Saram-eun...
- L'épisode a été diffusé 27 juin 2025
- TV-MA
- 55m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
6,7/10
19 k
MA NOTE
Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAs Jun-ho races to reach the island, tensions peak in the final round. The last players face an impossible situation in the closing minutes of the game.As Jun-ho races to reach the island, tensions peak in the final round. The last players face an impossible situation in the closing minutes of the game.As Jun-ho races to reach the island, tensions peak in the final round. The last players face an impossible situation in the closing minutes of the game.
Avis en vedette
Season 2, Part 1 and 2, feel rushed and appear to have been adapted for the US market. This is a waste of what was a promising story. The ending was terrible in every conceivable way. I'm so disappointed that this could have ended so poorly. Characters were stripped of their complexity, and the dialogue felt unnatural. The suspense was gone, replaced by lazy writing and predictable twists. It felt like fan service for a completely different audience. What once had depth and meaning has now turned into a shallow imitation. A total betrayal of what made Season 1 so impactful. Let's continue milking the cow!
There is no deeper exploration of human nature than what we already saw in season one. The characters, the plot, and the games themselves, are just variations on a theme.
It's entertaining, but it's not the same world class psychological horror mixed with political satire that originally broke new ground. The sell of the unexplored island, the VIPs, the history of the games was why people came back, but that's clearly been saved for yet another spin off.
The ending was going to be cliche whether he won and survived or martyred himself for his message. The realism went out the window when he went back into the games, so everything since was always going to be contrived.
These last two series are just an excuse to get him playing the games again so Netflix can make bank. It's weak characters, filler, more time seeing players vote than play games. Whatever plot there can be is only third priority after that.
The message that there is no justice in this world, and it will take your life to try and fight that, is realistic and makes the ending fine. The season was entertaining enough, so again fine. Not time wasted, but not the level we hoped for.
It's entertaining, but it's not the same world class psychological horror mixed with political satire that originally broke new ground. The sell of the unexplored island, the VIPs, the history of the games was why people came back, but that's clearly been saved for yet another spin off.
The ending was going to be cliche whether he won and survived or martyred himself for his message. The realism went out the window when he went back into the games, so everything since was always going to be contrived.
These last two series are just an excuse to get him playing the games again so Netflix can make bank. It's weak characters, filler, more time seeing players vote than play games. Whatever plot there can be is only third priority after that.
The message that there is no justice in this world, and it will take your life to try and fight that, is realistic and makes the ending fine. The season was entertaining enough, so again fine. Not time wasted, but not the level we hoped for.
I don't think there is much point in reiterating what others have written before me as I can largely confirm the negative points. The VIPs are cartoon villains - again - cringeworthy at best. The absence of logic and convoluted mess makes this the worst ending possible to one of the best series in the recent years. At this point it feels like a cash grab, an excuse to vindicate a likely American-based spin-off. No essential questions were answered. Multiple interesting storylines devolved into nothingness. This season felt like it's building up to something big, yet with every new episode it felt more and more like an elaborate running gag.
I understand why people are rating this 1 star, because from a series like Squid Game, people were expecting a nice, heart-warming, happy ending where the protagonist survives and ends this violent and brutal game. But people forget, the world is not nice, is not ideal, is not peaceful, but is brutal, savage and nice people do not necessarily end up being happy. The reality of this world is shown in the series' finale and sadly not a lot of people understand it, or I should say, do not WANT to understand it. People choose to close their eyes so that they can keep thinking that good things happen with good people, and when it isn't shown in the end, they end up disappointed. The truth is, the world is feral, and will always be, reality is bitter, and people do not like bitterness.
Squid Game Season 3 is a deeply satisfying, poetic, and thought-provoking sendoff to one of the most compelling character journeys we've seen in modern television.
This ending is going to spark debates for years-maybe even split fans down the middle. But that's what makes it great. It dares to choose meaning over mass appeal. And in a time when so many finales are designed to please, Squid Game chooses truth.
In the streaming age, where everything is sliced into bite-sized tension loops to satisfy the binge model, most shows are afraid to breathe. Squid Game isn't. It knows how to deliver thrilling, edge-of-the-seat moments and still remain grounded in story and character. It doesn't just hook you with cliffhangers-it earns your investment by making you feel the weight of every decision.
And when it comes to decisions-every single character's choices, no matter how dark or tragic, feel understandable. You may not agree with them. But you get them. That's what makes this such a rich piece of storytelling. It doesn't paint morality in black and white. It embraces the murky grey where real humanity exists.
Gi-hun's ending isn't the ending many viewers would have hoped for. It's not wrapped in justice, not drenched in triumph. But it's honest. It's raw. It reflects the truth that in real life, good doesn't always win. And even when it does, it comes at a cost. This ending has the courage to stare into that truth-and that's what makes it unforgettable.
There's a brutal kind of poetry in how this series understands people. The hurt. The compromise. The desperate, clawing need to survive. Even the villains aren't truly villains. Just broken people trying to play a rigged game. And the way Squid Game navigates that terrain-without ever spoon-feeding its audience-is what elevates it.
Season 3 isn't just a conclusion. It's a statement. A warning. A mirror. And most importantly, a triumph in screenwriting that will be studied and remembered for years.
We didn't just watch a show. We witnessed the making of a modern classic.
Hats off.
This ending is going to spark debates for years-maybe even split fans down the middle. But that's what makes it great. It dares to choose meaning over mass appeal. And in a time when so many finales are designed to please, Squid Game chooses truth.
In the streaming age, where everything is sliced into bite-sized tension loops to satisfy the binge model, most shows are afraid to breathe. Squid Game isn't. It knows how to deliver thrilling, edge-of-the-seat moments and still remain grounded in story and character. It doesn't just hook you with cliffhangers-it earns your investment by making you feel the weight of every decision.
And when it comes to decisions-every single character's choices, no matter how dark or tragic, feel understandable. You may not agree with them. But you get them. That's what makes this such a rich piece of storytelling. It doesn't paint morality in black and white. It embraces the murky grey where real humanity exists.
Gi-hun's ending isn't the ending many viewers would have hoped for. It's not wrapped in justice, not drenched in triumph. But it's honest. It's raw. It reflects the truth that in real life, good doesn't always win. And even when it does, it comes at a cost. This ending has the courage to stare into that truth-and that's what makes it unforgettable.
There's a brutal kind of poetry in how this series understands people. The hurt. The compromise. The desperate, clawing need to survive. Even the villains aren't truly villains. Just broken people trying to play a rigged game. And the way Squid Game navigates that terrain-without ever spoon-feeding its audience-is what elevates it.
Season 3 isn't just a conclusion. It's a statement. A warning. A mirror. And most importantly, a triumph in screenwriting that will be studied and remembered for years.
We didn't just watch a show. We witnessed the making of a modern classic.
Hats off.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesToutes les informations contiennent des divulgâcheurs
- GaffesWhen the island is set to self destruct, the last time the timer is shown it says 00:30:00. After a while, when the voice start counting down, it starts at 10 but it should start at 3. There were 27 beeps between the shot of the timer and the countdown voice.
Meilleurs choix
Connectez-vous pour évaluer et surveiller les recommandations personnalisées
Détails
- Durée
- 55m
- Couleur
- Mixage
Contribuer à cette page
Suggérer une modification ou ajouter du contenu manquant