven by FOMO and Street Cred.


Parents should recognize these dynamics as meaningful social drivers, especially after a year of social isolation. Prohibiting Squid Game will increase its appeal. It also won’t work—there are too many access points. I recommend that parents watch it with their kids. Parents’ presence can provide an emotional “safety net,” if needed, emotional regulation. There are, in fact, some “teaching moments” and conversation starters if you choose to go down the route of the social issues, such as gambling addiction and abuse of social privilege and wealth. It can lead to sharing other examples of literature with themes about human fear, compliance, and survival instincts, such as Hunger Games, Slaughterhouse-Five, Lord of the Flies, and Animal Farm.


The production values belie the show’s popularity. Squid Game is badly dubbed in English over Korean (and if you turn on subtitles, they often don’t match spoken English.) These inconsistencies were initially off-putting but recede soon enough. It doesn’t diminish the violence but may dampen the fear through emotional distancing. Nevertheless, Squid Game’ actors do an excellent job of delivering their character in ways that are likely to make the audience care who will survive and why the games exist.


Freud suggested that horror was appealing because it allows the expression of feelings repressed by the ego. In a similar vein, Jung’s work indicated that horror’s appeal lies in the ability to connect with primordial images in the collective unconscious. Threat Management theory says that these types of films function to help people overcome fears by making them seem possible to defeat.


We watched Contagion at the start of COVID-19, and now we’re bookending it with Squid Game. It captures the emotions of powerlessness and mistrust in a world struggling to survive. That anyone stays, in the end, is reassuring.
 
I was wondering why too.
I was encouraged to watch it and it was hyped up as some super special awesome show, but the fact it's on netflix and a korean knockoff of battle royal, and I don't like that kind of genre of death games.
 
meets Battle Royalemeets Lord of the Flies
Except what these two had that all other Battle Royale derivatives lack is the fact that both of these stories are about characters that ALREADY KNOW EACH OTHER.

That’s the part all these other ones miss, and by doing so dilute a lot of the horror and the message about society,

After I finished BR and Lord of the Flies I had something to sit and digest and analyze. Hunger Games and PUBG and stuff trample that.
 
Eh it was ok, I was going to give it a miss though because I thought Awkwafina was in it
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Yes I think all Asian women look the same
 
As someone who is familiar with death game genre (asian and otherwise), Squid Game is literally nothing I havent seen before. I feel like its a niche genre finally hitting the mainstream and said mainstream going all apeshit over it when this genre existed for a VERY long while.

Besides, Squid Game, for the genre standards that is, isnt that good. Its decent but its nothing I would write home about it. I find it enraging that they all decided to return (thus everything that happens its on them), at least in most death games, the participants were kidnapped and forced into it (thus we relate better to their plight to escape and survive).

Besides, the ending piss me off. Sure, buddy, you are going to win against the people that hand over billions of yen like its penny change. Lets not do the smart thing and flee the country...You aint John Wick, just an average joe with a stupid amount of luck/plot armour.

Another rthing setting it apart from other death games is that the cast aren't a bunch of talented people with some unknown chip on their shoulder against the system. The people who play Squid Game are nobodies, dregs of society and people who will amount to nothing in life. Shunya in the manga was the son of a freedom fighter against the regime unbeknownst to him, Katiness was ironically in the safest district since the jackboot to civilian ratio was low and other death games protags usually have some talent or have something of value to society?

People who play the Squid Game are boring bland normies who will not be missed if they somehow off themselves in trying to win more money than they can spend
 
Another rthing setting it apart from other death games is that the cast aren't a bunch of talented people with some unknown chip on their shoulder against the system. The people who play Squid Game are nobodies, dregs of society and people who will amount to nothing in life. Shunya in the manga was the son of a freedom fighter against the regime unbeknownst to him, Katiness was ironically in the safest district since the jackboot to civilian ratio was low and other death games protags usually have some talent or have something of value to society?

People who play the Squid Game are boring bland normies who will not be missed if they somehow off themselves in trying to win more money than they can spend
In death games, there is usually this grand reason why the participants are all there or some grand scheme or point to their presence.

Squid Game makes sure that their presence isnt special, its just another game the sadistic elites play routinely, just a sadistic show and nothing else. I dont think Squid Show is the first to do this but I guess its the one that stands out the most.

I guess I prefer something setup by humans rather than something setup by some sort of undefeatable cosmic entity ala King's Game or as As the Gods' will or even Alice in Borderland. Because then one might ask, how can you even win at this point? All thinking outside of the box is just meaningless because the entity can just assume thats cheating and kill you or just state thats against the rules and let you off with a warning at best.
 
That's pretty much it, mundane nobodies playing a death game to amuse the rich and powerful and the rich and powerful s personal motivations now that the guy who started this is dead. What will happen to future iterations of the squid game?
 
That's pretty much it, mundane nobodies playing a death game to amuse the rich and powerful and the rich and powerful s personal motivations now that the guy who started this is dead. What will happen to future iterations of the squid game?

I dont see anything changing to be honest, what is there to change?
 
I dont see anything changing to be honest, what is there to change?

An "eat the rich" plot by the families of the losers as they plan to subvert the Squid Game to avenge their loved ones or out of greed. A game where some of the elites are gambling their lives to incriminate their enemies who also made bets and offering their inheritance to the little "pet" who can help them win
 
An "eat the rich" plot by the families of the losers as they plan to subvert the Squid Game to avenge their loved ones or out of greed. A game where some of the elites are gambling their lives to incriminate their enemies who also made bets and offering their inheritance to the little "pet" who can help them win

Meh, but then would it still be Squid Game?

Admit it, its just like the slasher genre, we arent here for much beyond seeing people die.
 
True, butnl Squid Game still does stand out on the plain and unremarkable nature of the players vs other murder game

As well it would be because of the capitalism allegory. So you have a bunch of people who are doing it to break the game and maybe end the lives of the elite by putting their own lives on the horses they bet on while others just want the money of their hated foes and go fly off to some remote place in the world to start their own little micronation.
 
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