Netflix Crowns ‘Squid Game’ Finale No. 1 as Creator Weighs Spinoff

Series ends with Gi-hun’s final act and an American recruiter tease while Netflix considers how far the games might spread next.

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Netflix dropped the six-episode final season of “Squid Game” on 27 June, closing the survival saga three and a half years after it upended global viewing records. Within twenty-four hours the show had reclaimed the top position on the service’s daily rankings, underscoring the appetite for creator Hwang Dong-hyuk’s promised endgame.

The finale answers the fate of Lee Jung-jae’s Gi-hun: the long-suffering Player 456 sacrifices himself to save an infant contestant who is formally declared winner, a twist Entertainment Weekly says Hwang designed to “make people reflect on their own values”

. Indian daily The Times of India labeled the episode “grim yet forward-looking,” citing Cate Blanchett’s cameo as evidence the games have gone global. Review aggregators show an 83 percent Rotten Tomatoes score and a 66 on Metacritic, while ScreenRant called the decision to end after record reach “surprising but thematically tidy”.

Hwang tells EW he considers the narrative complete but is “not trying to close the door” on the universe and has mapped a limited series set in the three-year gap between seasons 1 and 2 that would follow recruiters and masked guards off-island. That pitch joins speculation about an American spin-off after Blanchett’s cameo, which Tom’s Guide reads as a “strategic teaser” for a Los Angeles-set edition.

Netflix has not committed to further titles, yet analysts note the platform’s habit of enlarging marquee brands—most recently with reality show Squid Game: The Challenge—and point to Season 2’s 192.6 million views, the third-largest series total in company history. Viewing momentum could rise again: industry trackers expect forthcoming Nielsen figures to rival the five-billion-minute weeks logged by earlier chapters.

Lee Byung-hun, who plays the Front Man, told Netflix’s in-house site he would “gladly return” for any offshoot provided it examines the character’s moral collapse. For now, Hwang says he is resting after a shoot that cost him “two more teeth” atop eight lost during Season 1, leaving the franchise’s long-term future—and Blanchett’s recruiter—unresolved.

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